LOGINThe executive conference room was no longer just a place for boardroom maneuvers; it was a sanctuary of calculated submission. The heavy oak doors had been locked for six hours, and inside, the air was dense with the cloying, ozone-laced humidity of the M-ESSENCE.
Anji stood at the head of the long table, his indigo-shot eyes scanning the seven members of the Board of Directors. They weren't sitting with the rigidity of professional gatekeepers anymore. They were scattered, leaning back, or huddled in groups, their expensive suits disheveled. The sharp scent of human sweat, musk, and pheromone-drenched desperation made the room feel more like an upscale opium den than a corporate headquarters.
“The supply chain is bleeding,” Director Vane said, though his voice lacked any hint of professional alarm. He was sitting at Anji’s feet, resting his arms against the table's edge like a child asking for attention. “But when you speak about it, Anji, it feels... inevitable. I find I don't really care if the company goes under. I just want to know what’s next.”
“Everything is going to plan, Vane,” Anji replied. His voice didn't waver. The indigo serum had tempered his nervous system, smoothing the rough edges of his ego into something razor-sharp and inhuman.
Beside Vane, Sarah, the lead strategist, was shivering despite the sweltering heat of the room. She kept rubbing her inner wrists, her skin reddened by her own nails. “The numbers don’t add up. We’re losing money. The logistics nodes are reporting ghosts in the system. But whenever you’re in the room, I feel like I’m seeing clearly for the first time. Why is that?”
Anji didn't answer. He stepped away from the head of the table and began to pace. Every step he took released a localized wave of the catalyst into the air. He watched as the directors reacted, their bodies unconsciously following his movement like iron filings to a magnet. He was no longer a person to them; he was the source of a dopamine frequency they had never before reached.
“It’s because your clarity was always artificial,” Anji whispered, his eyes locking onto Sarah’s. “You’ve spent your whole lives chasing performance, metrics, and dominance. You think that’s ‘working.’ But all you’ve done is spend decades starving yourselves of the one thing that actually makes your brains light up. Now, you’re finally eating.”
He stopped directly in front of her. Sarah tilted her head back, her breathing hitching in her chest as the proximity to the pheromone source overwhelmed her ability to stay rational. She stood up, stumbling into him, her movements driven by a desperate, instinctual hunger.
“Eat,” Anji commanded.
He didn’t move. Sarah grabbed his waist, burying her face into his coat, her hands fumbling with his belt. It was a humiliating display of corporate erasure—a director of a billion-dollar firm effectively losing all sense of place and decorum because the human organism craved the drug Anji was broadcasting. Anji placed his hands on her hair, forcing her head back to meet his gaze. She looked broken, rapturous, and utterly lost.
“We have a merger to finalize in Singapore tomorrow,” Anji reminded her, his hands pressing down on her shoulders. “If you aren’t focused, we lose the window.”
“Singapore can go to hell,” Sarah gasped, her eyes swirling with an obsidian hunger. She gripped the fabric of his shirt, pulling him down until their faces were inches apart. “Right now... I just need to stop the static in my head. I need you to do it.”
The room erupted into a discordant, stifled symphony of indulgence. As Anji leaned into the contact, he felt the familiar rush of the drug working through Sarah—a parasitic tethering that burned through her resistance until all that remained was a raw, trembling devotion. Around the table, the other board members weren't turning away; they were watching, some with jealous eyes, some with eyes that were already dilated into bottomless black pits, waiting for their turn to be touched by the catalyst.
Arga, who had been sitting quietly in the far corner, watching the proceedings like a broken general overseeing his own defeat, stood up slowly. He walked toward the desk, his gaze fixated on Anji’s hands as they worked through the fine silks and expensive tailoring of the Board's best. Arga wasn't jealous. He felt a sickening surge of pride. He had been the one to identify the catalyst in the basement. He was the one who had invited the rot into the structure of their reality.
Arga stepped in, reaching out to brush a strand of hair from Anji’s forehead. His hand trembled, a small reminder of his own neural damage. “They aren’t resisting anymore,” Arga whispered, his voice thin, almost like a ghost’s. “It’s beautiful, isn’t it? The way you’ve turned their own intellect into a cage for them.”
Anji broke away from Sarah, pushing her gently back into the chair. She stayed there, looking up at him with a gaze of such abject, starving worship that she might as well have been kneeling on a prayer mat.
“It’s not a cage,” Anji said, his voice flat. “It’s a leveling. They had too much agency before. Now, they have exactly as much as I’m willing to broadcast.”
