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Chapter 108 — The Decision

Author: Nanu20
last update publish date: 2026-04-27 00:00:07

The email didn’t come immediately.

Which meant it had already been decided.

By the time Oliver saw the notification, it wasn’t a discussion anymore.

It was confirmation.

He opened it without hesitation.

Subject line:

“Outcome of Preliminary Disciplinary Review.”

Direct.

Expected.

Still—

There was a pause before he scrolled.

Just a second.

Then—

He read.

Carefully.

Every word.

Because wording mattered.

“…sufficient grounds to proceed with interim disciplinary action…”

There it was.

Not final.

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  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 108 — The Decision

    The email didn’t come immediately.Which meant it had already been decided.By the time Oliver saw the notification, it wasn’t a discussion anymore.It was confirmation.He opened it without hesitation.Subject line:“Outcome of Preliminary Disciplinary Review.”Direct.Expected.Still—There was a pause before he scrolled.Just a second.Then—He read.Carefully.Every word.Because wording mattered.“…sufficient grounds to proceed with interim disciplinary action…”There it was.Not final.But not temporary either.Something in between.Calculated.“…pending full review…”“…effective immediately…”Oliver exhaled slowly.By the time he looked up—The room already felt different.Max noticed first.“What?” he asked.Oliver didn’t answer.He handed him the phone.Max read faster.His reaction wasn’t quiet.“You’ve got to be kidding me.”Sarah stood, already moving closer.“What is it?”Max looked up at her.“They’re suspending him.”The word hung in the air.Heavy.Final, even if it te

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 107 — The Hearing

    The room was designed to feel neutral.It didn’t.Everything about it was deliberate.The long table. The spacing. The positioning.Even the lighting—bright enough to expose, soft enough to pretend it wasn’t doing that.Oliver noticed all of it the moment he stepped in.Because details mattered here.Three members sat at the far end.Not the same faces from before.Higher level.More composed.Less interested in conversation.More interested in outcome.“Mr. Oliver.”The man at the center spoke first.Measured tone. Controlled pace.“Thank you for attending.”Oliver took his seat.“You scheduled it,” he replied.A pause.Brief.Then the man nodded slightly.“Yes.”Caspian sat to Oliver’s left.Still. Silent.Present.Max and Sarah sat just behind them.Not part of the panel.But close enough to witness everything.That mattered.“We will proceed,” the woman on the right said.No introductions again.No unnecessary framing.Straight into it.“You have been formally notified of the conc

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 106: Strategic Retaliation

    The response didn’t come immediately.That was the first sign.No rushed statements.No defensive reactions.No visible pushback.For two days—Nothing.And that was what made it worse.“They’re too quiet,” Max said, pacing again.It had become a habit now.Restless movement. Sharp turns. Short breaths.“They’re planning something,” he added.Sarah didn’t look up from her screen.“They’ve been planning something since before this started.”Max stopped.“Yeah, but now it’s different.”Caspian, leaning slightly against the wall, spoke without looking up.“Now it’s targeted.”Silence followed.Because they all felt it.The shift.Oliver sat at the table, fingers loosely interlocked, gaze steady.“They won’t attack the movement again,” he said.Max frowned.“What? Why not?”“Because it didn’t work,” Sarah answered.She finally turned her screen toward them.Graphs.Engagement data.Response trends.“The moment we shifted focus, they lost control of the narrative,” she continued. “If they

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 105 — Reclaiming the Narrative

    The room felt smaller.Not physically.But in presence.Fewer voices.Fewer movements.Only the ones who had chosen to stay.Oliver stood by the window, watching the campus below.People moved like nothing had changed.Like the ground beneath everything wasn’t quietly shifting.Behind him, the room carried a different kind of energy.Not scattered.Not uncertain.Condensed.Max sat forward, elbows on his knees, restless energy still in his system.Sarah leaned back slightly, her laptop open but untouched for once.Caspian stood near the table, arms folded, watching Oliver instead of the screen.No one spoke immediately.They didn’t need to.Everything from the past twenty-four hours still sat between them.The articles.The reactions.The silence from people who used to be loud.The weight of it all.Oliver exhaled slowly.Then turned.“We’re not responding to them.”Max frowned immediately.“What?”Sarah’s gaze sharpened slightly.“Explain.”Oliver stepped away from the window.“They

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 104: First Consequence

    The message came early.Too early for anything good.Oliver saw it before he was fully awake.A notification.Then another.Then several more.He frowned slightly, reaching for his phone.The brightness hit his eyes sharply.Messages.Dozens of them.Max.Sarah.Unknown numbers.Group threads.And one headline link sent three different times.That was the one he opened.The article loaded slowly.For a second, it was just text blocks and a blank image frame.Then everything snapped into place.“University Under Fire as Student Leader’s Background Raises Questions”Oliver stared at it.Not surprised.Not really.Just… seeing it.They had moved faster than expected.He scrolled.His name appeared within the first paragraph.Not unusual anymore.But this—This was different.The framing had shifted.Less about the movement.More about him.Selective details.Carefully arranged.His past.His identity.His connections.Pieces of truth.Turned into something else entirely.A narrative.He

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 103: Movement Divides

    The shift didn’t happen all at once.It would have been easier if it did.Easier to point to a moment. A reason. A clear break.But this—This was slower.Quieter.And far more dangerous.Oliver noticed it in the spaces between things.A message left unread longer than usual.A meeting that had fewer people than expected.A conversation that ended too quickly.At first, he told himself it was nothing.Fatigue.Stress.People catching their breath after everything that had happened.That made sense.Until it didn’t.“You’re seeing it too, right?”Max’s voice cut through the room, low but sharp.Oliver didn’t look up immediately from his laptop.“I’m seeing something.”Max let out a breath and ran a hand through his hair.“It’s not just something.”Sarah closed the door behind her as she walked in.“They’ve started pulling away.”That made Oliver look up.“Who?” he asked.Sarah didn’t answer right away.She walked over, set her tablet down on the table, and turned it toward him.Names.

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 70: The Line You Don’t Control

    The message came through just after noon.Oliver saw the sender and already knew it mattered.Office of Student AffairsHe opened it.Read it once.Then again.Max leaned slightly over the desk. “What is it?”Oliver turned the phone toward him.Short. Direct.

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 69: Inside the Noise

    The hallway outside Oliver’s room was quieter than the courtyard.Not empty—just less direct.People still looked.They just did it from a distance now.Oliver unlocked his door without stopping.Caspian followed him in.Max lingered outside for a second, glancing back down the hall before stepping

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 68: The Question Out Loud

    By midday, it stopped being subtle.Oliver noticed it the moment he stepped outside the council building.People weren’t pretending not to look anymore.They were looking.Openly.Phones in hand. Conversations cut short the second he passed. A few didn’t even bother lowering their voices.“…that’s

  • The Colors Of Resilience    Chapter 67: The Spread

    By morning, it wasn’t contained anymore.Oliver noticed it before anyone said anything.Not because of a message.Because of the pauses.Conversations that dipped when he walked past. People who looked up too quickly, then away like they hadn’t been watching him in the first

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