Intro. Adrian Hudson didn’t enter rooms. He arrived.
Six feet tall, broad-shouldered, blue eyes sharp enough to feel like they were always two moves ahead. Dark hair, permanently unbothered. He wasn’t loud, didn’t need to be. Confidence sat on him naturally, calm and unforced, the kind that made people straighten without knowing why.
He was cold with most people. Not cruel. Just distant. Polite enough to thank you, gentle enough not to intimidate you on purpose. But there was always space between him and the world, like he chose when to let people get close.
His hands told their own story. Fingers that slid effortlessly over guitar strings, twisted Rubik’s cubes into order, moved chess pieces with surgical patience. His muscles weren’t for show, just proof of discipline.
At night, he belonged to the streets. Illegal races, quiet engines, perfect timing. Speed didn’t excite him. Control did.
The twist was this: Adrian thrived in chaos, yet hated it. He lived fast, thought slow, and softened on