He walked over to Arga and pulled him close, ignoring the Board as they shifted and fidgeted, all of them eager for any lingering sensation he would leave in his wake. Anji pressed his forehead against Arga’s, feeling the faint, rhythmic pulse of the elder executive’s struggle against the chemical pull. It was an anchor-to-anchor connection—cold, industrial, and profoundly wrong.
“I need you to run the diagnostic on the Seattle office, Arga,” Anji said, his hand sliding behind Arga’s neck and massaging the tense, aching muscles of his trapezius. “They think they can hold out against the expansion by claiming local autonomy. Break that belief. I don’t want them compliant; I want them hungry.”
Arga exhaled, a ragged sound. His legs wobbled as he leaned his weight onto Anji. The touch was the only thing holding him together in this room. “They don't know what’s coming,” Arga breathed. “When you enter a room... they don't even get a choice, do they?”
“No,” Anji agreed, his thumb rubbing deep into the sensitive hollow of Arga’s throat. “They’re controlled variables. Every single one of them. We change the input, they change the outcome. Simple mathematics.”
Across the room, the malevolent hum of the Architect’s unseen surveillance flickered through the hidden speakers in the ceiling, a subtle low-frequency chime that indicated time was drawing short. Anji turned, facing the boardroom table again. He looked at the members, their hair a mess, their faces flushed with the aftermath of their collapse, their minds softened by the excess he provided.
“I am moving the deployment forward,” Anji announced to the room, his voice gaining that deep, hypnotic quality that forced every person present to sit up straight and pay total, terrifying attention. “We aren't going to roll this out via conventional channels. We’re moving the chemical distribution to the direct injection nodes in the server cooling system. Everyone in this building will be saturated by sunset.”
“Is that legal?” one of the directors whispered, her hand absentmindedly wandering to her throat, eyes dazed.
“Law is a set of boundaries created by people who didn't understand the power of internal chemistry,” Anji replied. He strode to the center of the room, looking at the team of geniuses he had reduced to a room full of sycophants. “When this is over, you won’t care about the law. You’ll care about whether I approve of your next breath.”
The silence that followed was total. No one objected. In fact, most of them seemed to shiver at the thought of it.
He leaned down and rested his hands on the table, feeling the cold, smooth obsidian vibrate against his palms. He felt powerful. He felt dangerous. But most of all, as the drugs began to stabilize within him, he felt bored. This level of control was too easy, the game was too short, and the subjects were too soft.
“Go home,” Anji told them, his eyes gleaming with the indigo spark of a higher chemical plane. “Finish the transfer protocols. And someone fetch Randy from the security department. I find I have a need for more target practice.”
The Board rose like puppets pulled by invisible wires. They exited the room without glancing at the mess, without remembering the professional lives they had held only hours before. Anji stood alone with Arga in the now-quiet room, the air still thick with the residue of their frantic energy.
Arga moved closer, his gaze searching Anji’s face for some shred of the man he’d met in the basement, but finding only the reflection of the substance that had eaten them both whole.
“Do you remember the night you found the vial, Anji?” Arga asked softly.
“I remember,” Anji said, his voice cold, devoid of heat or nostalgia. “And I’ve never been happier that I chose to look into the box.”
He turned away from Arga, toward the floor-to-ceiling glass that framed the city—the next massive organism waiting for the injection. He touched his chest, feeling the hum of his own pulse, a rhythmic tick of an engineered god. He was done with being an employee. He was finished with being a man.
He looked at his own shadow on the floor and noticed that for a split second, in the harsh glare of the city light, the shadow seemed to ripple, expanding in size, distorting into something ancient and unrecognizable. The experiment was far from over. If anything, he thought, staring at his indigo reflection, he had only just reached the surface.
