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Warehouse preservation details

Neighborhood context and connectivity

Not elaborate. Not vague. Enough to show I've thought about the story of the place without giving anyone room to direct the shot.

I type a one-line message. "Preliminary shot list attached. Happy to refine during tomorrow's walkthrough." My finger hovers over send.

The money is good. The project is high-profile. But I just traded my autonomy for a schedule. For a corporate babysitter named Sam Morgan who is going to stand over my shoulder and dictate what my images are allowed to say.

I finally reach for my camera, picking it up to check the lens housing. No coffee. The body's clean. Small victories.

Which brings me right back to the disaster of a woman from this morning.

I drag a hand through my hair, still annoyed. I can still smell the dark roast she dumped all over me. I can still picture the way her wide, frantic eyes snapped up to mine, and the absolute chaos of her hovering hands. She had been a whirlwind of panic and babbling apologies—the exact kind of uncoordinated, messy person I actively avoid.

I check the calendar invite on my screen one last time.

Harbor District Site Walkthrough. Wednesday, 8:00 AM. South Gate. Lead Architect: Sam Morgan.

Fine. I'll show up. Be professional. Deal with whatever rigid, grey-suited corporate guy shows up to micromanage me. I will deliver the images, cash the check, and get out.

I grab a microfiber cloth and start aggressively scrubbing the front element of my lens.

Sam Morgan might be a nightmare, but at least he won't be throwing coffee at my chest.

Chapter six

Sam

The notification drops across my laptop screen at 6:47 PM, effectively ruining my evening.

Harbor District - Image Archive - ALL STAKEHOLDERS.

It is a shared folder invite from Marketing. I click it open, my pulse immediately ticking upward as I scan the folder permissions. Auto-upload enabled. Real-time sync.

No approval gate.

My stomach drops. Every image the freelance photographer takes will be visible to the decision-makers the second he uploads it.

I sent him a very specific twelve-angle shot list so the images tell the story I need them to tell. But if he shoots something off-list, the team will see his version of the site before I ever get a chance to review it.

I can't curate. I can't edit.

The system I thought I was controlling just removed me from the process entirely.

My phone buzzes against the desk. An unknown number lights up the screen with a text preview.

I'll be at the south gate by 8 AM. Looking forward to it. Tom Bennett

Casual. Professional. Unaware that he is currently ruining my life.