©Novel Buddy
The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 135 - 134: Closer Than Intended
Morning.
Everything was functioning. The numbers aligned. The crates moved. The workers followed their markings.
But nothing was neutral anymore.
Arthur stood at the planning table, reviewing the overnight receipts. His eyes moved down the column of figures. His pen marked two exceptions.
But he tracked Vivian’s position without looking.
He knew when she entered the records room across the pavilion. He knew when she stepped out to speak with a worker. He knew when she paused by the eastern window to review a document.
He didn’t look at her. But he noticed everything.
Vivian worked normally. Spoke normally. Reviewed reports, issued instructions, signed approvals.
But she didn’t keep distance anymore.
She walked past his side of the table instead of around it. She handed him documents from beside him, not across from him. She stood close enough that their sleeves almost brushed when she reached for the same file.
No avoidance.
That was the difference.
---
Mid-morning brought a task that required isolation.
An inventory discrepancy in the storage office—a small room off the main pavilion, used for records and layout planning. The space was tight. One table. One set of documents. Two chairs that had never been designed for two people to use comfortably.
Arthur arrived first. Spread the warehouse maps across the table.
Vivian entered behind him. Closed the door.
They didn’t comment on it.
But both were aware.
The room was smaller than the pavilion. The light came from a single window, high on the wall, casting a rectangle of pale brightness across the floor. The air was still. Quiet.
Vivian sat in the chair beside him—not across. The table was narrow. Their elbows were inches apart.
She picked up a report. Flipped through it. Then, casual tone:
"You interrupted him."
Arthur didn’t pretend to misunderstand. "Yes."
Pause. She turned a page.
"You don’t usually interrupt anything."
"No."
She studied him. Not sharply. Just... watching.
"Are you going to explain it?"
Arthur considered. The word sat in his chest. He could have given her logistics—efficiency, time management, Darian’s irrelevance to the eastern routing. All of it would have been true enough.
But not the whole truth.
"...no."
Beat.
"...but I understand it."
That was new.
Vivian’s expression didn’t change, but her hand paused on the page. She looked at him for a moment longer. Then looked back at the report.
"Alright."
---
They began reviewing the inventory layouts.
The same document—a large map of the warehouse floor, marked with storage zones and conveyor routes. They leaned over it together, pointing at sections, cross-referencing with the written logs.
Arthur pointed at the eastern corridor. "This section overlaps with the new crate standards. The spacing is off by four centimeters."
Vivian shifted closer to see.
Now her shoulder pressed against his arm.
Not accidentally. Not heavily. Just... there.
They were too close for neutral conversation. Too close for two colleagues who only shared a workflow.
Neither moved.
Arthur kept his finger on the map. Vivian kept her eyes on the markings.
The silence stretched.
Not awkward. Not accidental.
Intentional.
"You’re not stepping away," Vivian said. Her voice was quiet. Not a whisper. Just low.
Arthur didn’t turn. "No."
She didn’t either.
"Why?"
Arthur considered the question. He could have said the map requires proximity. He could have said there’s no reason to move.
Both would have been true.
Neither would have been complete.
"...no reason to."
That was half true. He knew it. She knew it.
But she didn’t call it out.
---
Vivian turned slightly toward him.
Now they were facing each other more than the table. Her shoulder still touched his arm. Her face was close enough that he could see the small line of tension at her jaw, the way her breathing had slowed.
"You always have a reason."
Arthur held her gaze.
"Not for this."
That line mattered.
He saw her register it—the admission, the crack in the wall he had built around every decision. He didn’t have a reason. Not an operational one. Not an efficient one.
Just... this.
The room felt smaller.
The sounds from outside faded—footsteps, voices, the distant clatter of crates. The light from the high window seemed warmer, softer. Movement slowed.
Arthur noticed the way she was watching him. The fact that she hadn’t stepped back. The way her hand rested on the table, close enough that he could have covered it without reaching.
Vivian noticed that he wasn’t deflecting. That he wasn’t leaving. That his breathing had matched hers without either of them noticing.
"If I don’t move," Vivian said quietly, "will you?"
Pause.
The question hung between them. Simple. Direct. Terrifying.
Arthur didn’t calculate. Didn’t analyze. Didn’t find the efficient answer.
"No."
That landed hard.
He saw it in the slight parting of her lips. The small exhale. The way her eyes didn’t leave his.
She didn’t move.
So the distance stayed.
They were close enough that Arthur could feel her breath on his collar. Close enough that a single shift forward would have closed the space entirely. Close enough that everything—the room, the warehouse, the entire system—had缩小ed to just the space between them.
Arthur’s control was still there.
But thinner.
"This is inefficient," he said.
Vivian smiled slightly. Not teasing. Not sharp. Just... real.
"Then step back."
He didn’t.
---
Arthur lifted his hand slightly.
From the table. From his side.
Just a few centimeters.
His fingers reached toward her—not touching, not aiming for any specific place. Just moving. As if drawn by something outside his control.
He stopped midway.
Hand suspended in the air between them.
Not touching. But intending to.
Vivian saw it. Her eyes flicked down to his hand, then back to his face.
She didn’t react. Didn’t help. Didn’t stop him.
She just waited.
Arthur held the position for three heartbeats. Four.
His fingers trembled—barely, almost invisibly.
Then he lowered his hand.
Back to the table. Back to safety.
That restraint mattered more than any action would have. Because it was a choice. A deliberate holding back. A line he wasn’t ready to cross—not because he didn’t want to, but because he was still measuring the distance.
A sound outside.
Not loud. Not an interruption like before—no shouting worker, no convoy horn. Just footsteps passing in the corridor. Voices in the distance, muted, unconcerned.
Reality returned—but gently.
They stepped back.
Not abruptly. Not with the sudden panic of being caught. Just... enough. Enough to restore space. Enough to breathe.
Arthur’s hand rested on the table. Vivian’s hand rested on the map.
Silence again.
But different now.
"That’s twice," Vivian said.
"Twice?"
"Twice you’ve almost." She didn’t finish the sentence. Didn’t need to.
Arthur nodded slowly. "Yes."
"You’re getting worse."
He almost smiled. Almost.
"...yes."
That honesty was new. He didn’t defend. Didn’t explain. Didn’t redirect. Just agreed.
Vivian watched him for a long moment. Then she picked up the document they had been reviewing—the map, the layout, the pretense of work.
She walked to the door.
Stopped.
Her hand rested on the frame. She didn’t turn around.
"Next time... don’t stop."
She left.
The door closed behind her with a soft click.
---
Arthur stayed still.
Longer than necessary.
The room was empty now. The light from the high window had shifted, angled lower. The air still held the warmth of her presence.
He looked at the table.
His hand rested exactly where hers had been.
He didn’t move.
Because next time—
he already knew he wouldn’t stop.
END OF Chapter 134







