The policeman interrogating Julius cleared his throat.
"I see," he said.
He was probably trying not to be judgmental, but he clearly had an opinion about those events. An opinion that was not favorable.
"Yet what we see is often misleading," Julius noted. If it were solely about him, he wouldn't have cared what others thought about it. His private life was his own, and his private behavior had nothing to do with his professional work either as a psychologist or as a powerful CEO. Even if he behaved in the most controversial way, that was solely his business.
But it began to occur to him that, after all, Janus' behavior during his undercover mission, whether it was against the law or morality, would be subject to evaluation and could affect his future.