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The suite was quiet in the way expensive places always were—thick carpets swallowing sound, glass walls keeping the city at a tasteful distance. Paris glittered outside like it was celebrating sothing Diane hadn’t been invited to.

She stood by the window, arms crossed, nails biting into her sleeves.

She had once believed that loyalty was a currency.

Her father taught her that.

Not in words. Never in warmth. But in rules—unspoken, immovable rules that governed everything from how she spoke in public to who she was allowed to love.

Stand beside , he’d said once, years ago, voice low and satisfied as caras flashed around them.

And you’ll never want for anything.

She had believed him.

She had given him everything.

She smiled when told.

Defended him when whispered about.

Learned when to speak and—more importantly—when to stay silent.

She learned how to keep secrets before she learned how to drive.

And when she finally fell—when she needed him to stand beside her—he didn’t even hesitate.

He cut her loose like excess weight.

"You’ve beco a liability," he’d said, tone clinical. Not angry. Not disappointed. Just... finished.

"You embarrassed yourself. And ."

Diane laughed softly now, the sound brittle.

After everything I did for you.

She pressed her forehead to the glass.

"I made myself smaller for you," she whispered. "I swallowed things no daughter should ever have to swallow."

She rembered the first ti she realized what kind of man her father truly was.

She’d been sixteen.

She’d overheard a phone call—his voice sharp, impatient, talking about moving money where it couldn’t be traced. She hadn’t understood all the details back then, but she understood enough.

This is how power survives, he’d said.

That night, she didn’t sleep.

Not because she was afraid.

But because she understood the rules of the world for the first ti.

And she had followed them faithfully.

Until he decided she was expendable.

Sebastian didn’t interrupt her thoughts.

He never did.

He sat at the table behind her, scrolling through docunts on his tablet, posture relaxed, presence deliberate. He understood the value of silence—how it invited confession without demanding it.

"You know," he said eventually, not looking up, "most people hesitate when I ask this question."

Diane turned.

He t her gaze then, eyes sharp with interest.

"Who do you want gone first?"

She didn’t flinch.

"My father."

The words landed cleanly. Final.

Sebastian raised an eyebrow—not in surprise, but in assessnt. "No warm-up target?"

She smiled. It didn’t reach her eyes. "He taught not to waste effort on practice."

She crossed the room and took the seat opposite him, folding her hands neatly on the table like this was a business eting.

"He believes blood grants immunity," she continued. "That no matter what he did to , I’d still protect him."

"And you won’t?" he asked.

"I already did," she said. "For years."

Sebastian studied her, the corner of his mouth lifting slightly. "You’re certain?"

Diane leaned forward.

"I know where the money went," she said calmly. "Which accounts were real. Which were only there to confuse auditors. I know which hospitality subsidiaries were used to launder profits. Which consulting fees were bribes. Which partners were paid to forget."

She didn’t raise her voice.

She didn’t need to.

Sebastian set the tablet down.

"These are serious accusations," he said mildly.

"They’re facts," Diane replied. "I lived with them. I covered for them. I cleaned them up."

She paused, then added softly, "I learned from the best."

For the first ti, Sebastian smiled fully.

The plan unfolded without theatrics.

No confrontations. No threats. No emotional outbursts.

Diane sat beside Sebastian as forensic accountants reconstructed transaction histories with surgical precision. Files were cross-referenced. Tilines aligned. Every piece of information Diane provided slotted perfectly into place.

She didn’t exaggerate.

She didn’t fabricate.

She curated.

"This account here," she said, pointing once. "That’s the one he uses when he wants plausible deniability."

"And this?" Sebastian asked.

"Where he hides what he doesn’t want his board to see." she replied.

He nodded. "He trusted you."

"Yes," Diane agreed. "That was his mistake."

The leaks went out anonymously.

Not all at once.

Just enough to raise eyebrows.

Then enough to raise alarms.

Banks froze credit lines. Longti partners suddenly went silent. The board convened an ergency eting without informing him first.

Diane watched it all from Paris.

When the news broke, she was drinking tea.

Senior Business Figure Under Investigation for Financial Cris.

Assets Frozen Amid Widening Probe.

Regulators Confirm Long-Term Illicit Activity.

Her phone buzzed.

Unknown number.

She let it ring.

Again.

And again.

Finally, a ssage ca through.

Diane. If this is you—

She deleted it without opening the rest.

She imagined him now—angry, confused, scrambling to regain control. A man who had always believed he stood above consequence finally realizing the ground could collapse beneath him.

