My phone buzzed on the desk. I glanced at the screen and blinked. Cora. Video call. Well, that was unexpected.
I picked it up and leaned back in my chair. "Hey."
The screen flickered, then her face appearedâtoo close at first, like sheâd shoved the phone right up to her cheek by accident. She yelped softly, pulled it back, and I saw more of her.
She was in a weird... costume.
"Oh," I said before I could stop myself. "Wow."
Cora froze. Her shoulders tensed immediately. "D-donât laugh."
"I wasnât going to," I said quickly. "I swear."
She shifted the phone a little farther away, giving me a full view. She was wearing something straight out of a dark fantasy animeâa monster-girl outfit. Black and deep violet fabric, form-fitting in places and loose in others. The top hugged her chest with sharp, angular cutouts, held together by thin straps that crossed over her collarbone. The sleeves were long and detached, clawed at the fingertips, and the skirt was short but layered, asymmetrical, with torn-looking edges that fluttered when she moved.
There were small horn accessories clipped into her hair, curving back just enough to be noticeable without looking ridiculous. A thin tail swayed behind her when she shifted her weight, clearly attached to a belt under the skirt. Thigh-high stockings with faint rune-like patterns climbed up her legs, stopping just before bare skin.
It was... anime as hell.
And yeah. A little sexy.
She hugged her free arm across her stomach, clearly self-conscious. "Esme said this one fit the theme. I donât even know if it does."
"It fits something," I said honestly.
She looked up at me through the screen, eyes wide behind her glasses. "E-Evan."
I smiled. "You look cute. And sexy. Both. Somehow."
Her face turned red immediately. "Youâre not helping."
"Iâm being truthful."
She bit her lip, then adjusted the phone again. "I donât like showing people this stuff. I meanâcosplay. Or myself. Like this."
"I know," I said. "And you donât have to do it for anyone else. Youâre doing it because you agreed to try. Thatâs already more than enough."
She hesitated, then nodded slowly. "I... Esme said the same thing."
As if summoned by name, a blurry shape drifted into the background.
"Sis?" a sleepy voice mumbled.
The camera shifted as Cora turned the phone slightly, and Esme wandered into view, half-lidded eyes, hair messy like sheâd just rolled out of bed. She was wearing a completely different cosplayâsoft, pastel-colored, oversized hoodie styled like some kind of sleepy mage or support character. The sleeves were too long, covering her hands, and there were little embroidered stars along the hem. A floppy wizard hat sat crooked on her head.
She yawned.
"Oh," I said, amused. "Hey, Esme."
She squinted at the screen. "Hi, Evan."
Cora glanced at her. "Youâre supposed to be helping me, not interrupting."
"I did help," Esme said, leaning her head against Coraâs shoulder. "I picked the outfit. And I said you look good."
"You said I looked âacceptable.â"
"Thatâs high praise."
I chuckled. "You both look great."
Esme nodded slowly, like that settled the matter, then drifted out of frame again. I heard a couch creak in the background and something soft hitting a pillow.
Cora sighed. "Sheâs already mentally done for the day."
"Well, yeah," I said. "Gotta conserve energy."
She nodded. "Iâm still nervous. What if people stare?"
"They will," I said easily.
She stiffened. "Thatâs not comforting."
"But theyâll stare because itâs a convention," I added. "Everyoneâs dressed up. Everyoneâs weird. Youâll blend in more than you think."
She looked down, then back at the screen. "Youâll be there, right?"
"Yeah," I said. "I promised."
"Okay." She took a breath. "Then Iâll go."
The glass door of Nalaâs office slid open.
Anotta stepped out.
She walked past the desks with that same calm, dangerous composure, heels clicking softly against the floor. Didnât glance my way. Didnât acknowledge me at all.
"Hey," I said quickly into the phone. "I gotta go."
Cora nodded. "O-okay. Um... see you tomorrow."
"Yeah," I said. "You did good today."
She smiledâsmall, shy, but real. "Bye, Evan."
"Bye."
I ended the call, slipped the phone into my pocket, and stood up just as Anotta reached the elevators.
"Ms. Anotov," I called.
She didnât slow. Didnât turn.
The elevator doors slid open. She stepped inside like she hadnât heard a thing.
"Damn it," I muttered under my breath, exhaling slowly.
From behind the glass, Nala looked over at me. She wore a small, knowing smile and lifted her hand, gesturing for me to come in.
