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The conference room was a world of glass and polished order.

Sunlight stread through the tall windows, casting sharp lines of gold across the sleek black table.

The only sound was the steady hum of the air conditioner as the team filed in, folders opening and tablets blinking to life.

Mr. Max took his seat near the head of the table, his posture firm, expression composed.

He offered the three interns a brief nod toward the end of the row—a silent invitation that felt like a test.

"Sit. Listen. Absorb," he had instructed them earlier.

But when his eyes t Noel’s, there was sothing more—a flicker of trust, perhaps, or quiet curiosity.

The eting began.

"Today’s focus," Max announced, his tone all business, "is the Southeast trade route update. We’re addressing shipnt delays, customs adjustnts, and new tariff implications. We’ll review the figures and proposals."

Papers rustled. A senior executive launched into his report—a rapid-fire delivery of numbers, graphs, and forecasts.

Ren’s pen flew across his notepad in a flurry of neat, compact script, while Jace struggled to keep pace, his eyes widening slightly at the barrage of jargon.

Noel sat perfectly still, his gaze sharp and attentive, tracking every turn in the discussion.

Half an hour in, the conversation shifted to logistics.

A manager suggested rerouting shipnts through a secondary port to save ti, but his reasoning began to waver.

Noel’s pen stilled.

Max caught the subtle shift in his expression. "Sothing to add, Interns?"

The room fell quiet. All heads turned.

Noel straightened slightly, not nervous—rely asured. "If I may," he began, his voice even. "The reroute might save days, but the cost margin would increase by nearly four percent due to higher storage fees at the secondary port."

A few eyebrows lifted around the table.

He continued, calm and precise. "The original route remains viable if we pre-submit clearance docunts electronically through the partnership bureau. The delay stems from manual verification, not distance."

A mont of silence was followed by a murmur of acknowledgnt.

Soone at the far end of the table nodded. "He’s right. We didn’t factor that in."

Max didn’t interrupt.

He simply leaned back, watching with a trace of pride behind his composed deanor.

Encouraged, Ren spoke up next. "If I can add," he said, flipping a page in his notes, "the revised export act includes a new clause that allows an express lane for verified partners. Applied correctly, it could reduce delays by two days."

This drew a surprised hum from a departnt head. "You’re a student, correct?"

Ren nodded, a faint blush coloring his cheeks. "Yes, sir."

Max allowed a subtle, approving smile. "And clearly one who reads the fine print."

The eting continued, but the energy in the room had shifted.

Where there had been polite indifference, now there was quiet, focused attention.

The interns—newcors barely a week into their roles—were holding their own among seasoned professionals.

When the final report concluded, Max stood. "That’ll be all. Good input, everyone." His gaze drifted toward Noel and Ren. "And to our guests—well done. You listened, and more importantly, you understood."

Noel inclined his head in a slight, respectful nod.

Ren’s grin was harder to contain, his pride shining through his professional composure.

Jace exhaled softly, as if relieved not to have embarrassed himself by comparison.

As the others began filing out, Max paused beside the interns.

His tone softened—not casual, but distinctly approving. "You were only supposed to observe," Max said, a faint amusent softening his tone. "But if that’s what observing looks like, I may need to raise my expectations."

Ren chuckled nervously. "We just tried to keep up."

Noel offered a quiet, respectful smile but said nothing.

Max returned the look with one that said he had noticed everything—and would rember it. "Good. Keep that up. You’re here to learn, but you’re also here to prove you belong."

The mont lingered, professional yet warm, before he turned and disappeared into the corridor, files in hand.

Ren leaned toward Noel as they left the room. "I think we just survived the boss level."

Noel’s lips curved faintly. "Barely."

Jace snorted. "Next ti, maybe warn us before you start sounding like a seasoned consultant."

Noel didn’t reply—he simply adjusted the strap of his folder and walked ahead, carrying the quiet confidence of soone who had finally been seen for what he could truly do.

The next morning arrived without fanfare—just sunlight filtering through glass walls and the office slowly humming to life.

Georgia was already at her desk, coffee in one hand, phone in the other, scanning ssages as if she’d been born multitasking.

