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Chapter 38 - Controlled Distance

Author: HG
last update publish date: 2026-05-31 23:40:38

The restriction didn’t come as an announcement, It arrived as procedure.

By morning, my schedule had been revised without consultation. Meetings removed. Access narrowed. A polite reshaping of my role into something observational rather than participatory. Marcus didn’t need to confront me. Systems did it for him.

I recognized the tactic immediately. Reduce visibility without provoking resistance. Create distance while maintaining plausible courtesy. Lucian noticed as well.

“You’re being sidelined,” he said quietly when we crossed paths in the corridor.

“Not erased,” I replied. “There’s a difference.”

“For now.”

He hesitated. “This puts us in a difficult position.”

“It puts us in an honest one,” I said. “They’re afraid of alignment.”

His gaze sharpened. “They should be.”

The day unfolded with artificial calm. Staff remained polite. Smiles measured. No one mentioned the changes, which meant everyone had noticed.

By afternoon, the weight of isolation began to settle, not emotionally, but strategically. I was being watched less closely in some ways, more in others. Distance was a test, and tests invited response.

I didn’t seek Lucian out that evening. That was deliberate. Instead, I positioned myself where observation flowed naturally, common spaces, open corridors, places where neutrality was expected. If they wanted me contained, I would become unremarkable, and unremarkable was dangerous.

In the library, a junior analyst lingered longer than necessary near my table. Nervous. Curious.

“Did the board meeting go as badly as they’re saying?” he asked finally, voice low.

I didn’t look up. “Who’s saying that?”

He swallowed. “No one officially.”

“Then don’t listen to unofficial narratives,” I said calmly. “They’re designed to travel faster than truth.”

He nodded, chastened, and moved on.

By nightfall, I sensed it, the subtle shift in rhythm. Marcus was repositioning pieces. Lucian joined me on the terrace after dinner, his presence quiet but deliberate.

“You’re adapting faster than expected,” he said.

“I don’t have the luxury of hesitation.”

His gaze softened briefly. “That’s what concerns me.”

I turned toward him. “You don’t need to protect me by distancing yourself.”

“I’m not,” he said. “I’m protecting the structure.”

“And if the structure breaks?”

His jaw tightened. “Then we rebuild.”

The pause between us carried more than strategy.

“You didn’t come find me today,” he added.

“No.”

“Good,” he said after a beat. “They’re monitoring patterns.”

“I know.”

We stood in silence, the space between us intentional, measured, controlled. A shadow moved near the edge of the garden. It was Marcus. He didn’t approach. He observed from a distance designed to be noticed.

Lucian’s posture shifted subtly. Alert. Ready. Marcus inclined his head slightly, a gesture meant only for Lucian. Acknowledgment. Then he turned and walked away.

Lucian exhaled slowly. “He’s testing boundaries.”

“So are we,” I said.

“He’ll force a choice soon.”

“I’m prepared.”

Lucian turned to face me fully now. “Are you prepared for the version of me that choice may require?”

The question wasn’t rhetorical.

“Yes,” I said without hesitation.

That answer didn’t relax him, It sharpened his focus.

“Then stay unpredictable,” he said. “Stay visible enough to matter, distant enough to avoid capture.”

I nodded. “And you?”

“I’ll do what I do best,” he replied quietly. “Move where he doesn’t expect.”

As he left, the distance between us closed only after he was gone. Controlled distance, I realized, wasn’t absence. It was restraint. And restraint, when shared was its own kind of bond.

Somewhere inside the estate, Marcus recalculated again. He had underestimated silence, and he had misunderstood distance, because the space between Lucian and me wasn’t weakness, It was strategy.

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