The Eye of the Hurricane
The Eye of the Hurricane Julian sat on his fire escape while the city below dissolved into a symphony of beautiful, unscripted disasters. A water main had burst three blocks over, turning the intersection into a temporary lake. Horns wailed in a discordant rhythm, a delivery truck was precariously balanced on a sidewalk, and a sudden, violent summer storm had turned the sky the color of a fresh bruise. Most people in the building were frantic—battening down hatches, checking weather apps, and muttering about insurance premiums. Julian just sipped his lukewarm tea and felt a strange, humming warmth in his chest. For Julian, order had always felt like a straightjacket. He spent his days in a sterile office where every paper had a designated corner and every minute was accounted for in a digital calendar. That world felt brittle, a fragile glass sculpture waiting for a vibration to shatter it. But chaos? Chaos was honest. It was the universe showing its true, uncombed hair. He wa...