The sub-basement of the headquarters, once a forgotten purgatory for archival boxes and discarded server racks, had been transformed into something approaching a secular temple. This was where the "Disciples of Essence" met—a rotating core of middle managers, IT specialists, and administrative leads whose faces had lost their color, replaced by the translucent, sickly glow of heavy, chronic exposure.Anji descended the service stairs with the calculated stride of an deity. He didn't carry himself with the frantic energy of a stimulant user anymore; he possessed the cold, fluid menace of someone who had fundamentally upgraded their physiology. Behind him, Randy—once his fiercest rival, now the head disciple of his inner circle—followed with a tray of vials that vibrated with a soft, pulsing bioluminescence."They're waiting, Anji," Randy whispered. His eyes were wide, perpetually fixed on Anji’s silhouette. His suit hung loosely off a frame that had grown skeletal over the past weeks o
The executive conference room was no longer just a place for boardroom maneuvers; it was a sanctuary of calculated submission. The heavy oak doors had been locked for six hours, and inside, the air was dense with the cloying, ozone-laced humidity of the M-ESSENCE. Anji stood at the head of the long table, his indigo-shot eyes scanning the seven members of the Board of Directors. They weren't sitting with the rigidity of professional gatekeepers anymore. They were scattered, leaning back, or huddled in groups, their expensive suits disheveled. The sharp scent of human sweat, musk, and pheromone-drenched desperation made the room feel more like an upscale opium den than a corporate headquarters.“The supply chain is bleeding,” Director Vane said, though his voice lacked any hint of professional alarm. He was sitting at Anji’s feet, resting his arms against the table's edge like a child asking for attention. “But when you speak about it, Anji, it feels... inevitable. I find I don't real
The office was no longer an executive workspace; it was a sarcophagus of synthetic longing. The lights had been dimmed to a pulsating, arterial red, controlled by the Architect’s interface. Anji stood in the center of the suite, his skin flushed with the rhythmic, neon heat of his body’s own bio-production. He was burning up, a furnace contained within a tailored charcoal suit that suddenly felt two sizes too small.He hadn't ingested the catalyst in over forty-eight hours, and the crash was no longer coming—it was eating him alive.The door to the office swished open, but he didn't need to turn to know who it was. The atmosphere shifted from oppressive to frigid. The Architect entered, a shadow in human shape, clutching a medical-grade injector that glimmered with a viscous, indigo light."You look haggard, Anji," the Architect remarked, his voice a serrated whisper. He crossed the room, his eyes scanning Anji with the detached interest of an entomologist studying a pinned insect. "T
The pressure in the executive lounge was tectonic. It wasn't the air conditioning that made the walls feel like they were closing in; it was the suffocating concentration of the M-ESSENCE radiating from Anji, saturating every cubic inch of space. Randy—once the suave, entitled rival who had scoffed at Anji’s existence—was currently on his hands and knees on the thick-pile rug, his suit trousers damp, his face a mosaic of humiliation and ravenous craving."Look at you, Randy," Anji said, his voice dropping to a register that bypassed reason and tapped directly into the primitive, lizard-brain responses of anyone within hearing range. Anji was leaning against the bar, swirling a tumbler of untouched whiskey, his golden-flecked eyes fixed on his rival. "Six months ago, you wouldn't have stood in the same room as me unless you were handing out reprimands."Randy trembled, his head lolling as if the simple act of keeping his neck straight required Herculean effort. His skin, pale and sweat
The fluorescent lights in the penthouse conference room were a mockery of natural order, casting a surgical, clinical glow over the chaos. Anji sat at the center of a black obsidian table, his fingers tracing the edge of a new document. He was, to the casual observer, a picture of corporate calm. Beneath the tailored wool of his blazer, however, his veins felt like conduits of liquid electricity.Arga was gone, relegated to the outer office, tasked with “clearing the schedule”—a polite euphemism for suppressing the memories of the night before. Across the table sat Broto, the logistics kingpin whose massive, bear-like presence seemed to dwarf the room. Beside him sat He Sanaa, the Architect’s personal viper, his eyes flicking toward Anji with a curiosity that felt like an incision.“You’ve been busy, Anji,” Broto rumbled, his gravelly voice vibrating the crystal decanter on the table. He didn't look like the man who had signed the merger under a hypnotic daze; the influence was waning
The heavy mahogany door to the executive suite hummed, sealing in the volatile pressure building within the office like the core of a reactor gone critical. Outside, Miki and Dave stood paralyzed against the glass partition, their flashlights forgotten on the floor, their gazes glued to the sight of Arga—the firm's iron-fisted ruler—collapsing into a primal, shattered mess beneath the touch of the man he once considered his plaything. Inside the room, the scent of the M-ESSENCE had thickened into a physical weight. It was sweet, cloying, and carried a metallic bite that turned the air humid with synthetic desire. Anji held Arga with a strength that belied his slighter frame. His eyes were no longer those of a weary office worker; they were vast, obsidian voids reflecting the chilling calm of the Architect standing in the corner. "I need more," Arga wheezed, his suit jacket torn open, his white dress shirt stained with sweat and the residue of the previous encounter. He clawed at Anj

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