LOGINThe 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 sweating, betrayed a desperate, low-grade fever—the mark of someone who had tasted the byproduct of Anji’s volatility and found themselves hooked. "I don't... I don't give a damn about the past, Anji," Randy hissed, his breath hitching. "I just need the fix. You said if I cleaned up the files... if I took care of the ledger audits, you’d—"
"I’d give you the catalyst?" Anji finished the sentence with a thin, mocking smile. He sauntered over, the movement predatory. The sheer weight of the aura he projected made Randy cringe, a visible tremor of arousal and fear shuddering through his frame. "The problem with men like you, Randy, is that you always want a shortcut to power. You didn't realize the power came with a subscription f*e."
Anji kicked the heel of Randy’s shoe, forcing him to shift. "Strip. It’s hot in here."
"Anji, come on," Randy wheezed, his eyes watering, but his hands immediately flew to his tie. The internal rebellion was nonexistent. The drug didn't just sedate; it rewritten the software of his personality to view Anji as the only thing in the universe that mattered. As Randy clawed his silk tie away and fumbled with his cuffs, he didn't look like a disgruntled colleague. He looked like an addict offering up his dignity as a tribute.
He Sanaa was watching from the doorway, nursing a thin glass of vintage scotch. He leaned his shoulder against the doorframe, looking bored. "You’re breaking him quickly, Anji. Usually, these sorts require a bit more... technical conditioning before they get this pathetic."
"He’s not breaking," Anji countered, watching as Randy stripped to his undershirt, his movements clumsy and eager. "He’s finding his natural level."
Anji stood over him. He felt the cold, hard logic of the Architect’s training pressing against his own impulses. He could turn this into a symphony of pain, but he needed a clean signal. He reached down and tangled his fingers into Randy’s thinning hair, pulling his head back so their eyes met. The sheer surge of contact hit Anji like a jolt of pure voltage, the Essence in his bloodstream vibrating against the skin of the other man.
"You want it?" Anji whispered.
Randy’s moan was a pathetic, gurgling sound that resonated in the hollow space between his ribs. "God, yes. Please. Anything."
Anji didn't hold back. He gripped the edge of the leather lounge chair and braced himself, letting the adrenaline of his superiority wash over the man who had once tried to bury his career in the basement files. The interaction that followed was a violent, lopsided ritual—an interrogation conducted through skin and nerves. It wasn't merely the mechanics of the act that bound Randy; it was the way Anji channeled the residual electrical current of the drug through every touch, effectively ‘branding’ his rival’s nervous system with his own signature.
Every thrust of their physical connection felt like a neural overwrite. Randy bucked and cried out, his hands clawing at Anji’s ankles, his face buried into the soft velvet upholstery of the chair. He wasn't participating; he was undergoing a complete chemical lobotomy. Each groan he let out was a protest that immediately surrendered into a whimper of pleasure, the boundaries of his selfhood disintegrating under the overwhelming saturation of Anji’s presence.
He Sanaa began to hum a slow, discordant tune, moving into the room to watch the rhythm of the collapse. He noticed how Anji’s movements had become detached—mechanical, cold, and immensely powerful. The young man who had been terrified of his own shadow in the company archives was dead. What stood here was a beacon, a black hole around which everything—even hatred—orbited in submission.
"Watch the pupils," Sanaa whispered to himself, taking a sip of scotch. "Total neural entrainment. The frontal lobe is off the map."
When the climax hit, it was a blinding, suffocating rush of static for both of them. Anji felt his consciousness ripple, his senses expanding until he could almost hear the cooling system in the floorboards and the heartbeat of every soul in the hallway. For Randy, it was an total erasure. When his body went slack and he tumbled off the side of the chair, his eyes stayed open, glazed over with a dazed, infantile worship that made it impossible to recognize him as the man he had been an hour ago.
Randy crawled to Anji’s feet, panting, reaching up to rest his chin on Anji’s shoe. He looked shattered, refined, and entirely subservient. "More," Randy breathed, his tongue dry.
Anji wiped his hands on a nearby silk handkerchief, his expression unbothered by the state of his rival. He looked down at the puddle of sweat and broken ego on his floor. "That’s enough for today. Go get dressed, finish the data wipe on the logistics servers, and then get to the briefing room. If you can keep your mouth shut, I might let you touch me again on Friday."
Randy scrambled up, his eyes glassy and brimming with a manic, terrified loyalty. "Yes, sir. Thank you. Thank you, Anji." He sprinted for the door, stumbling twice but recovering with a speed born of pure anxiety, disappearing into the dark corridor.
He Sanaa stood up, setting his glass on the bar. "You’ve turned the entire middle management into your personal playthings, Anji. I suspect by the end of the month, no one will even be able to sign a paycheck without feeling an impulse to drop to their knees first."
Anji didn't look at him. He moved to the mirror and studied his own face. The light in his eyes didn't look human anymore. The exhaustion was there, sure, but it was buried under the weight of his own godhood. "The efficiency of the company has increased by forty-two percent, Sanaa. If I have to break a few minds to ensure the engine runs smooth, so be it."
"The Architect is coming to observe the regional launch," Sanaa added, stepping close enough to sense the static rolling off Anji’s skin. "He’s pleased. But remember—even anchors can drift if they start believing they own the sea."
Anji laughed—a sound as sharp and hollow as glass. "I don't own the sea. I just make sure the waves are moving in my direction."
He turned away from the mirror, his gaze hardening as he contemplated the sheer volume of resources he now commanded. Arga was a shell. Broto was an addict. And Randy? Randy was now a drone who would execute any code Anji uploaded into his consciousness. The 'Breaking Point' hadn't been a tragedy; it was just the prologue.
"Let’s start the integration phase," Anji said, his voice ringing with a cold, terrifying authority. "I’m done with the local play-testing. It’s time to expand the market."
Sanaa bowed—a half-hearted, mocking gesture—and followed him toward the office. The hallway was empty, the dim lights creating long, haunting shadows, but Anji walked as if the path had been illuminated just for him. His nervous system, now constantly hummed by the residual, pulsating warmth of his own chemistry, felt steady for the first time. The terror was gone. There was only the hunger, the control, and the intoxicating, beautiful realization that there was nobody left in this building—or perhaps, this city—who could tell him no.
As they reached the heavy double doors of the boardroom, Anji hesitated for a fraction of a second. The memories of his past self—the one who cared about respect, career advancement, and a stable salary—flickered like a failing bulb. He exhaled a sharp breath of ozonated air and shoved the memories into the dark. The doors swung open to reveal an empty room, a blank slate for his next conquest.
He didn't just feel ready; he felt inevitable.
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