But inside her, the shift was there, subtle, disorienting, the kind that cos after pushing too far, holding too much, for too long.
She exhaled, long and tired, her fingers loosening from the edge of the table as she reached out blindly.
For sothing. Anything. Water. Before her hand could fall back. Two bottles appeared. At the sa ti.
On her right, Julian stood close, closer than he had been a mont ago. The cap was already twisted open, the bottle angled toward her as if he had anticipated the need before she voiced it. His expression was firm, protective, his attention locked entirely on her.
On her left, Raymond. Still. Silent. But not detached. He held out his own bottle, unopened, his hand steady, but his eyes... His eyes weren’t calm.
They searched her face with an intensity that didn’t belong to a colleague. Didn’t belong to soone standing at a distance. It was sothing deeper. Sothing claiming. And it didn’t go unnoticed.
Julian’s gaze shifted. Just slightly. But enough.
His eyes flicked to Raymond, narrowing into sothing sharp, cold, assessing, edged with a warning that didn’t need words.
He didn’t like this. Didn’t like the proximity. Didn’t like the way this employee stood there as if he had a place in this mont. As if he belonged. And most of all. He didn’t like the look in Raymond’s eyes.
Because it wasn’t concern. Not entirely. It was sothing far more dangerous. The look of a man who believed, whether rightly or wrongly, that he had a right to be here.
The air between them tightened. Silent. Charged. A line drawn without a word spoken. But Amara. Amara didn’t see any of it. Not the tension. Not the clash.
Not the quiet claim being challenged in the space above her. She was too tired. Too drained. Her focus narrowed to the simplest need.
Water. Her hand moved, instinctively, without hesitation. Toward Julian. "Thank you," she whispered softly, her voice barely carrying as she took the bottle from him.
The coolness of it grounded her instantly. She lifted it to her lips, taking a slow sip, the water easing the dryness in her throat, steadying her breath just enough to hold herself together a little longer.
Beside her, Julian’s posture eased, only slightly, but the edge in his gaze didn’t fully disappear.
Across from him, Raymond didn’t move. Didn’t lower the bottle. Didn’t look away. If anything. His grip tightened just a fraction before he slowly lowered his hand, the unopened bottle still in it.
His expression didn’t change. But sothing behind his eyes did. Because in that small, quiet mont. Nothing had been said. Nothing had been revealed. And yet. The distance between them had never felt more defined.
Or more dangerous. Seb’s hand dropped slowly to his side, the unopened bottle hanging loosely at first, then tightening in his grip until the plastic gave a faint, protesting creak.
It was a small sound. Lost beneath the quiet hum of the room. But inside him, it echoed. Because that mont, simple, almost insignificant to anyone else, cut deeper than he expected.
He had stepped forward without thinking. Without calculating. Just instinct. And for a second, he had almost believed. No. He had believed. That he had a place there. But reality didn’t bend for instinct.
It stood exactly where it always had. Cold. Unmoving. Unforgiving. Across from him, Julian remained at Amara’s side, steady and unquestioned, as if the space beside her had always belonged to him, and always would.
No hesitation. No doubt. No one challenged it. And that was what burned. Seb’s jaw tightened slightly, his gaze dropping for the briefest mont before lifting again back to her. Always back to her.
She was still drinking the water slowly, her breathing evening out just enough to hide the strain, her fingers still lightly wrapped around the bottle Julian had given her.
Not his. Never his. A sharp, bitter sting settled in his chest, spreading quietly, steadily. Because no matter what he had done... No matter how much he had moved behind the scenes, how much he had risked, how close he had co.
Out here, in the open. He was nothing. Just another employee standing too close. Just another face in a crowded room. While Julian.
Julian was the one who stood beside her without question. The one who handed her what she needed. The one she reached for without thinking. Seb exhaled slowly, the breath controlled, but heavy.
Because the truth wasn’t just in what had happened. It was in what hadn’t. She hadn’t looked at him. Hadn’t noticed. Hadn’t chosen. And that silence. That absence. Spoke louder than anything else.
Still, he didn’t move. Didn’t step back. Didn’t leave. Because even as the distance between them stretched wider than ever. His eyes remained fixed on her.
Unwavering. As if standing there. Even like this. Was the only place he could exist. Right then...
Before the silence could stretch any tighter, before the unspoken tension between Julian and Seb could sharpen into sothing visible. "Oh my God! Look at the numbers!"
Mike’s voice cut clean through the room. Loud. Breathless. Alive. Every head turned.
He was hunched over his laptop, the glow of the screen lighting up his face, eyes wide with disbelief as his fingers hovered over the trackpad like he didn’t quite trust what he was seeing.
"We have a million views already!" he said, almost laughing now, the shock breaking into excitent. "And it’s climbing, it’s going viral!"
The shift was imdiate. Chairs scraped. Footsteps rushed.
Staff who had been frozen monts ago suddenly moved, drawn toward him like gravity had changed direction.
Even Julian stepped forward, his attention snapping away from everything else, his focus locking onto the screen.
"What’s happening?" soone asked.
"No...scroll," another said quickly. "Scroll down!"
Mike swallowed, his fingers moving fast now, dragging the page downward as the comnts flooded in faster than they could read.
"The comnts..." he whispered, almost to himself.
Then louder. "Look at the comnts!" They leaned in.
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