Colleagues aren’t always friends—sometimes they’re collaborators who tolerate each other’s flaws long enough to build something no one else could make alone.… In early 2026, the world’s largest quantum computing lab—QubitWorks Research Consortium—was racing to solve one of the most intractable problems in physics: the simulation of non-abelian anyonsfor fault-tolerant topological quantum computing. Only a team of multi-disciplinary experts could even attempt it: quantum physicists, error-correction theorists, cryo-engineers, and AI-driven algorithm designers. They called themselves Project Ouroboros. At the core of this project were six colleagues who saw each other every single day in a cavernous lab in Zurich: • Dr. Imani Reyes, a theoretical physicist who insisted the team was one clever equation away from a breakthrough. • Prof. Marc-Andre Dubois, a stoic veteran of quantum error correction, who loved nothing more than ...