Mag-log inSebastian Mason arrived at 8:30 a.m. sharp.
As always. He appreciated rhythm. Structure. Routine. So when he turned the corner into his office and spotted the new addition to the creative wing — Katherine Brown — already seated, already typing, already talking to herself, he mentally re-evaluated his expectations for the day. She was wearing orange. Again. Bright, unapologetic, eye-watering orange. Her shoes were even brighter. He sighed and kept walking. --- Katherine was mid-rant — to her laptop, not a person. “If the button’s going to be that small, why put ‘D******d all’ on it? That’s just UX cruelty.” She wasn’t whispering. She never whispered. But when she spotted Mr. Mason pass by her glass wall, she snapped her fingers twice at herself. “Right. Serious. Grown-up. Shhh.” She added a smiley face next to the word “shhh” on her notes. Because, really, some things needed color. --- The creative team was small. Katherine was still learning names. So far she had: Mark, the intern who feared fonts. Dana, the copywriter who whispered everything. And Claire, the designer with stress-induced eye twitches. Katherine, by contrast, had brought in her own mini cactus, her own Bluetooth speaker (volume low, promise), and a whole drawer full of candy no one had asked for — but everyone had raided. “You’re a lot,” Claire said that morning, watching her unwrap a fourth yellow highlighter. “In a good way. I think.” “You say that like it’s a diagnosis,” Katherine grinned. “I prefer the term ‘stimulus-rich.’” --- At 10:00 a.m., she was called into a review session. Mr. Mason was there. So were three other team leads. Katherine entered with her notepad, two pens, and a printout of her revised concept board — annotated, marked, peppered with small stars in the corners. Not for flair. For clarity. Sebastian didn’t look up right away. When he did, it was brief. Assessing. “Miss Brown,” he said flatly, “your edits were delivered later than projected.” “But still before the deadline,” she replied, setting down her copy, “and with sparkles of brilliance.” “We do not measure productivity in sparkles.” “Pity.” The room was silent. Then someone coughed. Katherine didn’t flinch. “I’ve also brought two alternatives. One more conservative, one more daring. In case you’re feeling bold today.” He didn’t dignify that with a response. Just opened the file and began flipping through. --- He said very little during the session. Just notes. Quick, technical. Precise. She answered with diagrams. Motion. Ink. Color. He circled something once. A red arrow too large. “Scale down. This isn’t a billboard.” “It could be,” she said brightly. “Someday.” “Today is not someday.” --- After the meeting, Katherine stayed behind to collect her materials. No one asked her to — she just couldn’t bear leaving her purple pen behind. Sebastian stood by the window, typing something on his phone. She hesitated for a moment, then walked past him to grab a forgotten folder. “You know,” she said, not looking at him, “you’re kind of terrifying.” “I’m not here to comfort anyone.” “Yeah, I got that.” She zipped her bag. “But it might help to blink once in a while. You know — show you're alive.” Still no reaction. She left. --- He didn’t watch her go. But the scent of something citrusy lingered in the room for longer than he cared to admit. He erased it from his focus. Then opened her concept file again — alone. And this time, he noticed that the margins were lined with sticky tabs… labeled by fruit flavors. --- He stared at the tabs a moment longer. Strawberry. Grape. Lime. Each color coordinated to a different section of her pitch. Utterly unprofessional. Annoyingly methodical. It irritated him how thorough she was. Sebastian closed the file, shut the laptop, and stood. He needed air. Or caffeine. Possibly both. --- Downstairs, Katherine had started what she called her “Unofficial Team Reboot”. It involved: Candy (gummy bears in labelled jars), Sharpies (color-coded by intensity of deadlines), And a printed sign over her desk that read: “We Can Do Hard Things (But We Prefer Doing Fun Things First).” Claire stared at the sign in visible distress. “You’re going to give Mason a heart attack.” “He needs the cardio,” Katherine replied, unwrapping a caramel. “You’ve seen how still he stands? Like he’s buffering internally.” “He’ll fire you.” “For printing joy? That’s a lawsuit waiting to happen.” She winked. The others chuckled quietly — still cautious. But she saw it: the tension in the room was softening. Her chaos was spreading. Slowly. Just the way she liked it. --- Later that day, she joined the internal task force review. She was five minutes early. Again. Sebastian entered last, glanced around the table, eyes barely landing on anyone — until they hit the end of the table, where Katherine had placed… a small bowl of lollipops. No explanation. No context. Just a bowl. Right next to the quarterly charts. “What is this?” he asked sharply, stopping in front of her. “Morale support,” she replied cheerfully. “Also, statistically, sugar improves focus.” “We don’t conduct analysis over snacks.” “Then you’re missing out. Cinnamon-flavored data is far more palatable.” He didn’t respond. He just picked up the bowl and moved it to the edge of the table — closer to