The Fifty-First Floor
The crane operator, old Marco, had been lifting steel for thirty-seven years. He could set a column on a pin with a gust of wind in his face and not spill his coffee. The construction company hired him for his hands. They never asked about his mind. The project was Summit Tower, a slender spire of glass and steel set to pierce the city skyline at seventy-two floors. The developer wanted speed. The general contractor, a sharp-edged man named Kessler, ran the site like a drill sergeant. “No questions,” Kessler would say at the six-thousand-foot morning meetings. “Just execution. We have a schedule. Follow the drawings. Move.” And for fifty floors, they moved. The steel went up. The concrete followed. The glass hung like a mirrored curtain. Everyone was busy. Everyone was efficient. But a small crew on the fiftieth floor began to notice something. Maya, the young assistant superintendent, was the first to speak up. She had been poring over the structural drawings late one night, cross-ref...