LOGINThe steel doors rattled in their tracks as the elevator descended, but the silence inside the small metal box was deafening. Anji pressed his back against the cool wall, his chest heaving with shallow, jagged breaths. The sensation of Arga’s hand against the door was still vibrating in his mind, a lingering ghost of pressure that made his own skin prickle with an uncomfortable, crawling heat. He looked at his reflection in the mirrored panel. He appeared pale, his eyes wide and glassy, and a sheen of cold sweat coated his forehead. The high of the board meeting was completely gone. In its place was a hollow, aching emptiness that gnawed at his gut, an agonizing hunger that felt like his nervous system was unspooling.
The elevator hit the ground floor with a soft chime. Anji stumbled out into the lobby. The building was vast, filled with the hum of climate control and the distant clicking of keyboards. He felt like a fever patient wandering through a blizzard. Every sound was too loud. The chatter of the receptionists sounded like glass breaking, and the scent of floor wax made his stomach churn with nausea. He gripped his briefcase so tightly that his knuckles turned bloodless. He needed to get home. He needed to be in a dark, quiet place where he could try to wait out the crash.
"Anji," a voice barked from behind him.
Anji froze. He knew that voice. It was sharp, aggressive, and currently laced with an unrecognizable layer of agitation. He slowly turned around. Randy was standing near the elevators, his tie loosened and his face flushed an angry shade of red. He looked disheveled. The arrogance he usually projected was cracked, replaced by a jagged, confused vulnerability.
"What do you want, Randy?" Anji asked. His voice was thin and brittle. He felt a wave of dizziness wash over him and had to lock his knees to stay upright.
Randy stepped forward, his eyes fixed on Anji with an intensity that bordered on violence. "What did you do in that meeting? Everyone is looking at me like I am a ghost. And you," Randy stopped, his chest heaving as he closed the gap between them. "Why do you look like you are dying? You should be celebrating."
Anji tried to sidestep him, but Randy blocked his path, reaching out to shove him against the cold marble wall of the lobby. The impact sent a jolt of pain through Anji’s shoulder, but the contact was like a spark hitting gasoline. Anji’s breath caught in his throat. The moment Randy’s hands touched his jacket, the agony in his nervous system suddenly sharpened into something else. It was as if the drug, starved for physical input, was now feeding on the conflict. The burning pain in his skin vanished, replaced by an electric, agonizingly sweet sensation that flooded his brain.
"Get off me," Anji gasped, though his body betrayed him by leaning into the pressure.
Randy didn't let go. He looked down at Anji, his own pupils dilated to near-total blackness. The anger on his face was warring with a raw, primal bewilderment. He seemed just as confused by his own actions as Anji was by the sensation. "I hate you," Randy whispered, his voice shaking. "I have wanted to ruin you for months. But right now, looking at you... I cannot think of anything else. I want to hurt you, but I also want to make sure you never leave this hallway."
Anji felt his mind fogging over. The M-ESSENCE was demanding more. It was no longer satisfied with the mental manipulation of the boardroom. It needed friction. It needed a release to stabilize the chemical imbalance that was tearing his cells apart. He felt his hands move on their own, clutching the lapels of Randy’s expensive suit, pulling him closer.
"You are a snake, Randy," Anji said, his words slurred and breathy. He wasn't thinking about the promotion or the rivalry anymore. He was thinking about the way Randy’s heart was hammering against his own chest, the way the man’s scent of cologne and fear was suddenly the most intoxicating thing he had ever encountered.
Randy growled, a low, guttural sound that vibrated through the air. He pinned Anji harder against the marble, his hands moving from Anji’s shoulders to his neck, his thumbs pressing into the sensitive skin below his jaw. The touch was aggressive, borderline sadistic, but it was exactly what Anji’s screaming nerves required to stop the convulsive trembling. Anji arched his back, a choked sound escaping his lips, his head falling back against the wall.
"What is happening to us?" Randy asked, his face hovering inches from Anji’s. His eyes were wide, wet with frustration. He looked like a man who had lost his mind. "I should be hitting you, but I feel like I need to hold you until you stop shaking."
