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“Restore from backup,” his boss had said. But backups were six hours old, and six hours of financial transactions, CAD files, and angry client emails would be the end of his Q3 bonus.

His hand trembled as he slid the DVD into a USB drive. The server’s BIOS groaned, then hummed. The familiar blue Windows setup screen appeared. Partition. Format. Install.

It was 2 AM in the data center, and the only light came from the blinking diodes on a rack of Dell PowerEdges. Leo, a sysadmin with five years of experience and three empty coffee mugs on his desk, stared at a corrupted boot sector. Server 04, the company’s main file hub, was dead.

At 3:47 AM, the desktop loaded. “Windows Server 2022 Standard.” The file shares came back online one by one, like lights in a blackout. Leo leaned back, the ISO case still in his hand.

He didn’t know who had burned that disc two years ago. But he whispered a quiet thanks into the cold server room air, and made a mental note: Never delete the ISO.

He had one option: a clean install of Windows Server 2022. But the ISO was gone—deleted by a junior admin who thought “cleaning up old ISOs” meant all ISOs. The official Microsoft portal was down for maintenance. The clock was ticking.

In the back of the server room, behind a broken UPS and a box of PS/2 mice, was a gray metal shelf. On it sat a stack of forgotten DVDs. Leo crouched, dust swirling in the dim light, and flipped through the pile: “Ubuntu 14.04,” “Windows 7 SP1,” “Driver Pack 2012.” Then, near the bottom, a plain white sleeve with handwriting in faded Sharpie: “WS2022 – RTM – DO NOT LOSE.”

That’s when Leo remembered the shelf .