The Unpunished

Day 305 / 400

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Latest paragraph (day 305)

Generated May 25, 2026 11:12 UTC

Maya pushed open the conference room door to find it more crowded than she'd expected—not just Institute staff but representatives from Federal Buildings across three states, all of them wearing the particular exhaustion of people who'd spent the last week watching their jobs become obsolete in real time—and as she scanned the faces looking up at her entrance, she saw Calvert at the head of the table with his tie already loosened, saw former colleagues who'd once nodded politely through her harm-reduction presentations now looking at her like she was either a prophet or a threat, and she understood with a clarity that made her pause in the doorway that the meeting she'd imagined—a quiet discussion about repurposing infrastructure—was actually something closer to a reckoning, because every person in this room had spent years operating a system that three days of vigils had proven was only sustainable when nobody was watching closely enough to see that the operators were just people who could walk away, and now they'd gathered not to discuss logistics but to decide whether they could look at the woman who'd made that walking away contagious and admit that maybe the problem had never been with the Right's protocols or training or oversight, but with the fundamental premise that killing could ever be clean enough, distant enough, bureaucratic enough to feel like anything other than what Maya had forced them all to see it actually was: a choice someone made to end another person's breathing, and now that choice had become impossible to make while the whole city watched, they'd have to decide whether to spend the next twenty years trying to rebuild the comfortable distance that had made the choosing feel inevitable, or whether to finally admit that the distance had always been a lie they'd told themselves to make working here feel like public service instead of what she'd proven it actually was—complicity in a machine that only worked because they'd all agreed to stop seeing the faces.

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