himself. But not in reach. Katherine blinked. Did he just confiscate candy? --- The meeting was painfully dull. Numbers. Ratios. Trajectory projections. All things Katherine could make sense of, but not enjoy. So she doodled in the margins of her printouts. Not cartoons. Not jokes. Just patterns. Lines, stars, tiny repeating arrows pointing toward things that didn’t exist. At one point, Sebastian glanced over from across the table. His brow tightened — just slightly — when he saw her sketching. “Miss Brown. Your attention.” “Fully present,” she replied, without looking up. “Then stop drawing.” “It’s cognitive engagement.” “It’s distraction.” She met his eyes. Calm. “Some of us just process differently.” There was a pause. Sharp, but silent. He didn’t argue. But he didn’t look away right away either. Then: “Proceed.” --- By the time the meeting ended, the rest of the team dispersed like smoke. No one stayed longer than necessary. Katherine, however, lingered. Not to provoke. Just to collect her notes. And because, frankly, she hated rushing. Sebastian remained seated at the head of the table, scanning through minutes on his tablet. She didn’t speak. Until— “You ever think maybe people are just… wired different?” He looked up slowly. “Define ‘people.’” “Everyone. Me. You. That guy from analytics who always eats lunch exactly at 12:17.” “That’s discipline.” “That’s a ritual. Big difference.” He didn’t answer. She grabbed her folder. “Anyway,” she added, stepping back toward the door, “if you ever want to try one of those lollipops, I’m partial to the sour ones. Builds character.” He looked back down. “I don’t eat candy.” “Tragic,” she whispered. And left. --- An hour later, back at her desk, Katherine found an envelope. No note. No name. Inside? One cinnamon lollipop. Unwrapped. Sealed. She glanced around. Everyone looked busy. Innocent. Too innocent. She smiled to herself, tucked it into her drawer — and didn’t say a word. --- Upstairs, Sebastian rechecked his schedule. Meetings. Calls. Numbers. And something unexpected: “Creative Check-In: Katherine Brown — Thursday 5:30 p.m.” He didn’t remember scheduling it. He certainly didn’t approve it. But there it was. Blocked. Recurring. Weekly. He closed his calendar. Stared at the screen. And said, out loud, to absolutely no one: “Unacceptable.” But he didn’t delete it. ---Morning begins with a calendar invitation. Not marked «Urgent.» Not marked «Confidential.» Just a simple notification appearing on Katherine's screen while she is halfway through her first email. 9:00 a.m. — Human Resources Subject: Internal Procedure Review She studies it for a second. No explanation. No agenda. Just thirty minutes reserved with the Head of Human Resources. She frowns slightly. That isn't normal. Not because HR never requests meetings. Because they almost always explain why. Across the office, the HQ Floor is already settling into another workday. Phones ring softly. Someone laughs near the coffee station. Sophie walks briskly between departments with three folders balanced against one arm. Everything looks ordinary. Which somehow makes the meeting invitation feel even stranger. Sebastian glances toward her office through the glass wall. Their eyes meet briefly. He notices the slight crease between her brows. He sends a short message. "Everything okay?"
The first sign that Mercer’s roundtable is becoming something larger arrives before Katherine finishes her first coffee. The HQ Floor is still waking up. Monitors glow to life one by one. Conversations begin in quiet clusters near the coffee station. Somewhere across the office, someone is already arguing about a budget spreadsheet. Normal. Predictable. Exactly the kind of morning. Katherine appreciates. Which is why Sophie’s appearance in her doorway immediately feels suspicious. The assistant is carrying a tablet. Never a good sign. “Good morning,” Katherine says. Sophie glances down at the screen. “That depends.” Katherine sighs. “Wonderful.” Sophie steps inside and places the tablet on the desk. “Mercer’s attendance list.” That gets her attention. Immediately. Katherine reaches for the device and begins scrolling. At first, nothing seems unusual. A few Board members. A handful of governance specialists. Corporate attorneys. The sort of people who normally a
The morning begins normally. Which is precisely why Katherine notices the difference. The office settles into its usual rhythm around eight-thirty. Coffee cups appear. Monitors glow to life. Slack notifications flicker across screens like tiny electrical storms. People move through the HQ Floor carrying laptops, folders, unfinished conversations. Everything feels exactly the way it should. At first. Katherine is halfway through reviewing vendor revisions when she hears Sebastian's office door open. She glances up automatically. Not because she's monitoring him. Because she's become aware of him in the way people become aware of sunlight through a window — constant enough to stop being surprising. He steps into the corridor, phone already against his ear. His expression is calm. Focused. He doesn't look around to see who's watching. Doesn't lower his voice. Doesn't hide. He simply walks toward one of the quieter corners near the executive meeting rooms. Talking. Listening.
