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The First Day After

Author: Januar Storm
last update publish date: 2026-04-29 09:48:03

Marcus POV

Faraz dropped me at the house at six-forty-one AM.

I had not slept. I do not, in operational windows, sleep I have a body trained, across four years and twenty kills, to absorb a single night of deep concentration without immediate consequence and to compensate the next night with a long forced unconsciousness pharmacologically assisted if necessary. I had taken nothing. I would not. The body would handle Wednesday the way the body had been built to handle Wednesdays.

What the body had not been built to handle was the specific quality of the morning I walked through to my front door.

The street was Brooklyn Heights at first light. The sky over the river was beginning to thin from the steel of pre-dawn into the pewter of an actual cold November day.

There was a man walking a dog two doors down. A woman with a stroller across the street. The specific beginning of an ordinary Wednesday morning in a wealthy neighborhood, and I was walking up the steps of my house at six forty-one with the velvet case containing the silver Bauta in my coat pocket and the hour-long memory of a woman’s hand over mine on her thigh in the foreground of every functioning thought I had.

I went inside.

I did the things a man does when he has come home from a long night.

I took the case from my pocket and locked it back in the cabinet behind the bookshelf in the study. I put the operational gear in the laundry mechanism that did the cleaning I required without sending anything to a third-party service. I showered. I changed. I made coffee in the small kitchen on the parlor floor and I drank it standing at the window of the kitchen, looking at the part of the river I could see between two of my neighbors’ buildings, for the entire duration of the cup.

I did not sit down.

I had a meeting at ten-thirty.

Before the meeting I went to the study and I verified the breadcrumbs.

The phone ping in Albany had registered at 5:42 AM on schedule, on the correct tower, on the correct cell ID. The Visa charge in Rhinebeck had registered at 6:18 — the BP gas station’s system had captured the transaction with the specific time stamp my software had generated. Both data points would now sit in the public-facing record of Derek Calloway’s last known activity, available to any detective who pulled the records, presenting the same internally consistent picture to anyone who looked.

I closed the verification dashboard.

I opened the Calloway file in the queue.

Across four years and twenty cases, I had developed a closing protocol a final entry I made in each file at the conclusion of an intervention. The entry had three fields.

‘Outcome,’ ‘Confidence,’ and ‘Notes.’ Outcome was binary: complete or aborted. Confidence was a numerical estimate, on a scale of one to ten, of the operational quality of the intervention. Notes was a free-text field.

I had, in seventeen of the previous twenty cases, populated the Notes field with the same six-word entry: ‘No further intervention required.’

I populated the fields.

Outcome: complete.

Confidence: nine.

I did not write ‘ten’ because the intervention had not, by my standard, been operationally clean I had moved the schedule up. I had worn the Bauta when operational logic did not call for it. I had pulled audio I had not been planning to pull. I had let the wife of the target speak to me in her own house for ninety-one minutes. None of these were errors that would surface in a forensic review. All of them were errors of *protocol,* and the protocol was mine, and I noted the deviations honestly.

In Notes, I did not write ‘No further intervention required.’

I wrote: ‘File closed. Subject’s spouse Saoirse Boyle (née) has been removed from active consideration. Future operational adjacency to subject’s spouse is forbidden.’

I read the entry once.

I closed the file.

The Calloway case was, by my own protocol, now permanently archived.

Then I did something I had not done in four years.

I opened a folder on a separate machine a personal machine, not part of the queue infrastructure, not part of any Arbitr AI system and I created a new file.

The file did not have the case-template structure of the queue files. It was not a case. It was a folder, and the folder had a single document in it, and the document had nothing in it but a name at the top.

Saoirse Boyle.

I sat at the desk and I looked at the document for a long time.

I did not know yet what I was going to do with it. I did not know what I was going to put in it. I knew only that I had, three hours after closing one file on her, opened a different one, and that the opening of the second file was not an operational decision and was not a security decision and was not, in any sense I could articulate, a decision I had reasons for.

It was a thing I had done.

I had done it because she existed and I was a man who had, for four years, organized everything in his life by creating files for it.

I closed the document.

I left the file in the folder. I did not, that morning, add anything to it.

I made a note that the absence of the addition was itself a piece of information about my own state I would, at some future point when I had the capacity, examine.

At nine fifty-two AM Faraz pulled up to the house.

I came down the steps. I got into the back of the SUV. He pulled away from the curb without speaking.

In the rearview mirror, I caught him looking at me.

Once. Briefly. Not the sustained look from last night when I had told him ‘Tuesday.’ A different look — the small daily evaluative glance of a driver checking his employer’s condition before a working morning, the same glance he had given me a thousand times across seven years and which I had never previously understood was an inquiry.

This morning the glance carried a question.

I gave him the answer he was asking for, in the small economical way our shorthand permitted.

I said: “Regular day, Faraz. The office. Then home.”

He said: “Yes, Mr. Reed.”

The glance left the mirror.

I had told him, in five words, that I was operational, that no further site work was scheduled, and that the events of last night were now a thing both of us were going to carry forward in the silent accord we had developed across seven years.

He understood.

He drove me to Dumbo.

The Arbitr office at ten thirty was the Arbitr office at any other ten thirty.

Lena had a product review for me. The team had been working on a model retraining pass against the demographic-parity audit data, and they wanted my sign-off on the parameter adjustments. I sat in the conference room with five engineers and Lena and a junior designer whose name I had to think about for two seconds before I got it correctly. I gave my full attention to the slides. I asked the questions I would have asked on any other Wednesday morning. I approved what I approved and I sent back what I sent back. The meeting took fifty-three minutes.

Halfway through, a slide came up that referenced the harm-trajectory model.

Lena said, gesturing at a curve on the projected screen, “This is the spousal-fatality projection across the seventy-two month observation window.”

I looked at the curve.

I did not, while looking at it, picture a specific woman.

I want to be clear about that. I did not picture her. I had, in the moment of the slide appearing, a sufficient operational discipline that the file I had closed three hours earlier did not surface. The slide was data. The data was the data. I responded to it as the founder of a company would respond.

But I did notice, at the end of the meeting when the engineers had filed out, that I had been gripping the cap of my pen a little too tightly for the last twenty minutes.

I noted the grip.

I did not file it.

Faraz drove me home at four-eleven PM.

I went up to the study.

I did not open the new folder.

I had decided, in the SUV on the way home, that I was going to allow the folder to exist in my system, untouched, for some indeterminate period of time a kind of mathematical fast to verify that opening it had been a discrete event with no recurrence, and not the first instance of a behavior I would, if I did not intercept it, find myself repeating.

I sat at my desk and I read for two hours.

I did not read about her. I read about other things. A paper on multi-source data fusion. An academic article on the computational ethics of predictive intervention. A short piece in the Harvard Business Review on management succession in mission-driven companies, which I had been considering, in a low-priority way, for some months.

At eleven-oh-three PM I closed the books.

I opened the folder.

I added one item to the document.

Below her name, on the second line, I wrote a single sentence.

*She bought herself white tulips at a bodega on Day Three.*

I closed the document. I closed the folder. I put the laptop to sleep. I went to bed.

I had, at no point in the day, admitted to myself what the folder was for.

I did not need to.

I had, in the last twelve hours, become a man who kept a file.

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