The morning arrived with the gray, indifferent light of a Parisian dawn. I hadn’t slept. The penthouse was silent, but I felt Charles’s presence in every room, a heavy, watchful weight that followed from the spare bedroom to the kitchen where a silent maid had laid out coffee and croissants. I was a guest, but it felt more like being a specin under glass.
He found staring out the window, the city spread out below like a map of a kingdom I was about to be introduced to. He was already dressed, a suit so perfectly tailored it seed like a second skin, his tie a slash of blood red against the crisp white of his shirt. He looked like he was going to a battle, not a eting.
"Nervous?" he asked, pouring himself a coffee.
"No," I lied. My hands were trembling, so I shoved them in my pockets.
"Good," he said. "They’ll sll fear. Don’t give them the satisfaction."
The drive to the Damien Corp Paris headquarters was a procession. The mont we stepped out of the car, the caras were there. A wall of flashing lights and shouting reporters surged toward us, a pack of hyenas sensing blood. I froze for a half-second, but Charles didn’t even break his stride. He simply took my arm, his grip firm and proprietary, and pulled through the chaos. His body was a shield, his face a mask of cold indifference. He didn’t answer their questions, didn’t acknowledge their existence. He just moved forward, and I had no choice but to move with him.
The boardroom was on the top floor, a space of dark wood, polished marble, and intimidating modern art. A long table dominated the room, surrounded by a dozen n and two won, all of them dressed in the sa uniform of expensive, quiet power. They were the board, the arbiters of Charles’s empire. And as we entered, every one of them turned to look at .
Their gazes were sharp, analytical, and utterly devoid of warmth. I saw curiosity, suspicion, and in a few cases, a barely concealed disdain. I was the anomaly, the complication, the Oga in the room. I could feel their collective judgnt like a physical pressure.
Charles led to the chair on his right. It was a statent. A declaration. He wasn’t hiding . He was placing beside him, forcing them to acknowledge .
The eting began without preamble. A man at the far end of the table, a stern, gray-haired man nad Dubois, cleared his throat.
"Charles," he said, his voice formal and heavy. "I think we all know why we’re here. This... situation." He gestured vaguely in my direction. "The press is having a field day. Our stock is already taking a hit. We need to discuss the potential damage to the Lacroix acquisition."
"The acquisition is not in jeopardy," Charles said, his voice calm and even. He didn’t raise it. He didn’t need to. The quiet authority in his tone was enough to silence the room.
"With all due respect," Dubois countered, "a scandal of this nature, involving you personally, calls your judgnt into question. Lacroix is already using it to leverage a better deal. He’s claiming instability."
"Let him," Charles said, a flicker of sothing dangerous in his eyes. "His leverage is an illusion."
Another board mber, a younger man with a sleek, expensive suit and a predatory smile, leaned forward. "Perhaps, Charles, the simplest solution would be to... distance yourself from the source of the problem." He looked directly at . "A quiet settlent, a new position for Mr. Hart in a less... visible division. Out of the country, perhaps."
It was a polite, corporate way of saying "throw him to the wolves." I felt a knot of dread tighten in my stomach. This was it. This was the mont they would cast aside.
Charles didn’t even look at the man who had spoken. He kept his gaze fixed on Dubois. "Eric’s position is not up for discussion. He is overseeing the Berlin project, which, I might add, is already showing promising early returns."
That was a lie. A bold, audacious lie. I hadn’t even had a chance to implent anything yet. But he said it with such conviction that for a mont, even I almost believed it.
"Promising returns?" the younger man scoffed. "From a failing factory that was on the verge of liquidation a week ago? That’s difficult to believe."
"Believe it," Charles said, his voice dropping a few degrees, the temperature in the room dropping with it. "Because if you don’t, you can find yourself another company to believe in."
The threat hung in the air, raw and absolute. No one spoke. The younger man paled slightly and sank back into his chair.
Charles let the silence stretch for a mont, letting his power settle over the room. Then he continued, his tone shifting from nacing to strategic.
"Lacroix thinks this scandal is his weapon," he said. "He thinks he can use it to undermine , to chip away at my authority. He’s wrong. This scandal is not a weakness. It’s an opportunity."
He stood up and walked to the large screen at the end of the room, picking up a remote. With a click, a new image appeared. It was a financial chart, a complex web of lines and numbers.
"This is Lacroix’s European logistics network," Charles said, his voice sharp and clear. "It’s efficient. It’s profitable. And it’s built on a foundation of illegal price-fixing and smuggling. I’ve known about it for years. I’ve just been waiting for the right mont to expose him."
He turned to face the board, his eyes burning with a cold, calculating fire.
"He handed us that mont," he said. "He thought he was attacking . He was just walking into the trap. While he’s busy gloating to the press about my personal life, we are preparing to leak this information to every regulatory agency in Europe. We will not just stop his acquisition. We will destroy his company. We will dismantle his empire, piece by piece, and sell off the parts to his competitors. Starting with his logistics network."
The room was utterly silent. The board mbers were staring at him, their expressions a mixture of shock and awe. They weren’t looking at a man caught in a scandal anymore. They were looking at a general unveiling a master plan.
He looked at , a flicker of sothing unreadable in his eyes. He had used . He had used the scandal, the betrayal, the entire ss, and turned it into a weapon. He had taken Anja’s plan to use as a shield and twisted it into a spear.
"The board eting is adjourned," he said, clicking off the screen. "I expect your full support."
No one argued. No one dared.
As we left the boardroom, walking back through the gauntlet of silent assistants, he spoke to for the first ti since we had entered the building.
"You see?" he said, his voice low. "This is how it’s done. You don’t just defend. You attack. You turn their strength into their weakness."
"I had no idea," I said, my mind reeling.
"You weren’t supposed to," he replied. "You were supposed to be the distraction. And you were... magnificent."
We stepped back into the elevator, the doors closing us in together. The air was thick with the aftermath of the battle, the electric charge of his victory. He moved closer, his body radiating a heat that had nothing to do with the temperature in the room.
He reached out and his fingers brushed my cheek, a touch that was both possessive and surprisingly gentle.
"Now," he said, his voice a low murmur that vibrated through , "we find out if my distraction has been compromised."
Before I could ask what he ant, his phone buzzed. He glanced at it, and for the first ti that day, the confident mask slipped. A flicker of sothing cold and hard entered his eyes. He held the screen out for to see.
It was a forwarded email. The original sender was listed as "Anonymous." The subject line was a single, chilling word: Checkmate.
Below it was a short ssage.
You played your hand well, Damien. But you left a piece on the board. I’ve taken it.
Attached to the email was a single file. Charles tapped it open. It was a security feed, grainy but clear. It was the interior of a dimly lit hotel bar. The tistamp was from two nights ago. And sitting at the bar, looking pale and shaken, his head in his hands, was Klaus.
My blood ran cold. Klaus. The cynical production manager Anja and I had dismissed as a simple-minded obstructionist. He wasn’t the traitor. He was the target.
Another ssage appeared on the screen, a follow-up from the Anonymous sender.
He knows where Dieter’s original prototype is. And he’s about to tell Lacroix everything. Tick-tock.
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