LOGINNaomi’s Pov The end didn’t arrive with ceremony. No speeches. No applause. No moment where someone declared it finished and meant it. It ended the way most real things do quietly, with the understanding that whatever had been holding everything together had finally let go. I felt it when I woke up and didn’t reach for my phone first. That alone told me something had changed. Cassian was already up, standing by the window with a mug in his hand, staring out at the city like he was memorizing it. Not planning. Not scanning. Just looking. “You didn’t wake me,” I said. He glanced over his shoulder. “You needed the sleep.” “So did you.” He nodded once. “I got enough.” I sat up slowly, the weight of the last few months settling into my body in a way that didn’t hurt anymore. Not gone. Just… placed somewhere it could exist without crushing me. “They finalized everything,” he said. I didn’t ask what everything meant. We both knew. “Public record?” I asked. “Yes.” “No revisions?
Naomi’s Pov Iconic moments don’t announce themselves. They arrive quietly, heavy, like the air before rain, when you know something is about to change but you don’t yet know how much will be left standing when it’s over. The morning after we finished felt like that. Not relief. Not victory. Just stillness with consequences. I woke to Cassian already dressed, sitting at the edge of the bed, elbows on his knees, staring at nothing. He didn’t look tense. He looked resolved. That was different. Tension meant waiting. The resolution meant the waiting was over. “They’re moving,” he said without turning around. “Who?” I asked, though I already knew. “Everyone,” he replied. “Some away. Some forward. Some pretended they were never involved.” I sat up and wrapped the sheet around myself. “And us?” He finally looked at me. “We’re standing where we said we would.” That mattered more than anything else he could’ve said. The fallout came in layers. Not dramatic headlines. Not siren
Naomi’s Pov The last thing to surface is always truth. Not the kind people announce. The kind that crawls out when there’s nowhere left to hide it. I felt that shift the morning after the point of no return, when the building woke slower, like everyone was waiting to see who would move first. Cassian didn’t rush. He stood at the window, jacket still on, coffee untouched on the table. He looked composed, but I could see the tension in the way he held himself, like he was carrying a map in his head and choosing which roads to burn. “They’re bleeding credibility,” he said without turning around. I wrapped my arms around myself, the chill settling in my bones. “That doesn’t stop people from trying to control the story.” “No,” he agreed. “It just makes them sloppy.” Sloppy was dangerous. By midmorning, the first mistake surfaced. A document leaked too early. Not redacted enough. Names crossed wires that were never supposed to touch. Someone had tried to bury a detail and only ma
Naomi’s Pov Once something breaks in public, there’s no clean way to repair it. You can patch. You can deny it. You can rename what everyone already saw. But you can’t unsee it. And you can’t pretend the cracks weren’t always there, waiting for the right pressure. That’s what the next forty-eight hours felt like. Not chaos. Not resolution. Exposure. I woke before the alarms that morning, the building still dim and quiet, my body already braced like it knew what kind of day this would be. Cassian was awake too, sitting on the edge of the bed, phone in his hand, expression unreadable “They’re scrambling,” he said without looking up. I sat up, pulling the sheet around my shoulders. “How badly?” “Enough that they’re contradicting each other,” he replied. “Enough that they’ve stopped coordinating.” That mattered. Coordination was how they hid. When it fell apart, mistakes followed. By the time we stepped into the main corridor, the building was alive with low movement. People spea
Naomi’s Pov The escalation didn’t explode. It fractured. That was the part I hadn’t expected. I’d braced for a collision, for a moment where everything came at once and forced a single, clean response. Instead, it splintered into pieces that cut from different angles, each small enough to deny, each sharp enough to draw blood. I felt it before anyone said anything. The building woke up tense. Not alert. Not cautious. Tense in the way people get when they know something has tipped and they’re pretending it hasn’t. Conversations stopped when I entered rooms, then resumed too quickly. Smiles stayed in place half a second too long. It was the look of people who were calculating what it would cost to stay neutral and deciding neutrality was no longer safe. Cassian noticed before I spoke. He always did. “They’ve started choosing,” he said quietly as we stood near the window. “Yes,” I replied. “And pretending they haven’t.” He nodded. “That’s when it gets ugly.” The first confirmat
Naomi’s Pov The thing about taking control is that it never comes without consequence. I felt it the morning after I took the floor, when the building woke up sharper than usual. Not louder. Sharper. Like everyone had decided where they stood and was waiting to see who blinked first. I didn’t blink. I sat at the table with my coffee and read through the overnight summaries. Neutral language. Clean phrasing. But underneath it all, I could see the shift. People weren’t pretending anymore. They were choosing sides quietly and calling it pragmatism. Cassian stood near the window, phone pressed to his ear, listening more than speaking. His posture was still controlled, but I could tell by the way his jaw tightened that the calls weren’t friendly. When he finished, he crossed the room and set the phone down face-up. No new messages. That alone was telling. “They’re pulling back,” he said. “From what?” I asked. “From cooperation,” he replied. “Not openly. Just enough to slow everyth
Naomi’s Pov The day started like it was pretending nothing had changed. Emails. Calls. Quiet conversations that stopped when Cassian walked into the room. People trying not to look at us together while absolutely looking at us together. I noticed the shift right away. The way eyes tracked moveme
Naomi’s Pov The threat didn’t announce itself. It slipped in through routine. I felt it in the way conversations shifted when I entered a room. Not silence this time, but something more deliberate. People choose words carefully. Watching reactions. Measuring distance like it meant something aga
Naomi’s Pov I didn’t know it was going to happen that day. If I had, I might’ve braced for it. Or talked myself out of it. Or tried to control how it landed. But the truth is, the moment only worked because it wasn’t planned. Because it came from pressure and choice colliding at the same time.
Naomi’s Pov The noise hit before the air did. Cameras shouted my name as if it were something they owned now. Questions overlapped. Someone stepped too close. Someone else yelled louder like volume meant access. Cassian didn’t grab me. He didn’t pull me. He stepped half a pace ahead and created







