COVENANT CLIENT, part II
final corrective memo
May Season Studio Archives
by Gintare O.
The line connected without ringing.
It never rang.
“Elias Mercer,” he said. “Vice President, Sales and Market Expansion, May Season Studio.”
He used the full title. Not for them. For himself. Titles had a way of stabilizing conversations before they drifted into places you couldn’t document afterward.
There was a pause. Not silence. Silence implied absence. This felt more like attention.
“We are aware of you,” the voice said.
It did not sound male or female. It did not sound synthetic either. It sounded like something that had learned how to speak by listening to agreements rather than people. Flat, but not cold. Precise without being clipped.
“I’m calling regarding delivery timing on the Q4 allocation,” Elias said. He kept his voice level. Familiar. He had learned a long time ago that sounding calm mattered more than being right. “We have an opportunity to adjust sequencing in a way that benefits both parties.”
“Define benefit.”
Elias inhaled slowly. He looked at the window as if the city might help him answer.
“Accelerated access,” he said. “Priority fulfillment. No reduction in volume. No pricing changes. Just an earlier window.”
“Earlier windows alter internal protocols,” the voice said.
“Within tolerance,” Elias replied. He said it quickly, before his own hesitation could slow him down. “Our models support it.”
“You are not authorized to redefine tolerance.”
Elias smiled, though no one could see it. He felt it anyway, the practiced curve of it. The smile he used when a conversation crossed from cooperative into interpretive.
“I’m not redefining it,” he said. “I’m interpreting it.”
There it was.
He would think about that sentence later. He would replay it more than once, in different rooms, with different lighting. At the time, it felt controlled. Reasonable. Almost boring.
The pause stretched. Elias resisted the urge to fill it. Silence was not a vacuum in conversations like this. It was a process.
“You are requesting a sequencing deviation,” the voice said finally.
“Yes.”
“For MSS benefit.”
“For mutual benefit,” Elias said automatically. He corrected himself too quickly, which he noticed even as he did it. “For MSS benefit, operationally. Without detriment to your volume or cost.”
“Your benefit is time,” the voice said.
“Yes.”
“Our benefit is stability,” the voice replied. “Explain how your request preserves it.”
Elias had prepared for this. Not formally. Not with slides. He had prepared in the way people prepare when they know they are going to break a rule and want to believe they are still being careful.
“MSS will maintain full delivery volume across the fiscal year,” he said. “The advance shipment allows internal alignment on our side without disrupting your downstream distribution. You receive product earlier. We absorb the timing shift.”
“You absorb risk.”
“Yes.”
That part was true. Just not in the way it would end up meaning.
Another pause.
“You have reviewed covenant restrictions,” the voice said.
“Yes,” Elias replied.
“Recently.”
“Yes.”
That was also true. He had reviewed them three days earlier, standing at his desk, telling himself he understood them better now than he had when he signed.
The Compact agreed.
Not because they trusted him. Elias knew that. Trust wasn’t how this relationship functioned. They agreed because the contract allowed MSS discretion in sequencing under specific conditions, and Elias had learned long ago that rules written by humans often failed to anticipate intent.
The paperwork followed. Clean. Quiet. Routed through the appropriate channels without triggering alarms because nothing technically violated the system’s expectations. The language was careful. The approvals logged. Legal did not intervene because Legal had not been asked.
The revenue pulled forward.
By Friday afternoon, the dashboard refreshed.
Two point three percent disappeared.
Elias watched the number update and felt a sharp relief that surprised him with its intensity. It wasn’t triumph. It wasn’t pride. It was something closer to pressure releasing from a joint that had been misaligned for weeks.
He closed his laptop and sat back in his chair.
His phone buzzed. Slack messages rolled in. Restrained enthusiasm. Thumbs-up reactions. Someone used a confetti emoji, then immediately deleted it. Elias noticed that too.
