"Oh my God," she says. "You're coping already."
We push through the glass doors into the lobby. The air feels different out here - less controlled, more human. I inhale like I've been underwater.
Bella crosses her arms. "You didn't just walk in late. You challenged him."
"I answered his question."
"You answered it like you were daring him to argue."
I open my mouth to respond, then close it. She's not wrong, and that annoys me more than if she were.
"Did you hear how he talked to you?" she continues. "Not like the others. Not like a boss. Like-"
"Like what," I ask.
She tilts her head, studying me. "Like someone trying to decide if you're a problem or a project."
My stomach tightens.
"That's not a thing," I say.
Bella snorts. "That's absolutely a thing. And he already decided you're interesting."
"I don't need to be interesting," I reply. "I need to survive the program."
She starts walking again, forcing me to follow. "Those two goals rarely overlap."
We step outside, sunlight hitting my face like a reset I didn't ask for. The city hums - cars, voices, footsteps - normal life happening while mine quietly tilts on its axis.
Bella glances back at the building, then at me. "Also," she adds casually, "he's hot."
I choke. "Bella."
"What? I have eyes."
"That's not relevant."
"It's always relevant," she says. "Especially when powerful men start noticing disciplined women who don't flinch."
I stop walking this time.
She turns, eyebrows raised. "You're telling me you didn't feel that."
"I felt targeted," I say.
She smiles slowly. "That too."
A group of Apex participants passes us. One of them looks at me, whispers something to the others. They all glance my way.
Bella notices immediately.
"See?" she murmurs. "You're already a topic."
"I hate that."
"I know," she says. "Which is why it's dangerous."
I look back at the building. Glassy. Impersonal. Watching.
Eric's voice echoes in my head - Late arrivals are information.
"I didn't ask for attention," I say quietly.
Bella steps closer, dropping the jokes for half a second. "No. But you don't run from it either."
I don't answer.
She squeezes my arm. "Come on. Coffee. You look like you're holding yourself together with spite."
"That's usually enough," I say.
"Not today," she replies, already pulling me toward the corner café. "Today you almost fought a billionaire before nine a.m."
I let her drag me.
But even as we walk away, I know something she doesn't say out loud.
Eric Dusine didn't challenge me to put me in my place.
He challenged me to see if I'd push back.
And I did.
The café is across the street, close enough that everyone funnels toward it like it's part of the program.
Bella pushes the door open with her shoulder, scanning for an empty table like she's planning a heist. I follow her in, immediately aware of how many Apex badges are already here.
Too many.
The line is long. Conversations overlap. Laughter spikes too loud in places it shouldn't.
And then there's me.
I feel it before I see it.
The pause.
The glance that lingers half a second too long.
The whisper that stops when I turn my head.
Bella leans in. "Don't look."
"I'm not," I lie.
"Good," she says. "Because they're doing that thing where they pretend they're not watching while absolutely watching."
A guy near the register turns and looks at me openly. Not curious - assessing. Like I'm a variable that could mess up his math.
I step closer to Bella. "I don't like this."
"No one ever does the first time," she replies. "Power proximity is a spectator sport."
We inch forward in line. Someone bumps into my shoulder and doesn't apologize. Another person smirks when I glance over.
I straighten my spine anyway.
A voice behind us murmurs, "That's her."
Bella stiffens.
I turn.
Two women stand a few feet back, both polished, both wearing that effortless confidence money teaches you early. One of them meets my eyes without flinching.
"You handled that well," she says.
"Thank you," I reply, careful.
She smiles, but it's thin. "Bold approach. Not sure I'd recommend it."
"I wasn't asking," I say.
Bella lets out a quiet laugh. The woman's smile tightens further.
"Good luck," she says, and turns away.
Bella exhales. "Wow. First enemy acquired."
"I didn't do anything."
"You existed loudly," Bella says. "That's enough."
We reach the counter. I order on autopilot, hands steady despite the buzz crawling under my skin. The barista calls my name louder than necessary.
"JANYIA."
Heads turn again.
I take the cup like it's evidence.
We grab a small table by the window. Bella drops into her chair dramatically.
"Well," she says. "You're famous."
"I hate that word."
"Me too," she agrees. "But you're not invisible anymore."
I stare into my coffee, watching steam curl and disappear. The surface reflects my face back at me - composed, alert, unreadable.
Inside, something coils tight.
My phone vibrates.
This time, I don't ignore it.
Unknown number.
I answer without thinking. "Hello?"
"Ms. Hefling," a familiar voice says.
My chest tightens.
Eric.
"I hope I'm not interrupting," he continues, tone light. "But I wanted to follow up."
"Follow up on what," I ask carefully.
"Your arrival," he says. "And what it tells me."
Bella's eyes widen across the table.
"I'm busy," I say.
"I know," he replies easily. "That's why this won't take long."
I stand, moving away from the table. Bella mouths oh my God.
"Yes?" I say.
"You're not the only one being watched today," Eric says. "But you are the only one who made it interesting."
My pulse jumps.
"That wasn't my intention."
"Intentions," he says, "are rarely the point."
There's a pause. Deliberate.
"Be ready," he adds. "Someone will be contacting you."
"For what," I ask.
He smiles into the phone - I can hear it. "That depends on how you perform next."
The line goes dead.
I lower the phone slowly.
Bella stares at me like I just announced the apocalypse.
"Did," she says carefully, "the tech CEO just call you on your personal phone?"
"Yes."
"In the first hour."
"Yes."
She presses her hands to the table. "You are absolutely screwed."
I sit back down, heart racing, coffee forgotten.
I don't know if that call was a warning.
Or an invitation.
But either way, the rules just changed.