Morning arrives slowly again.Not dramatically. Not with urgency.Just light.It slips through the tall windows in thin pale lines, stretching across the unfinished living room floor and catching on the edges of half-opened boxes. Dust particles drift lazily in the air, illuminated for a moment before disappearing again.The house is still quiet.Not empty.Occupied.The silence feels lived in now.The temporary kitchen setup is little more than a counter, a kettle, and two mismatched mugs they bought yesterday because the store didn’t sell them separately. The cabinets are still empty. The refrigerator contains exactly three things: water, milk, and leftover takeout.But the space smells like coffee.Sebastian stands barefoot on the cold tile, sleeves rolled up, one hand resting on the counter while the kettle finishes heating. His hair is still slightly disordered from sleep. He looks less like the CEO of anything and more like a man who woke up somewhere unfamiliar and decided to m
Morning doesn’t rush in.It slips through the tall windows slowly, pale gold stretching across the bare floorboards, softening the sharp edges of the empty rooms. The house feels different in daylight — less mysterious, more honest. The walls don’t echo as loudly. The space doesn’t feel unfinished.It feels quiet.They are still on the floor.No blankets. No furniture. Just the cool expanse of wood beneath them and the warmth they created sometime between dusk and midnight.Katherine wakes first.Not fully at once — just enough to realize where she is. The unfamiliar ceiling above her. The slant of sunlight touching the far wall. The steady, grounded rise and fall beneath her cheek.Her head is resting on Sebastian’s chest.His arm is wrapped around her waist — not tightly, not possessively. Just there. Like it settled there hours ago and never considered leaving.The position looks accidental.It isn’t.She stays still for a moment, listening.His heartbeat is slow. Deep. Calm in a w
The door closes with a soft, almost careful click.Not a slam. Not a declaration. Just the quiet sound of something being sealed — a line crossed without ceremony.Katherine stays where she is, her back against the door, fingers still resting on the handle as if she hasn’t fully decided whether she’s arrived or merely paused. The house around them exists in half-light: tall windows catching the last gold of evening, empty rooms breathing softly, walls still unfamiliar enough to feel like a held breath.Sebastian doesn’t move.That’s the first thing she notices.No steps toward her. No instinct to fill the space. He lets the silence stretch, lets the quiet settle into the bones of the place like it belongs there. It’s a rare kind of restraint — not calculated, not strategic. Present.Katherine exhales slowly.Her voice, when it comes, is low. Thoughtful. Almost surprised by itself.“It’s strange,” she says.A pause.“Being alone somewhere that’s supposed to become… something.”The word
The first light of morning bled through the half-closed curtains, soft and golden, cutting faint lines across the floor. The city outside was barely awake, its noise still a rumor that hadn’t reached the penthouse yet. Katherine stirred first. The sheet slipped from her shoulder as she shifted on
The next morning unfolded with an almost deceptive calm.The city outside glimmered under a pale, early light — cool, washed clean after the night — and for the first time in days, Katherine didn’t wake with that familiar tightness in her chest. The echoes of yesterday — the uncertainty, the chaos,
The hallway outside the conference room still buzzed faintly with the echoes of footsteps, murmured speculation, the scrape of leather folders being carried away. But inside Sebastian’s temporary office, the silence was almost heavy.Katherine sank into one of the chairs near the desk, her tablet s
The morning sun had just begun to slant through the tall glass walls of the office floor when Katherine pushed open her door, balancing her coffee in one hand and scrolling absently through her phone with the other. She was already running through the day’s agenda in her head — client calls, a boar







