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The gun in Anja’s hand was not a dramatic, oversized Hollywood prop. It was a small, utilitarian Walther PPK, dark and efficient, and it looked utterly natural in her grip. Her hand was steady, her finger resting casually beside the trigger. She wasn’t shaking. She wasn’t hesitating. She had done this before, or had at least imagined it enough tis that the reality held no terror for her.

"Anja," I said, my own voice sounding unnaturally calm in the humming silence of the server room. "What are you doing?"

"I’m protecting my people," she replied, her German accent sharper, more defined than I had ever heard it. "Sothing you seem to have forgotten how to do."

The betrayal hit like a physical blow. I had trusted her. I had confided in her. I had seen a pragmatic, hardened ally, and I had been completely, utterly wrong. She wasn’t the fortress protecting the employees; she was the snake in the nest.

"It was you," I said, the pieces clicking into place with sickening clarity. "Not Klaus. You sent the ssage. You’ve been playing from the beginning."

"Don’t flatter yourself," she scoffed, taking a step into the room and kicking the door shut behind her. The click of the latch echoed like a death knell. "You were a convenient complication. An unexpected variable."

"Why?" I asked, my mind racing, searching for an escape, a weakness, anything. "Lacroix’s offer? The hostile takeover? You were on his side then, too."

"Lacroix is a butcher," she said, her voice dripping with contempt. "He would have stripped this place for parts and sold off the land to developers. He offered a great deal of money to help him, yes. But I also knew what he would do to this community, to the families who have worked here for three generations. I took his money, and I used it to delay the acquisition. I fed him just enough information to keep him interested, but not enough to let him succeed. I was buying ti."

"For what?" I asked, edging slightly to the left, trying to put a server rack between us.

"For a miracle," she said, her eyes, for the first ti, showing a flicker of sothing other than cold resolve. "For a savior. For soone who actually had the power and the vision to save this place. I thought that might be you."

"I am trying to save it!" I said, my voice rising in frustration.

"No," she said, shaking her head. "You’re trying to win. You’re trying to prove sothing to Charles Damien. You’re using this factory as a pawn in your little ga with him. Your plan, the pivot, the boutique R&D firm... it’s brilliant. It’s also a fantasy. It has a one in a hundred chance of succeeding. And if it fails, Damien Corp will wash their hands of us, and Lacroix will swoop in and pick our bones clean."

"So you decided to sell out to him instead?" I asked.

"I decided to create a new option," she corrected. "I sent him the ssage. The Berlin Project is a go. I told him your plan was moving forward, that you had secured the initial funding. I told him you were the real deal."

I stared at her, completely baffled. "Why? Why would you tell him that?"

"Because Lacroix is a predator," she said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "And predators are predictable. He sees a threat, he doesn’t try to compete. He tries to destroy. He’ll co after you, not the factory. He’ll focus on discrediting you, on undermining your relationship with Damien. He’ll leave Nexus Tech alone while he’s picking you apart."

"You’re using as bait," I said, the horrifying truth dawning on .

"I’m using you as a shield," she corrected. "You are the high-profile, glamorous target. While Lacroix is busy trying to ruin you, we will be down here, in the guts of this factory, making Dieter’s battery a reality. We’ll be building our future while you’re fighting your battles in Paris. By the ti he realizes he’s been played, it will be too late. We’ll be profitable. We’ll be independent."

She was sacrificing to save her people. She was throwing to the wolves.

"You can’t get away with this," I said, though I knew the threat was hollow.

"I already have," she said, gesturing with the gun toward the server. "The last ssage I sent him included a little sothing extra. A copy of the photo you received. And a suggestion that if he wanted to really hurt Damien, he should leak it to the press. By morning, your relationship with your boss will be the gossip of the European business world. You’ll be too busy dodging that fire to worry about us."

I didn’t like where this was going. She hadn’t just betrayed . She had orchestrated my public execution.

"Why are you telling all this?" I asked. "Why not just shoot and be done with it?"

"Because I’m not a murderer," she said, a hint of the old Anja, the pragmatist, showing through. "And because I need you to play your part. I need you to go back to Paris. I need you to face Charles Damien. I need you to look him in the eye and convince him that your plan is still viable, that you are still in control. I need you to be the brilliant, confident savior he thinks you are. Can you do that, Eric Hart? Can you lie to the devil himself?"

The question hung in the air between us, a challenge, a test. She was giving a choice. Die here, in this dusty basent, a forgotten footnote in a corporate war. Or walk back into the lion’s den, with a target on my back and a lie on my lips, and play her ga.

I looked at the gun, then at her face, at the steely resolve in her eyes. She was a monster. But she was her people’s monster. She was doing what I had co here to do: whatever it takes.

"I can," I said, my voice hard as steel. "But when this is over, Anja, when Nexus Tech is safe, I’m coming back for you."

A slow, thin smile touched her lips. "I would be disappointed if you didn’t," she said. "Now get out. You have a flight to catch."

I didn’t need to be told twice. I walked past her, my heart pounding in my chest, not daring to look back. I didn’t stop until I was out of the factory, breathing in the cold, pre-dawn air. I was alive. But I was a pawn, a sacrifice, a player in a ga I hadn’t even known I was playing.

As I walked toward the waiting car that would take to the airport, my phone buzzed again. I dreaded looking at it, fearing another ssage from the blackmailer. It was worse. It was a text from Charles.

It was a single, stark sentence.

We need to talk. Now.

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