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The fire in the library had burned down to a bed of sullen, glowing embers, casting long, dancing shadows that seed to mock the pretense of warmth and comfort in this house. I had remained there long after Maya and Leo had retreated, the whiskey a slow, familiar burn in my veins. The air was thick with the ghosts of the evening’s performance, the echo of Maya’s calculated fury, the unnerving precision of Leo’s rehearsed question. They were a team, a mother-and-son act of such chilling proficiency that it almost made admire them. Almost.

But admiration was a luxury I couldn’t afford. I was a resident of this estate, a cog in Charles’s machine, and I had just been handed the task of locking the door on a fellow inmate who was far more dangerous than she appeared. The weight of it settled on , a suffocating blanket of complicity. I was no longer just an observer. I was an active participant in the construction of a cage.

Finally, I pushed myself out of the deep leather chair and made my way through the silent, cavernous halls of the estate. My room was in the north wing, a spacious suite that was as comfortable as it was isolating.

I didn’t bother with the lights. The moonlight slanting through the large windows was enough. I crossed the room and opened my laptop, the screen’s blue-white glow illuminating the stark, minimalist space. For days, the USB drive had been a secret, a cold talisman of a promise I wasn’t sure I wanted to keep. Tonight, after Maya’s display, it felt like a necessity. I needed to know who I was dealing with, not just her, but the woman who had given the key. I needed to know if I was walking into a trap or being handed a weapon.

I retrieved the drive from its hiding place in the lining of my briefcase. It felt heavier now, more substantial. I inserted it into the laptop, my movents deliberate, thodical. The icon appeared on my screen, a simple, unassuming folder labeled "Archives." I had glanced at the contents before—the financial ledgers, the shell corporations, the undeniable proof of Charles’s illicit empire. It was a treasure trove, enough to destroy him, to bring his entire world crashing down. But it was also too obvious, too clean. It felt like a story soone wanted to read.

I needed to read between the lines.

I opened the first file, a sprawling spreadsheet of transactions. I wasn’t looking at the numbers anymore; I was looking at the code. I started to dig, my fingers flying across the keyboard, my mind focused, sharp. I ran diagnostics, checksums, and deep-level tadata scans. I was looking for a fingerprint, a signature. I spent hours sifting through the data, my eyes burning, my mind a whirlwind of algorithms and encryption keys. And then, I found it.

It wasn’t in the financial records themselves, but embedded in the source code of a custom-designed program used to manage one of the shell corporations. It was a small, almost insignificant string of characters, a comnt line that a lesser analyst would have dismissed as a programr’s idle note. But I recognized it instantly.

//v3n3t1anblind0.7b

It was a watermark. A digital signature. My father had used it. He called it the "Venetian Blind." It was a piece of code he had designed, a way to hide data in plain sight, like a ssage written on the slats of a blind. You could only see it if you knew the exact angle to look from. The version number, "0.7b," was a date stamp, a reference to a specific project he had worked on in the last year of his life. He had been a data architect, a builder of digital fortresses, and this was his unique, unmistakable calling card.

The woman from the café. Elara. She hadn’t just given Charles’s secrets. She had given a piece of my father. She was telling that she knew him, that she had worked with him.

The cold knot in my stomach tightened. This was a warning. And an invitation. She was showing that she was connected to my past, that she was a player from a ga I thought had ended with my father’s death.

I leaned back in my chair, the laptop’s glow casting my face in a pale, spectral light. I was no longer just a man caught between two powerful figures. I was the heir to a conflict I hadn’t even known existed. My father’s death, which I had always accepted as a tragic but straightforward consequence of his association with Charles, was now shrouded in a new, sinister light.

As I was processing this, my phone buzzed on the desk. It was a text ssage from an unknown number. My heart hamred against my ribs. I picked up the phone, my fingers steady, my mind clear. The ssage was short, cryptic, and utterly chilling.

You see now.

47.1698° N, 8.5178° E.

22:00.

Alone.

The coordinates were for a location in the city’s old town, a place of narrow, winding streets and ancient, quiet squares. It was a summons. A test. She was telling that she was watching , that she knew I had found her ssage. And she was daring to answer.

To go to this eting was to step off the board, to leave the safety of Charles’s world and enter the unknown, dangerous world of Elara. It was a risk, a gamble, a leap into the dark.

But I had to go. I had to know the truth. I had to know what happened to my father. I had to know what she wanted from .

I stood up, my movents slow, deliberate. I had a choice to make. I could stay here, in the safety of the cage, and play the role Charles had assigned . Or I could walk into the unknown, into the lion’s den, and face the ghost of my past.

I changed my clothes, putting on a dark, nondescript suit, a uniform of anonymity. I checked my watch. It was 21:30. I had thirty minutes. I slipped out of my room, my movents silent ghost. I navigated the labyrinthine halls of the estate, avoiding the staff, my footsteps a whisper on the marble floors. I found a side door, one that was rarely used, and slipped out into the cool night air.

The city was a blur of light and sound, a chaotic, vibrant contrast to the sterile silence of the estate. I took a cab, giving the driver an address a few blocks away from the coordinates. I walked the rest of the way, my senses on high alert, my mind a whirlwind of possibilities.

The location was a small, quiet café, tucked away in a narrow alley. It was the kind of place where secrets were traded, where deals were made in the shadows. I pushed open the door, the bell above it tinkling a soft, welcoming chi. And there she was, sitting at a table in the back, a cup of coffee in front of her, a small, enigmatic smile on her face.

She was older than I rembered, her face more lined, her eyes more knowing.

"Eric," she said, her voice a low, cultured alto. "I was wondering if you’d co."

"I’m here," I said, my voice a quiet, steady murmur. "You wanted to see ."

"I did," she said, her voice a low, quiet purr. "I wanted to talk to you about your father."

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