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Chapter 2: The Hidden Ledger The silence after Adrian said my name didn’t break—it tightened. Vanessa’s eyes flicked between us, searching for a connection that didn’t fit the story she had already built. “You know her?” she repeated, slower this time. Adrian didn’t answer. Not immediately. His gaze stayed on me, but not really me—more like what I represented standing there in cheap flats, a fake badge, and a mark on my cheek that shouldn’t exist in his world. Then his expression shifted. Controlled warmth. The kind of mask he wore when investors were watching. “Claire Hail,” he said at last, carefully. “Temporary audit support.” A lie so smooth it almost sounded real. Vanessa relaxed instantly, like a wire unclenching. “Good,” she said coldly. “Then she can be removed for assaulting staff and stealing access time.” I didn’t move. I watched Adrian instead. Because I knew that pause. That fraction of hesitation before he chose the narrative. It wasn’t confusion. It was calculation. I lifted my phone slightly. The photo of Vanessa’s bracelet still glowing on the screen. “That bracelet,” I said quietly, “belongs to me.” A soft laugh escaped her. “Delusional.” Adrian finally stepped closer. Not toward me. Toward her. “Vanessa,” he said gently, “go back to your office.” It was not a dismissal. It was protection. She hesitated. Then obeyed. That was when I understood something I didn’t want to accept yet: She wasn’t acting alone in confidence. She was acting inside permission. Security moved in slowly, waiting for a signal that never came. Adrian gave them none. Instead, he turned slightly, lowering his voice just enough for me. “Come with me,” he said. It wasn’t a request. It was a containment strategy. / Chapter 1 / 2 8

Chapter 3: Glass Walls

Chapter 3: Glass Walls

His office on the forty-second floor hadn’t changed.

Floor-to-ceiling glass. Steel skyline. Controlled silence.

But everything in it felt wrong now.

Because I noticed what I hadn’t before.

A second chair angled slightly too close to his desk.

A drawer that wasn’t locked anymore.

A scent that wasn’t mine.

Vanessa’s presence was everywhere without her being there.

Adrian closed the door behind us.

“You shouldn’t be here,” he said softly.

“I own fifty-one percent of this company,” I replied.

That landed.

Not loudly.

But precisely.

His jaw tightened.

“Not in this form,” he said. “Not like this.”

I looked at him.

Really looked.

The man I married didn’t used to flinch when I spoke about numbers.

Now he avoided them entirely.

“I was slapped in your company pantry,” I said. “For holding your bottle.”

He exhaled through his nose, almost amused.

“This is what happens when assistants get emotional.”

That word.

Assistants.

It didn’t come from confusion.

It came from habit.

From repetition.

From a system that had already rewritten reality too many times.

I placed my phone on his desk.

Turned the screen.

The bracelet photo.

His eyes dropped to it.

For the first time, something cracked behind his control.

“You shouldn’t have that,” he said.

It wasn’t denial.

It was recognition.

A mistake had been made somewhere.

Not by me.

By him.

“Where is the rest?” I asked.

He didn’t answer.

That silence told me everything.


A notification buzzed on his computer.

A financial alert.

Then another.

Then another.

His expression changed instantly.

He turned slightly away from me, typing fast.

Too fast.

I saw the numbers reflected faintly in the glass.

Frozen vendor accounts.

Flagged transfers.

Audit triggers.

Someone had opened the ledger.

And they had opened it wide.

“Who authorized this?” he muttered.

Not to me.

To himself.

That’s when I knew.

The company wasn’t just being mismanaged.

May you like

It was being actively rerouted.

And I was no longer the only one watching.

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