I hesitated for half a second, then walked toward her office.
I slid the glass door open with a sigh, and stepped inside. The room felt quieter than the hallwayâmuted, insulated. I pulled one of the chairs closer and sat at the small table beside her desk.
Nala leaned back in her chair and exhaled, long and tired, rubbing her temples with two fingers.
"God, sheâs exhausting," she said.
I didnât interrupt. I just leaned back, crossed my arms loosely, and listened.
"Sheâs backing the project, yes," Nala continued, eyes drifting to the glass wall for a second. "But sheâs getting too involved. Asking questions that arenât her lane. Wanting updates that go beyond oversight. Pushing timelines, probing internal decisions." She shook her head slightly. "Itâs not overt, but itâs there."
"Control," I said.
"Influence," she corrected. "Sheâs smart enough to dress it up as concern. As interest. As support." A faint smile tugged at her lips, but it didnât reach her eyes. "And thatâs what bothers me."
I nodded slowly. "She doesnât feel like someone who invests and then waits."
"Exactly." Nala rested her elbow on the desk, chin on her knuckles. "She wants her fingerprints on everything. Not to run itâbut to know she could, if she wanted."
That tracked. Way too well.
I shifted in my chair. "Does that put us in a bad position?"
"Not yet," she said. "And not necessarily ever. But it means we have to be careful. Clear boundaries. No shortcuts. No letting her think pressure works."
We sat there for a moment, the quiet settling in comfortably. The hum of the building. The distant murmur of people moving through the floor. Not tenseâjust tired.
"Well," I said eventually, pushing myself up, "Iâll let you get back to ruling the world."
She huffed a quiet laugh. "Someone has to."
I stepped closer as I turned to leave, leaned down, and pressed a light kiss to her cheek. "Donât overwork yourself."
She glanced up at me, amused. "You donât get to say that."
"I just did."
I straightened, gave her a small smile, and headed for the door, sliding the glass open and stepping back into the hallway.
â¤ď¸âŹâŞâŞâ¤ď¸âŹâŞâŞâ¤ď¸
The elevator doors slid open, and Amelia stepped out.
She didnât walk toward my desk. She didnât wave or call my name. She just stopped a few steps out of the elevator and waited, hands loosely around her coffee cup, posture straight as always. Like sheâd calculated exactly where to stand so Iâd notice her without her having to ask for anything.
I pushed my chair back and stood.
She looked up when I approached. "Hey."
"Hey," I said. "Ready?"
She nodded once. "Yeah."
We stepped into the elevator together. I pressed zero, and the doors slid shut with a soft thud. For a few seconds, the only sound was the hum of the cables.
"So," I said, breaking it gently, "howâd the rest of your day go?"
"Quiet," she replied. "Which is good. No fires to put out. No surprise meetings."
"Lucky."
That earned me the smallest huff of amusement. Barely there, but I caught it.
The elevator descended smoothly. I leaned back against the wall, hands in my pockets. "Still nervous?"
"A bit," she said honestly. "But less than yesterday."
"Thatâs progress."
"I guess." She hesitated, then added, "I practiced the pedals in my head during lunch."
I smiled. "That might be the most Amelia sentence youâve ever said."
She blinked, then shook her head. "I donât know if thatâs a compliment."
"It is."
The elevator dinged, doors opening to the lobby. We stepped out and headed for the exit together, passing through the quiet after-hours space. Outside, the air was cooler, the sky dim and heavy with clouds that hadnât decided whether they wanted to rain again.
We descended the front steps and crossed into the parking lot. My car sat where Iâd left it, familiar and unassuming.
I walked around and opened the passenger door, sliding in. Amelia took the driverâs side, setting her coffee down carefully in the cup holder like it might explode if mishandled.
I handed her the keys. She took them, fingers a little stiff, then leaned forward and tried to guide the key into the ignition.
Missed.
She frowned, adjusted her angle, tried again. Missed again. I didnât say anything. Just watched her hands instead of her face.
She exhaled slowly through her nose. "Sorry."
"Hey," I said calmly. "No rush. Youâve got it."
She paused, loosened her grip, then tried again. This time the key slid in smoothly.
"There you go," I said.
She let out a breath sheâd clearly been holding and turned the key. The engine came to life.
We sat there for a second, the car idling.
"Same as yesterday," I said. "Weâll start slow. Just the lot. No pressure."
She nodded. "Okay."