The hum of the Gulfstream’s engines was a constant, monotonous thrum that vibrated through the floor and up into the soles of my shoes. It was the sound of imnse power and imnse wealth, the sound of Charles Damien’s world. Outside the window, the world was a blanket of thick, impenetrable clouds, a sterile, white void that erased the ground below. We were suspended between states, between countries, between truths.
Maya sat opposite , a small, fragile figure swallowed by the cavernous luxury of the cabin. She hadn’t spoken a word since we’d boarded. Leo, her son, was curled up beside her, his head resting on her lap, fast asleep, his breathing a soft, rhythmic sigh. He looked innocent. Peaceful. A child. But he was also a variable. A question mark. And in Charles’s world, question marks were dangerous.
I had my laptop open, the screen a cool, blue glow in the dim cabin light. I was supposed to be reviewing the preliminary reports from the ridian group, preparing for the next phase of the corporate strategy. But my eyes kept straying to my phone, lying face down on the polished wood of the fold-out table. The ssage was a ghost in the machine, a silent, screaming alarm that had shattered the carefully constructed narrative of my revenge.
The Cayman account is a trap. Don’t fall for it.
Who sent it? How did they know I was looking for it? Was it a warning from a friend? Or a threat from an enemy? Was it Charles himself, testing , setting a trap within a trap? The questions circled in my mind like vultures, each one more nacing than the last. I had built my entire plan around that account. It was the keystone, the single piece of evidence that would bring Charles’s empire crashing down. And now, I was being told it was a lie.
I closed my laptop, the click of the lid sharp and final in the quiet cabin. Maya looked up, her eyes wide and questioning.
"Is everything okay?" she asked, her voice a hesitant whisper.
"Everything’s fine," I said, my voice a quiet, steady murmur. "Just a minor technical issue."
She didn’t believe . I could see it in her eyes. But she was too afraid to push. She just nodded and looked away, her gaze returning to her sleeping son.
I stood and walked to the back of the cabin, pouring myself a glass of water from the small, well-stocked bar. The ice cubes clinked against the glass, a sharp, brittle sound. I needed to think. I needed to clear my head.
The Cayman account. It was the one detail Charles had let slip, the one piece of information that wasn’t in any public report. It was the smoking gun. But what if it was a decoy? A carefully placed breadcrumb designed to lead down the wrong path, to make waste my ti, my energy, my focus on a dead end while he was watching, waiting for to make a mistake?
I thought about the man who had sent on this mission. The man who had trusted to oversee the most intimate, most volatile part of his life. He was a master of manipulation, a puppeteer who pulled strings from the shadows. He would never leave a loose end. He would never give the key to his own destruction.
Unless he wanted to.
Unless he was setting up for a fall. A spectacular, public, ruinous fall that would serve as a warning to anyone else who dared to challenge him.
I took a long swallow of the water, the cool liquid a welco jolt to my senses. I had to be careful. I had to be smart. I had to be ready for anything.
The plane began its descent, the clouds parting to reveal the sprawling, glittering city of Geneva below. It was a city of banks and secrets, a place where the world’s elite ca to hide their money and their sins. It was the perfect place for Charles’s ga to play out.
A car was waiting for us on the tarmac, a sleek, black sedan with tinted windows that promised anonymity. Maya and Leo were quiet as they settled into the back, the boy still sleepy, his mother a bundle of frayed nerves. I sat opposite them, my phone a heavy, accusatory presence in my pocket.
The clinic was a discreet, modern building on the outskirts of the city, all clean lines and smoked glass. It looked more like a high-end spa than a dical facility. A woman in a crisp, white uniform greeted us at the door, her smile professional, her eyes assessing.
"Mr. Hart," she said, her voice a soft, cultured purr. "We’ve been expecting you. Mr. Damien has made all the necessary arrangents."
She led us down a quiet, sterile corridor, our footsteps the only sound. Maya was trembling, her hand clutching Leo’s so tightly her knuckles were white. I could feel her fear, a palpable, suffocating aura that clung to her like a second skin.
The woman led us into a small, comfortable office. "Please, have a seat," she said, gesturing toward a plush sofa. "Dr. Rousseau will be with you shortly."
She left, closing the door softly behind her. Maya sat down, pulling Leo onto her lap. He was awake now, his eyes wide with curiosity as he looked around the room.
"Are we going to see the doctor?" he asked, his voice a sweet, childish lilt.
"Yes, sweetie," Maya said, her voice a choked, desperate whisper. "We’re just going to see the doctor."
I stood by the window, my back to them, my gaze fixed on the grounds outside. I had to make a decision. I had to choose a path. I could follow the lead I had been given, the one that led to the Cayman account. Or I could trust the anonymous text, the one that warned of a trap.
The door opened, and a man in a white coat walked in. He was tall and distinguished, with silver hair and a kind, gentle face. He was Dr. Rousseau.
"Ms. Maya," he said, his voice a soft, reassuring murmur. "I’m Dr. Rousseau. It’s a pleasure to et you."
He turned to , his eyes a sharp, intelligent blue. "And you must be Mr. Hart. Mr. Damien has spoken very highly of you."
"I’m just here to oversee the process," I said, my voice a quiet, steady murmur.
"Of course," he said, his smile a little too practiced. "We understand the need for discretion."
He turned his attention back to Maya, his expression softening. "Now, Leo," he said, his voice a gentle, reassuring murmur. "We’re just going to take a little sample of your blood. It won’t hurt a bit. I promise."
He took out a small, sterile kit, his movents efficient and precise. Maya held Leo close, her eyes closed, her lips moving in a silent, desperate prayer. I watched them, a silent, impassive observer, my mind a whirlwind of calculations and contingencies.
This was it. The mont of truth. The mont the variables were asured, the probabilities calculated. The mont the ga changed.
As Dr. Rousseau prepared the needle, my phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled it out, my heart a frantic, desperate drum. It was another ssage. From the sa unknown number.
The ssage was short. Cryptic. And it was a command.
et at the Café du Soleil at 8 p.m. Co alone.
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