Cornwell's office was more inspiring than the man that it was made for and romantic in every manner for someone like Max. It was the embodiment of an end-of-career goal in his eyes. Spacious enough to have the walls lined with filing cabinets and bookshelves and enough room to set up a yoga mat with reach still to spread one's arms. There was a tiny space between the bookshelves big enough to fill with an intimidating amount of certificates, diplomas, and awards. A fine mahogany desk sat three computer monitors, pictures of significant moments framed in the same wood, and various knick-knacks Max considered paperweight. Other decors did not fit his taste, such as a fish tank, dartboard, tacky clock and pictures of Mrs Cornwell and their kids.
The man this was made for could fool anyone with his military veteran stature. He was a man in his late fifties. Arms that look like he used to wrangle cows, but with a beer gut, Cornwell was in a constant battle to hide with a straight back. He had a face that screamed the horrors of warfare with a scar across it that looked like someone almost took a good chunk of him as a souvenir. Whoever got to him took an eye from him that he always hid behind a pair of sunglasses or occasionally an eyepatch. His sharp chin added to giving his appearance that of a dying shark. The business smile he wore and spoke with only added to the image, "Officer Stone! Tell me, how is the wife?"
"We are keeping it together the best that we can. Yours?"
"My horse of a wife is fine. You came at a good time. Now I have an update about the spot opening..." Max's weariness and wariness melted as he found himself erect at his words. Cornwell saw this, got a laugh at his expense briefly, and sat a stack of papers in front of himself, "Background Check, Psychology Exam, Academy Score, Fitness, Recommendations, Arrest, and Accomplishments. Cleared, Below Average, 95%, Perfect, ten and... well, I don't know how to say this..." Cornwell's words continued to trail off as Max went over everything he had just said. There was nothing about where this conversation was heading that he liked.