The Glass Ceiling
The noise of the New York Stock Exchange was a physical force, a tide of shouting and digital chaos that drowned out everything but the pursuit of the next decimal point. I was the youngest analyst at Thorne & Co., a "prodigy" whose only skill was the ability to see the collapse of a company before it happened.
I lived in a world of projections and probabilities. To me, people were just data points in a larger trend. I admired my boss, Marcus Thorne, for his absolute lack of friction. He didn't just win; he erased the possibility of losing.
Then came the "Restructuring of the Century."
Thorne tasked me with identifying the "redundancies" in a mid-sized logistics firm we were acquiring. My job was to find the people who were "inefficient"—the ones whose salaries outweighed their output.
I found him in the third-floor office: a young man named Julian, barely older than I was. He wasn't efficient by the firm's standards. He spent too much time talking to the drivers, organizing a childcare collective for the warehouse staff, and fighting for better safety equipment. On paper, he was a liability.
I wrote the report. I recommended his immediate termination.
Thorne signed it without looking. Within a week, Julian was gone. But he didn't just leave the company; he left the industry. He had been the sole provider for a disabled sibling, and the loss of his insurance and salary triggered a cascade of failures in his personal life.
I watched it happen from my glass office. I saw the data points shift. I saw his credit score plummet, his apartment lease expire, his life dissolve into the grey noise of the city.
One afternoon, I ran into him at a subway station. He looked thin, his eyes sunken, but he didn't look at me with hatred. He looked at me with a profound, distant curiosity, as if I were a strange specimen in a jar.
"Do you ever wonder," he asked, his voice barely audible over the screech of the trains, "what happens to the things that don't fit into your spreadsheets?"
I didn't have an answer. For the first time, the numbers in my head stopped making sense. I began to see the "redundancies" not as errors, but as the only parts of the system that were actually alive.
I tried to help him. I offered him money, a new job, a way back. But Julian refused everything. "You can't buy back a soul you've already sold to a spreadsheet," he said.
He disappeared into the crowd, leaving me alone on the platform.
I returned to the office and looked at the new projections. I saw the growth, the profit, the efficiency. And I realized that I was the most redundant person in the building. I was a perfect tool, a flawless extension of Marcus Thorne's will, and in that perfection, I had ceased to exist as a human being.
I didn't quit. I didn't scream. I simply started introducing "errors" into the reports. Small, invisible glitches that favored the inefficient, the slow, and the kind.
I became a ghost in the machine, a saboteur of my own success. I knew that eventually, Thorne would find the leak. But as I watched a few more "inefficient" people keep their jobs, I felt a strange, quiet thrill.
I was finally learning how to be a variable.
*** Objective Tensor Code: [M1:6.0, M3:8.0, N2:0.8, K1:0.7, θ:180°] OTMES_v2_ID: V-06-GLASS-SIGHT-006
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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