She felt no triumph.

Only a quiet, settling clarity.

Sebastian watched her carefully. "Do you regret it?"

She looked at the screen one last ti, where her father’s na was already being dismantled by headlines and speculation.

"No," she said. "I regret that he made this necessary."

Outside, Paris continued to glow.

And sowhere far away, a man who had believed himself untouchable was learning what it felt like to fall.

The first headline broke before dawn.

It wasn’t sensational. That was what made it lethal.

Regulators Freeze Assets Linked to Jenkins Holdings Amid Financial Irregularities.

Diane read it twice, then set her phone down and poured herself coffee. Outside the window, Paris stirred awake—delivery trucks, early joggers, café lights flickering on. Ordinary life moved forward without waiting for anyone’s ruin.

By noon, the language sharpened.

Evidence Suggests Long-Term Laundering Through Hospitality Subsidiaries.

By evening, the story no longer used words like irregularities.

It used cris.

Back ho, ergency board etings were called without Jenkins’ presence. Lines of credit were pulled. Insurance partners suspended coverage pending investigation. Hotels he had boasted about at dinners suddenly had their doors shuttered, staff sent ho with apologies and no answers.

Diane followed it all with a clinical detachnt she hadn’t known she possessed.

Sebastian’s people worked efficiently. Not a single call went directly to regulators from a Vale Group address. Not one docunt could be traced to Diane.

She had not accused.

She had revealed.

And the truth—properly tid—did the rest.

Jenkins learned he was finished in a conference room that no longer belonged to him.

The bank representatives arrived first, faces apologetic, voices rehearsed. The board followed, expressions unreadable. When the regulators entered, badges visible, it was already over.

He demanded explanations.

He threatened.

He laughed once, incredulous, when they ntioned arrest.

That was when the handcuffs ca out.

News caras caught the mont he was escorted down the steps of a building he had once funded. His face was red, eyes scanning the crowd as if searching for soone who could undo this with a single call.

No one ca.

By nightfall, his accounts were seized. His properties were flagged. Bankruptcy filings were prepared by lawyers who had once begged for his favor.

In Paris, Diane watched the footage on mute.

She recognized the look on his face.

Not fear.

Betrayal.

She closed the video and set the phone aside.

"Prison," Sebastian said quietly from behind her. "Not imdiately. But it’s inevitable."

Diane nodded once.

"He always said consequences were for other people," she replied. "I suppose he’ll have ti to reflect."

They t later in Sebastian’s office, walls of glass overlooking the river. Night had fallen, the city lights reflected like broken stars across the water.

"You’ve crossed a line," Sebastian said calmly, not accusing. "There’s no returning to who you were."

Diane folded her arms. "I crossed it when he discarded ."

Sebastian studied her. "You could have spared him."

"I spared him for years," she said. "I protected him. I covered for him. I swallowed the cost of his sins because he told that was love."

Her voice didn’t shake.

"That wasn’t rcy," she continued. "That was obedience."

Sebastian inclined his head. "And now?"

"Now," Diane said, eting his gaze, "I choose myself."

Silence stretched between them—not uncomfortable. Assessing.

"You understand," Sebastian said at last, "that this level of exposure attracts attention."

"I’m counting on it," she replied.

"Good," he said softly. "Because visibility is currency."

Diane felt sothing settle into place.

Not triumph.

Alignnt.

Sebastian moved to the window, hands clasped behind his back. "Jenkins was... an easy proof," he said. "A rehearsal."

"For what?" Diane asked.

"For influence," he replied. "For reach. For shaping narratives before they’re spoken."

He turned to her. "You know who cos next."

Diane didn’t answer imdiately.

She thought of Yvette—calm, composed, quietly resilient. The woman who had taken what Diane believed should have been hers. The woman who stood at the center of Joseph’s attention without even trying.

"The one who’s visible," Diane said at last. "The one everyone assus is protected."

Sebastian smiled. "Visibility without armor."

"Not yet," Diane corrected. "But she will be."

Sebastian’s gaze sharpened with interest. "And when she is?"

Diane’s lips curved, slow and deliberate. "That’s when it matters most."

Outside, the river flowed on—indifferent to bloodlines, to loyalties, to the quiet decisions that changed lives.

Diane picked up her coat.

"I’ve done what you asked," she said.

Sebastian nodded. "You’ve done more."

As she walked toward the door, the weight of what she’d done did not follow her.

Only montum did.

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