Cherreads

Nothing Illegal

Mrugank_K
42
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 42 chs / week.
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NOT RATINGS
807
Views
Synopsis
In a world that runs exactly as designed, people still lose everything without a crime ever being committed. Careers end quietly. Reputations collapse without accusation. Deaths are ruled natural, accidental, or self inflicted, and the system continues forward without friction. Arjun Malhotra is an ordinary professional living a routine life. He does not chase power or truth. He notices patterns. A senior manager exits at the perfect moment. A scandal destroys the wrong person. A breakdown reshapes an entire organization while leaving no trace of intent behind. Each event has an explanation that makes sense on its own. Together, they form something harder to dismiss. What Arjun begins to understand is that there exists a kind of practical psychological knowledge that operates entirely within the law. A way of shaping human behavior through timing, pressure, expectation, and predictability. No force. No threats. No illegality. Just carefully designed conditions that make certain outcomes inevitable. The people who use this knowledge believe they are correcting a broken system. They do not act directly. They do not leave evidence. They design outcomes and let human nature do the rest. As Arjun becomes entangled in this invisible architecture of influence, he discovers that stopping it requires another kind of interference just as dangerous. One that disrupts intent without exposure and alters decisions without consent. Each intervention works. Each one costs something human. Nothing Illegal is a psychological webnovel about invisible power, engineered behavior, and moral erosion in modern systems. Every event is plausible. Every consequence is permanent. And the greatest threat is not what is illegal, but what is allowed to exist unnoticed.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

The email arrived at 9.12 in the morning and by 9.14 it had already stopped mattering to most people.

Arjun Malhotra read it twice because something about it refused to settle. It was short. Careful. Polite. The kind of message written to end conversations before they started. Shailesh Rao would no longer be with the company due to health reasons. The team was requested to respect privacy. Workstreams would be reassigned.

No farewell line. No contact number. No meeting invite to explain the transition.

By 9.20 the office had absorbed it and moved on.

Someone near the coffee machine said heart attack. Another said stress. A third said these things happen once you cross forty. Nobody lowered their voice. Nobody sounded afraid. It was not that kind of news. It did not feel like danger. It felt like maintenance.

Arjun kept his screen unchanged for a while after that. Shailesh had sat two rows ahead. Same floor. Same lift. Same lunch timings most days. Not close. Not distant either. Just present in the way people are when they have occupied the same routine long enough.

Three days earlier Shailesh had forwarded a meeting request for the following week. No sign off that hinted at collapse. No sudden urgency. No goodbye disguised as professionalism.

Arjun opened the performance dashboard again. He had no reason to. He told himself that. The numbers were unchanged. Revenue targets. Client satisfaction. Attrition rates. All familiar. Then he noticed the weighting.

Customer escalation response time had been adjusted. Quietly. Slightly. It was still a minor metric on paper. But its influence had increased enough to matter. Shailesh had always struggled with that one. Not disastrously. Just enough to keep it flagged.

The change had been made two weeks ago.

Arjun checked the change log. Approved. Properly documented. No names stood out. No rules were broken. It was the sort of internal adjustment that happened all the time and usually meant nothing.

Except now it did.

By lunch the conversation about Shailesh had ended completely. A new deadline had arrived. A client had raised an issue. Someone had booked the wrong conference room. The system absorbed the absence and rebalanced itself with disturbing ease.

Arjun watched Shailesh desk being cleared in the evening. Not ceremonially. Just a facilities worker placing files into a carton. No one stopped. No one asked what would happen to the projects he had overseen. Those had already been redistributed.

On the way out Arjun saw Shailesh wife near the reception. She looked composed in the way people do when they are still functioning on instructions. HR spoke softly. A document was signed. A hand was shaken.

It occurred to Arjun then that if he had not noticed the metric change he would have accepted the explanation without friction. He would have said stress like everyone else. He would have meant it.

At home that night he opened his laptop again. Not to investigate. That word felt dramatic and dishonest. He just wanted to understand whether this kind of coincidence happened often.

He searched old change logs. Old exits. Old restructurings that had been explained with medical language and polite emails. He did not look for proof. He did not even know what proof would look like.

He was only looking for repetition.

By midnight he had found three more cases. Different departments. Different years. Different reasons. All ordinary. All legal. All unremarkable.

Except for the timing.

Arjun closed the laptop and sat in the dark for a while. He did not feel fear. He felt something quieter and more corrosive.

Recognition.

If this was deliberate then it was not criminal. If it was accidental then it was too clean to ignore.

Nothing illegal had happened.

And that was the problem.