The team filtered in soon after—Bella humming under her breath, Wei Chen and Camila hand-in-hand, Liam with a quiet nod, and Luca, who looked far too pleased for soone who was only five minutes early.

"Morning," Georgia greeted without looking up. "I hope you all slept well, because you won’t be doing much of that for the rest of the week."

Bella laughed. "Oh, good. I love being mildly terrified before nine a.m."

Georgia set her phone down, her eyes sharp but not unkind. "Client presentation is in three days. You’re pitching the bottle campaign you started yesterday. Refine your ideas, divide tasks, and keep it clean. No fluff."

"Got it," Luca said, spinning a pen between his fingers. "I’ll polish the presentation."

Georgia raised a brow. "You’ll start the presentation. Bella will polish it."

Bella smirked. "See? Even the universe agrees."

Luca exhaled dramatically, hand to his chest. "Betrayed by fate itself."

Camila giggled while Wei Chen set his laptop down. "We should structure it before arguing about style."

"Right," Bella said, leaning over the table. "So—visuals, script, and data split. I’ll handle narrative—tone, phrasing, flow."

"I’ll take design," Luca said quickly, already sketching on his tablet.

"Figures," Bella murmured.

Camila glanced between them. "I can help with layout and color balance."

"And I’ll gather statistics," Wei Chen added. "Trends, sustainability data—anything credible."

All eyes turned to Liam. He blinked, caught mid-sip of his coffee. "Uh... I can double-check everything? Proofread? Make sure we’re not selling lies?"

Georgia crossed her arms, a flicker of approval in her eyes. "Good. You’re all covering your bases. I’ll expect a draft by end of day tomorrow. You’ll receive feedback and revise before the pitch." She added dryly, "Try not to murder each other in the process."

When she left, the group fell into motion—keyboards clacking, styluses gliding, voices murmuring over notes.

Luca leaned close to Bella’s screen, pretending to read but clearly watching her type. "You always type that fast?"

"Only when I’m trying to ignore soone," she said without looking up.

He chuckled. "Good luck with that, future co-star."

Bella sighed, finally glancing at him. "You an future liability."

Camila whispered to Wei Chen, "They’re going to end up best friends or kill each other."

Wei Chen smiled slightly. "Statistically, both are possible."

Liam kept typing, pretending not to smile.

The energy in the room shifted—steady, rhythmic, and alive.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was theirs: a team finding its rhythm in the beautiful chaos of collaboration.

The clock slid toward noon, sunlight glinting off glass partitions and half-finished coffee cups.

Georgia’s earlier words—"No fluff"—still echoed, yet the Marketing floor humd with a focused, creative energy.

Bella sat cross-legged in her chair, laptop balanced on her knees, fingers flying across the keyboard.

Her furrowed brow suggested she was rewriting the laws of advertising.

Luca leaned over his tablet, sketching his third concept of the morning—a sleek bottle paired with a bold, social-dia-friendly tagline.

He caught her eye and tilted his head. "Writing an essay or a pitch, Bell?"

"Depends," she murmured. "Do you want it to sound clever or sellable?"

"Both," he said easily. "We’re not just selling a bottle. We’re selling—"

"An ego boost?" she interrupted, a smile playing on her lips.

He smirked. "Exactly."

Camila giggled from the other side. "At least he’s self-aware."

Wei Chen looked up briefly. "Focus, love. The data’s almost ready."

Bella lifted her gaze from the screen. "Show what you’ve got."

He turned his laptop—displaying clean charts, trend lines, and a neat column of target demographics. "We can base the campaign around eco-conscious young adults—college students and professionals. That’s where the trend spikes."

Liam nodded quietly. "Makes sense. Short-form content would resonate most there. Thirty-second ads, social posts, brand challenges..."

"Good," Georgia’s voice cut in suddenly.

Everyone froze. None had noticed her reappear in the doorway.

Her expression was neutral, but her eyes missed nothing—the scattered notes, the half-eaten snacks, the electric buzz of collaboration.

"Progress?"

Bella sat straighter. "We’ve narrowed the market, established tone and the. Campaign nas are in progress."

