Athena stood before the tall glass building of the Giacotti company, the wind tugging at her coat, her chin held high and shoulders squared. The rain has finally stopped.
The massive logo glead faintly under the morning sun, but the glimr it once held for her now seed dull—like a fading crown. She studied it for a mont, her expression unreadable.
Her earlier plan had been simple: let the company rot. Let the empire Ewan had built collapse into rubble while the world gawked. But then she’d thought of Spider—and the hacker’s uncanny skill at turning disasters into opportunities.
No, letting the company burn wasn’t clever enough. True revenge wasn’t destruction. It was control.
She smiled faintly, the kind that barely touched her lips but sharpened her eyes. Today, she would take everything—, elegantly, irrevocably.
Her fingers tightened around her black leather bag, the one containing the docunts that would end all debate before it even began. A quick glance at the crowd ahead reminded her why she’d brought guards. Caras flashed. Microphones stretched forward like hungry mouths.
"Dr. Athena! Are you here to support Mr. Giacotti?"
"Is it true you were the one who exposed the data leak?"
"Rumor says you’re working with him?"
Athena smiled politely, not slowing her stride. "No comnts," she said smoothly, her heels clicking against the marble floor as security cleared a path. Her guards flanked her, forming a quiet wall against the frenzy.
Once inside, the hum of the lobby swallowed the noise from outside. Familiar faces turned to stare. So smiled in awkward recognition, others looked away in sha or fear. Athena acknowledged none of them.
The elevator chid softly. As she stepped in, she caught her reflection in the mirrored wall—composed, powerful, and distant. It had been just three days since she’d last been here, since she’d walked these halls as Ewan’s partner. Now she returned, not as a lover, but as a reckoning.
When the doors slid open on the top floor, Sandro stood near the eting room, engaged in low conversation with Madam Ruby. His official laugh faded the mont he saw Athena approach.
"Athena.. he began, a mixture of relief and dread in his tone.
She offered him a stiff, perfunctory smile. "Sandro."
He looked as though he wanted to say more—to explain, to defend, to plead—but she brushed past him before he could. The faint scent of her perfu lingered in the air, cool and sharp like her resolve.
Inside, the boardroom was already full. A dozen shareholders sat around the long mahogany table, the air thick with tension. Whispers ceased as Athena entered. Heads turned.
She took her seat at the far end of the table without invitation. Her posture was straight, regal almost. The sleek bun at the back of her head glead under the ceiling light.
"Let’s proceed," she said evenly, and that was all it took for Sandro, stepping into the boardroom, to clear his throat and flag the eting open.
The first speaker—a gray-haired man with anxious eyes—was already voicing his frustrations. "We can’t keep operating like this! The dia is tearing us apart, clients are withdrawing, and still no word from Mr. Ewan. What exactly is going on?"
All eyes shifted to Sandro. He exhaled quietly and leaned forward, clasping his hands together. "We are handling the situation," he began, his tone firm but weary. "This entire ss is a coordinated attack by an organized group. The leaked docunts, the alleged transactions—they were doctored to discredit Mr. Ewan and this company’s good work in this country."
A few heads nodded. A few frowned.
"What about the call recordings?" a woman demanded. "And the receipts?"
Sandro forced a smile. "Fabricated. All of it. We have reason to believe that this was orchestrated to target not just Mr. Ewan but the entire division involved in stopping the nace of the grey disease. Please, we need patience. The board must not fall into panic. We will clear his na soon."
Murmurs rippled through the room—skeptical, restless. Athena reclined slightly, her fingers playing with the pen in her hand. She waited.
When Sandro finally leaned back, clearly hoping for the matter to be dropped, Athena let the pen slip from her fingers. It landed against the wooden surface with a sharp tap.
All heads turned.
"I don’t think," she began softly, her voice slicing through the room, "that this company is handling it well at all."
Sandro’s head snapped toward her. "Athena—"
She ignored him, her gaze sweeping across the table. "You speak of patience, Sandro, but patience doesn’t pay the employees whose salaries would be delayed, if the stocks keep plumting at the rate it is. Nor does it reassure our foreign investors, who have already begun to redirect their funds elsewhere."
She reached into her bag and withdrew a thick stack of papers, dropping them onto the table. The sound was heavy, final.
"These," she continued, "are your current performance reports. Stock trends, partnership withdrawals, and internal correspondence between departnts. You’ll notice that since the scandal broke, this company’s market share has dropped by twelve percent—and counting."
A murmur of shock passed around the table.
Athena smiled thinly, letting the mont linger. "Now, you may continue pretending that everything is under control. But we all know what happens when denial becos strategy—it leads straight to bankruptcy. I believe I can turn things around..."
Sandro’s jaw tightened. "Athena, with due respect, you’re not being serious. You don’t have the necessary amount of shares..."
"Sandro, have you forgotten the last eting already," she interjected smoothly, sliding another folder toward him. "With my grandfather’s shares, combined with mine, I am now the largest external shareholder. That makes my voice not just relevant—but necessary."
The silence that followed was thick enough to taste.
Madam Ruby blinked rapidly, leaning forward to examine the docunt. "You... you have more shares than Ewan?"
Athena nodded. "I’m a Thorne, Madam Ruby. An astute business woman too."
Sandro looked stunned, then angry. "You can’t just walk in here and—"
"I can," Athena said, rising to her feet. Her hands rested lightly on the table, her eyes locking onto his. "And I will. Because while all of you were busy managing excuses, I will be managing outcos."
Her tone was even, calm—but the authority in it made several board mbers unconsciously straighten.
"I’m not here to destroy what Ewan built," she continued. "I’m here to make sure it doesn’t sink because of his mistakes. You want to protect his legacy? Then give it a fighting chance."
She turned toward the rest of the table. "The truth is, leadership change is overdue. This company needs stability—soone who understands both its science and its strategy. Soone who knows where the gaps are."
Sandro’s voice cracked slightly. "You’re suggesting a coup."
Athena’s eyes glittered. "I’m suggesting recovery."
Her gaze swept the room again, capturing each nervous face. "Gentlen, ladies—vote as you please. But understand this: the world outside isn’t waiting for you to decide whether you like or not. It’s already writing the company’s obituary. The only question is whose na will appear as the one who saved it."
She picked up her pen, poised it over the docunt before her, and added, "I move for a change in leadership—effective imdiately."
Then she shared the other docunt Ethan had made available to her–the rging of her companies...
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