That evening, his team gathered for drinks in the lobby bar downstairs. Not a celebration, exactly. More like confirmation. The kind of gathering where people talk around the thing they’re relieved about instead of naming it.
Elias stayed for one drink. He paid for the table. He left early.
He went home and slept for four uninterrupted hours. It felt indulgent. He woke disoriented, the way you do when your body finally lets go of vigilance without asking permission first.
The first incident report arrived ten days later.
It did not come through Sales.
It came through Security.
It was flagged as nonstandard environmental deviation and routed through systems Elias only still had access to because his name remained attached to the Compact account at a senior level.
The language was dry. So dry it almost felt reassuring.
Unexpected yield variance.
Containment failure.
Loss of Compact asset classified as irrecoverable.
There were no exclamation points. No urgency markers. No emotional framing. Just a line near the end that made Elias’s stomach tighten in a way he recognized immediately.
Root cause traced to unauthorized sequencing adjustment.
He read it twice. Then again, slower.
Unauthorized did not mean illegal. It meant unsanctioned.
By the end of the week, there were three more reports.
Each one worse.
The Compact had escalated consumption beyond projected limits. A disease cluster had moved faster than anticipated. A subsystem responsible for internal regulation had failed under load.
Something essential had been destroyed.
Not delayed. Not depleted. Destroyed.
Elias learned what that meant in pieces, because MSS never explained things all at once. Information arrived compartmentalized, routed through departments that pretended not to speak to one another.
Legal issued holds. Security initiated parallel reviews. Risk Oversight started running quiet models that didn’t include Elias in the distribution.
Elias stopped sleeping.
He did not bring it up in meetings. He did not tell his team. He told himself this was exactly why MSS had departments designed to absorb consequences. This was why he was not supposed to understand the downstream effects.
Containment existed for a reason.
Then the Compact responded.
The message was brief.
They acknowledged the breach.
They acknowledged the loss.
They acknowledged MSS’s responsibility.
They also acknowledged the debt.
The consequence would be enforced according to original covenant terms.
Elias read the message alone in his office, lights dimmed. His hands shook just enough to notice. He folded them together and waited for the shaking to stop, annoyed that it took as long as it did.
By Monday morning, the quarterly planning meeting was already underway.
Slides advanced. Forecasts discussed. Someone joked about the coffee. Elias nodded at the right intervals, added a comment about regional variance that earned him a few approving glances.
His phone vibrated once.
Calendar invite.
Subject: Immediate Review
Attendees: Executive Council, Legal, Corporate Security, Risk Oversight, Elias Mercer
Time: Now
He stared at the screen.
He stood up smoothly. “Excuse me,” he said, already moving toward the door.
No one stopped him. That was the second signal.
The stairwell was empty. Concrete walls. Emergency lighting. The hum of the building traveled faintly through the structure. Someone had scuffed the paint near the third-floor landing. Elias noticed it and immediately wondered why.
He closed the door behind him and screamed.
It surprised him how fast it came out. No buildup. No warning. Just a sound pulled straight from his chest and thrown against the concrete.
He pressed his palms into the wall until the chill cut through his jacket. The scream emptied him faster than he expected. It left him shaking, breath shallow, throat raw.
For a few seconds, he stood there with his forehead against the paint, eyes closed, letting the sound die where it couldn’t be audited.
Then the conditioning returned.
He straightened his jacket. Checked his phone. Read the meeting notice again, as if repetition might alter meaning.
It didn’t.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Some agreements are written to survive misunderstanding, but not reinterpretation. This entry documents the moment where discretion was mistaken for authority, and where relief arrived faster than consequence.
Not all damage announces itself immediately. Some of it waits until the paperwork settles.
written and designed by gintare okrzesik, creator of may season studio — a fictional corporation exploring beauty, bureaucracy, and quiet corruption through narrative design.
Filed under: May Season Studio Internal Records Part II
This report is part of an ongoing file. Additional entries follow.



