The Holloway Project was the kind of initiative designed to impress the board: a multi-million-dollar systems overhaul that promised efficiency gains, cost savings, and an eventual glossy case study to circulate in industry journals. The stakes were high, deadlines unyielding, and George Holloway had been entrusted with shepherding it from blueprint to execution. Exactly the kind of work that suited him.
George approached projects like he approached everything else—methodical, deliberate, rooted in structure. Each phase was outlined in his mind: requirement gathering, stakeholder buy-in, risk assessments, redundancies. The scaffolding of order that kept chaos at bay.
But Mathew Evans treated the project as if it were a canvas. He filled whiteboards with sprawling diagrams, words circled three times in different colors, arrows pointing nowhere and everywhere. He cracked jokes in meetings that had junior analysts laughing when they should have been silent. He thrived in mess, pulling brilliance from it.
And the worst part? George couldn’t deny the brilliance.
At first, George tried to dismiss it—file it under youthful arrogance, the kind of audacity he’d always known Mathew possessed. But time and again, Mathew’s improvisations landed. His ideas weren’t only clever; they worked. And each time they did, George felt the ground shift beneath his carefully built control.
The tension grew quietly at first. A clipped word here, a tightened jaw there. By the second week, it simmered like static in the room, drawing eyes from the rest of the team. No one commented, but George knew they saw it. He hated that. He hated being seen at all.
It finally broke one evening.
The conference room was nearly empty, the hum of fluorescent lights the only witness. George stood at the head of the table, a print-out of Mathew’s latest “solution” in his hands. Half of it looked like genius, half of it looked like chaos, and all of it was dangerous without proper validation.
“You can’t just improvise a framework, Mathew,” George said, his voice sharper than he intended. “This isn’t college debate club. There are rules here.”
Mathew leaned back in his chair, arms crossed loosely, a smile tugging at his mouth. Not mocking, not exactly—something sharper. “Rules don’t fix problems, George. People do. Systems adapt, or they break.”
George set the papers down with surgical precision. “Systems survive because they’re built to last. Improvisation is a gamble. Aether doesn’t gamble.”
Mathew rose from his chair, closing the space between them with slow, deliberate steps. His voice lowered, dangerous in its softness. “But you’ve always been better with rules than with people, haven’t you?”
The words landed heavy. George’s breath caught—not because it wasn’t true, but because Mathew of all people had the right to say it. He had lived it, once.
For a beat, the silence between them was no longer professional. The air in the room thickened, the space between bodies narrowing to something charged and unbearable. Memories flickered in George’s mind: arguments whispered in the dark, laughter breaking tension, the press of a shoulder against his in a library where they should have been silent.
He forced himself back into discipline, spine stiffening. “This isn’t about us,” he said, each word cut from steel. “It’s about deliverables.”
Mathew’s smile thinned. “Sure. If that’s what you need to tell yourself.”
And just like that, the moment collapsed. George gathered the papers, aligning them into perfect order, while Mathew stepped back, hands sliding into his pockets, his expression unreadable.
But even as George left the room, his chest tight and his composure unsteady, he knew the argument hadn’t been about deliverables at all. It had been about them—and the past he was trying, and failing, to keep buried.
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Updated 36 Episodes
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