Georgia stepped closer, scanning the board behind them. "You’ve covered the basics. But I don’t see your differentiator—the ’why this product over every other one.’"

Luca turned his tablet around. "We’re focusing on conscious choice. People want to feel part of sothing positive—without overhauling their lifestyle."

Georgia tilted her head, considering. "Not bad. Build on that. Make it emotional, but grounded. The client will want numbers, not poetry."

Bella shot Luca a teasing glance. "Guess you’ll have to rein in the ’legend’ talk."

Luca grinned, unbothered. "A true legend knows when to play by the brief."

Georgia raised an eyebrow. "Then prove it. Tomorrow morning. Presentation draft, nine sharp."

She turned and walked away—heels clicking, crisp and certain.

The mont she left, a collective exhale filled the room.

Bella slumped slightly. "Does anyone else feel like we’re in a corporate survival show?"

Camila smiled. "Except no one gets voted off. Just grilled politely."

Luca chuckled, closing his tablet. "That’s worse."

"Not for the future legend," Bella teased, reaching for her coffee.

He leaned back, his grin lazy and assured. "Exactly. Pressure just adds flavor."

By late afternoon, the office lights had softened, casting long, golden shadows across the floor.

Coffee cups sat cold and forgotten; laughter had faded into tired, focused hums.

The scent of ink and paper hung faintly in the air.

"Alright," Georgia said finally, checking her watch. "That’s enough for today. Final drafts tomorrow morning. Don’t show up empty-handed."

The students exchanged looks of relieved disbelief.

Bella stretched her arms above her head. "I think my brain is officially fried."

Wei Chen chuckled, gathering his things. "At least it’s cooked through. That’s progress."

Liam gave a soft hum of agreent, already shutting down his computer with his usual quiet efficiency.

Camila tugged her boyfriend’s sleeve. "Co on, let’s go before Georgia changes her mind."

Luca packed up last, sliding his tablet into his bag and glancing once more at the mock-up slides.

It wasn’t perfect yet—he’d refine it tonight. "See you all tomorrow," he said, flashing a tired but confident grin.

Bella grinned back. "Try not to oversell yourself, future legend."

"No promises."

Outside, the evening air was cool—a soft breeze cutting through the city’s persistent buzz.

The others peeled off toward bus stops, their laughter fading into the traffic.

Luca lingered in the lobby, leaning against a marble column as he scrolled through the presentation, adjusting colors and tightening taglines.

His reflection in the glass showed a faint smile—the look of soone who thrived on the chase.

Then the elevator pinged.

Noel stepped out, jacket over his arm, his eyes finding Luca’s instantly.

A quiet ease passed between them, familiar and grounding after a long day of noise.

"You waited?" Noel asked, his voice low but warm.

Luca shrugged, pushing off the wall. "Of course. Didn’t want to walk ho with anyone else."

That earned him a soft look—not quite a smile, but sothing close.

They stepped out together into the city evening, the world dim and alive around them.

Streetlights blinked on one by one; the hum of cars faded as they walked side by side, not talking much, simply sharing the quiet in comfortable stride.

At the corner, Noel brushed his shoulder lightly against Luca’s. "How was work?"

"Good," Luca said, stuffing his hands into his pockets. "Tough. Georgia nearly murdered with her stare, but... we nailed it."

Noel huffed a quiet laugh. "I believe that. You probably annoyed her into success."

"Exactly my strategy."

Their shared laughter lingered as they crossed the street.

The apartnt wasn’t far—just a few turns through the calm, fading city.

By the ti they reached their building, the sky had deepened to indigo, soft light spilling from the windows above.

Luca opened the door, gesturing for Noel to enter first.

"Ho sweet ho," he murmured.

Noel gave him a small smile, his eyes soft with sothing unspoken. "Yeah," he said quietly. "Ho."

And as the elevator doors closed behind them, they carried the two upward into the quiet comfort of their shared night.

Their shoulders brushed, brief but charged — the kind of touch that said more than words ever could.

You are reading Dear Roommate Please Stop Being Hot [BL] Chapter 207: Quiet Victories on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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