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Chapter 1 - The First Argument

The first thing I noticed about Lena Rodriguez was that she didn't ask permission.

Not to sit. Not to speak. Not to exist.

She walked into the conference room like she belonged there, like the space had been waiting for her to arrive so it could finally make sense.

I noticed this because I am the opposite of that kind of person.

I like rules. Schedules.Assigned seating.

Which is why I was already annoyed before she even sat next to me.

"Is this taken?" she asked, pointing at the chair beside mine.

I glanced at it. Then at her. Then back at my laptop.

"Yes," I said. "By the air."

She smiled. Sat anyway.

Strike one.

"I'm Lena," she said, extending her hand.

I looked at it for half a second longer than necessary. "Ethan."

Her handshake was firm. Confident. Like she wasn't trying to impress me and

didn't care if I noticed.

Strike two.

The coordinator clapped her hands at the front of the room. "Welcome to the

National Leadership Bootcamp. Over the next six weeks, you'll work in teams to

design a community project and present real impact results."Teams.

I already hated this.

Names started flashing on the screen.

"Team Three," the coordinator said. "Ethan Miller. Lena Rodriguez. Mark Chen.

Jessica Patel."

Lena gasped dramatically. "Oh, this is exciting."

I did not share her enthusiasm.

She leaned closer. "So what do you do, Ethan Miller?"

"I work in data analytics."

Her eyes lit up. "Like… math?"

"Yes."

"Voluntarily?"

"Yes."She laughed. Loudly. Unapologetically. A few people turned to look.

Strike three.

"And you?" I asked.

She tilted her head, thinking. "I dance. Act. Audition. Drink too much coffee.

Occasionally cry in public bathrooms."

I blinked. "I meant professionally."

"That is professionally."

I stared at my screen, hoping the spreadsheet would rescue me.

The coordinator continued explaining the project, but Lena had already pulled out

a notebook covered in stickers and random doodles.

"So," she whispered, "how do you want to do this?"

"I'll design a survey," I said immediately. "We'll measure spending patterns, foot

traffic, before-and-after comparisons—"

"No," she said.

I looked at her. "No?""No," she repeated, smiling like this was fun. "We should create an experience.

Something emotional. Something people feel."

"Feelings aren't measurable."

She leaned back in her chair, studying me. "That's a weird thing to admit out

loud."

A few seconds passed.

Then she added, softly, "You don't like messy things, do you?"

I didn't answer.

Because the truth was—I didn't like people who saw through me this fast.

The meeting ended. People started packing up. I was already making a mental

task list for the project when Lena stood and slung her bag over her shoulder.

"This is going to be interesting," she said.

"For you," I replied. "Not for me."

She paused. Turned back. Smiled.

"Oh," she said. "You have no idea."She walked away, and for reasons I couldn't explain, my focus didn't follow my spreadsheet.

It followed her. That should've been my first warning.

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