Anji didn't answer. He couldn't. The world had narrowed down to the heat of Randy’s body and the crushing, rhythmic pressure of his grip. He felt a surge of pure, unadulterated desire that he knew was entirely synthetic, a byproduct of the poison in his blood, but it didn't matter. The pain of the withdrawal was fading, drowned out by the rising tide of artificial pheromones. He let his head fall forward, his lips brushing the shell of Randy’s ear. He felt Randy flinch, his grip tightening until it almost bruised, a groan of surrender tearing from his throat.
They were a mess of tangled limbs and heavy, ragged breathing in the middle of the empty corporate lobby. The surveillance cameras were whirring above them, but neither of them cared. Anji felt his pulse syncing with Randy’s, a desperate, frantic rhythm that felt like the only anchor in his drowning world.
Suddenly, the lobby’s main doors swung open with a heavy, metallic bang. The sound of echoing footsteps cut through the silence like a gunshot.
"I believe," a cold, calm voice drawled from the doorway, "that this is neither the time nor the place for such an exhibition."
Anji shoved Randy away with a sudden, violent burst of strength, stumbling backward until his heels caught the edge of the rug. Randy reeled, his face turning from a deep, flushed red to an ashen, humiliated white. He looked toward the entrance, his hands still trembling.
Arga stood there, his coat draped over his arm, his expression one of bored, icy detachment. He walked toward them with the measured, predator grace of a man who owned the floor beneath his feet. He didn't look surprised. He looked disappointed, as if he had caught two children fighting over a broken toy.
"Randy, go home," Arga said, not even glancing at the man. "You are clearly unwell. I will deal with your incompetence in the morning."
Randy opened his mouth to protest, his eyes flickering between Arga and Anji, but the authority in Arga’s voice was absolute. He clutched his briefcase, stumbled, and then turned, fleeing toward the exit without a word.
Anji stood in the center of the lobby, his legs turning to lead. The sudden absence of Randy’s physical contact was like being ripped from a life-support machine. The withdrawal symptoms returned with a vicious, clawing intensity. The room began to spin. He grabbed the side of a reception desk, his fingers scraping across the wood.
Arga walked up to him, stopping just outside of touching distance. He reached out and caught Anji’s chin, forcing him to look up. Arga’s eyes were like ice, cold and depthless. He leaned in, his nose brushing against Anji’s temple as he inhaled deeply, his expression shifting from detached boredom to a fleeting, unrecognizable flicker of alarm.
"You smell like a chemical burn," Arga whispered, his voice dropping to a dangerous, low rasp. "And your heart rate is at a level that should have triggered a cardiac arrest by now. What did you take, Anji?"
Anji tried to pull away, but Arga’s grip on his jaw was firm, an iron restraint that wouldn't budge. He felt the electricity leaping between them, a stronger, more refined current than what he had felt with Randy. It hit him like a physical blow. He gasped, his vision blacking out at the edges as the chemical cocktail in his blood surged to meet the intensity of the man holding him.
Arga didn't release him. Instead, he pulled Anji closer, his eyes scanning Anji’s face as if he were reading a map of a disaster. "You are crashing," Arga noted, his tone devoid of pity, replaced by a chilling, clinical curiosity. "And you have no idea how to stop it, do you?"
Anji opened his mouth to speak, but the only thing that came out was a broken, desperate whimper. He looked at Arga, his eyes pleading for relief, for an end to the burning, for anything that would make the world stop moving. Arga’s cold mask slipped for a heartbeat, his gaze softening into something dark and hungry, but before he could react, the lobby lights flickered and died, leaving them in the total, suffocating darkness of the building’s power cycle. Anji felt Arga’s hand tighten on his jaw, pulling him into the shadows, his whisper vibrating against his skin.
"Then I suppose," Arga murmured, his breath cool against the feverish heat of Anji’s neck, "you have no choice but to let me guide you."
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







