The silence in the room was no longer empty. It was a weapon, sharpened by my question and now held between us, its edge pressed against Charles’s throat. He didn’t flinch. He didn’t retreat. Instead, a slow, dangerous smile touched his lips, a predator’s acknowledgnt of a worthy opponent. It was a genuine, unguarded expression I had ever seen from him, and it was more terrifying than any show of anger.
"Deceive myself?" he repeated, his voice a low, silken murmur that vibrated with a dark amusent. "That’s a fascinating choice of words, Eric. It implies there’s sothing to believe in. A truth. An emotion." He took a step closer, the space between us shrinking until I could feel the controlled heat radiating from him, the scent of scotch and sothing sharper, more primal, filling my senses. "I deal in probabilities. In leverage. In facts that can be verified and controlled. Belief is for children and fools."
He stopped directly in front of , close enough that I had to tilt my head back to maintain eye contact. His gaze was no longer just intense; it was invasive, dissecting, stripping away my layers of composure to see the raw nerve I had just exposed.
"Look at him," he continued, his voice dropping even lower, a confidential, almost conspiratorial tone that was more nacing than a shout. "Look at what you just saw. A desperate woman with a story and a child she knows is a key to a kingdom. She plays her piece, and you expect to see a family? I see a strategy. A well-tid, emotionally manipulative gambit."
My heart hamred against my ribs, but I held his gaze, refusing to be the one to look away. "The eyes, Charles," I said, my voice quieter now, but no less challenging. "You saw his eyes."
For a fraction of a second, sothing flickered in the depths of his own. A shadow of doubt. A crack in the impenetrable facade of his logic. It was there and then it was gone, replaced by an even colder, more hardened resolve.
"Eyes can be deceiving," he said, his voice flat, devoid of all emotion. "Mine, certainly. His? A coincidence. A genetic lottery. Nothing more." He reached out, to straighten my collar, a gesture of intimate, proprietary control that was both a caress and a threat. His fingers brushed against my neck, and a jolt of unwanted heat shot through , a betrayal of my body that I instantly suppressed. "You, of all people, should know that things are not always what they seem."
I stood perfectly still, forcing myself to endure his touch, to et his challenge without flinching. "Then why the DNA test?" I asked, my voice a low, steady murmur. "If you’re so certain it’s a strategy, why bother verifying a lie you’ve already dismissed?"
His thumb lingered against my pulse point, a silent, possessive pressure. "Because a lie, once proven, ceases to be a threat. It becos a tool. And I," he said, his voice a soft, deadly whisper, "never discard a potential tool." He finally dropped his hand, the loss of his touch a sudden, cold void. "I need to know the variables. All of them. So I can calculate the outco."
He turned and walked toward the large window, his back to , his reflection a dark, imposing silhouette against the glittering backdrop of the city. "You will make the arrangents," he said, his voice once again the cold, commanding tone of the CEO. "Discreet. Imdiate. Use the clinic in Geneva. They understand confidentiality."
I understood. He wasn’t just getting a test; he was creating a situation, a controlled environnt where he would be the master of the truth, whatever it turned out to be. He was already building the cage, not just for Maya and the boy, but for the outco itself.
"Understood," I said, my voice quiet and steady.
He didn’t turn around. "You may go," he said, his voice a dismissal.
I turned and walked out of the living room, my steps slow and deliberate, my back straight. I could feel his gaze on , a heavy, calculating weight that followed out of the room.
I walked down the corridor, my mind racing, my thoughts a chaotic swirl of emotions and calculations. The ga had changed. It was no longer just about revenge. It was about sothing more. Sothing more complicated. More dangerous.
I reached my room and closed the door behind , leaning against it for a mont, my heart a desperate drum in my chest. I was in over my head. I knew that. But I was also closer than I had ever been. I had a key. A piece of the puzzle. A weapon.
I pushed myself away from the door and walked over to the bed, my hand reaching into my pocket and pulling out the note from the archive. I unfolded it, the paper a thin, fragile whisper in the quiet room. I read the words again, my eyes scanning the neat, precise handwriting. The Cayman account is the key. The number is in the ledger.
The Cayman account. The detail Charles had so carelessly let slip. It was the smoking gun. The proof I needed to destroy him.
But as I stood there, the note a cold, heavy secret in my hand, I couldn’t shake the image of the boy’s face. The bright, curious eyes. The sweet, innocent smile. The unthinking trust.
I thought about Charles’s words. A lie, once proven, ceases to be a threat. It becos a tool.
What if the boy was his? What if the DNA test proved it? What would happen then? Would Charles embrace him? Or would he see him as just another variable, another tool to be used and discarded?
I didn’t know. And the not knowing was a torture more exquisite than any I had ever known.
I walked over to the window and looked out at the city, the lights a blur of color and motion. I was a ghost in this house, a ghost in his life. But I was also a witness. I had seen sothing I wasn’t supposed to see. I knew sothing I wasn’t supposed to know.
And I knew, that Charles would do whatever it took to protect his secrets. Whatever it took.
I had to be careful. I had to be smart. I had to be ready.
Because the ga was no longer just about revenge. It was about survival. And I was playing for keeps.
Reviews
All reviews (0)