Marcus’s POV
Ten o’clock sharp.
Not a minute before, not a minute after. When you’re about to dismantle soone’s carefully constructed world, timing becos everything. I arrive twenty minutes early because I need to feel the space before it fills with tension and calculated words. My footsteps echo as I circle the conference room once, then twice, letting my instincts map every corner where truth might try to hide.
This room was chosen deliberately. Smaller than the public venues where we usually conduct official business. No caras. No press gallery. No witnesses beyond the ones I trust completely. Just clean lines, neutral walls, and the subtle electronic hum of recording systems that have already been reconfigured in ways the man I’m waiting for hasn’t anticipated yet. The air carries hints of industrial cleaner and aged circuitry. Nothing decorative. Nothing false.
Everything here serves a purpose.
I settle into my chair but keep my posture alert. Ready.
Focused.
Ruth enters first, her expression carved from stone but her eyes burning with quiet intensity. Her tablet rests against her arm like a weapon she’s not quite ready to draw. Lana follows, already dissecting the room’s acoustics with the thodical precision of soone who understands that words beco evidence. Rishi glides in next, his movents deceptively casual while his fingers twitch toward the data streams he’s been preparing for weeks. Asher positions himself at my right shoulder, close enough to act but far enough to avoid intimidation.
His presence says what words can’t. If this goes sideways, it won’t go far.
Then he walks in.
The man who requested this eting carries his years like expensive armor. Not ancient, but seasoned beyond the point where power feels like a ga worth playing for sport. His movents waste nothing. Every gesture calculated. His suit whispers old money and older connections, chosen not to impress but to remind everyone in the room that he’s survived longer than most people in positions like this ever manage. This is soone who’s learned to bend just enough to avoid breaking while watching others destroy themselves against immovable objects.
His smile when he sees is perfectly calibrated.
I don’t offer one in return.
"Appreciate you making ti for this conversation," he says, settling into his chair with practiced ease. His voice carries the smooth authority of soone accustod to being heard without raising his volu. "I know recent events have kept you occupied."
"Recent events have kept honest," I reply, letting silence stretch between us like a blade.
His gaze sweeps the room, cataloguing faces and calculating allegiances. Who holds real authority. Who controls information flow. Who might rember this conversation later. He’s already working angles that stopped existing the mont I walked into this building, but I let him asure shadows that no longer cast protection.
"Let speak plainly," he begins after his assessnt concludes. "Your recent actions have destabilized established operational protocols."
"Wrong," I say without inflection. "My recent actions exposed how those protocols were being manipulated."
The smile tightens at the corners. Barely perceptible. "You’ve introduced chaos into systems that maintained stability."
"Those systems maintained silence," I correct. "Stability and silence aren’t the sa thing."
Behind , Rishi’s subtle movent triggers the wall display. No fanfare. No dramatic flourishes. Just information cascading across the screen in organized streams. Financial trails that lead nowhere official. Enforcent records with convenient gaps. Policy directives signed by people who don’t exist on any public roster. Impact studies that reduce human consequences to statistical footnotes. Nas where there should be numbers. Faces where there should be abstractions.
His eyes flick toward the display.
Not surprise.
Recognition.
"These fraworks evolved for legitimate reasons," he says, his words coming slower now, each one weighted with careful consideration. "They preserved necessary order."
"They preserved profitable confusion," I counter. "There’s a distinction."
He draws a long breath through his nose, as if patience has beco a finite resource that requires careful managent now that the foundation beneath his feet has shifted. "You’re dismantling structures whose complexity you haven’t fully grasped."
I et his gaze directly for the first ti since he entered.
"That’s exactly the problem," I tell him. "Now I understand them completely."
My voice stays level. Controlled. I don’t need volu or theater. The facts are doing the heavy lifting, but not in the way I once believed they would. Truth doesn’t persuade anymore. It restructures. It eliminates the comfortable middle ground where people used to stand while pretending not to see what was happening around them.
"You profited," I continue, watching his face for reactions he’s too experienced to show. "Maybe not intentionally at first. But consistently. And when oversight started examining these fraworks more closely, you channeled resources toward resistance efforts that weren’t driven by principle. They were driven by self-preservation."
He doesn’t contradict . Doesn’t deny. Doesn’t deflect.
That silence tells everything his words never could.
"That ends today," I say.
The words settle into the room like gravity. Not dramatic. Not negotiable.
Final.
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