MasukThe verdict was delivered on a gray morning.Not dramatic. Not delayed. Just scheduled, listed among other proceedings on the docket as if it were an ordinary matter. That normalcy unsettled Lillian more than ceremony ever could have.Ordinary was how this had survived for so long.She watched from a small room adjacent to the courtroom, the feed muted, the screen angled so she could see faces rather than hear arguments already exhausted. Elena sat beside her, fingers interlaced tightly enough to whiten the knuckles.Nathaniel stood behind them, still, his presence a steady line rather than a shield.The prosecutor rose.Charges were read again. Conspiracy. Manipulation of public infrastructure res
The gala ended without an ending.Music faded. Applause dissolved into polite murmurs. The floral centerpiece remained pristine, untouched by the tension threaded through the night. Guests departed in controlled clusters, already reshaping events into narratives that suited them.Lillian stood near
The briefing was scheduled for fifteen minutes.Nathaniel ended it in seven.He stood at the head of the smaller strategy room, tablet resting against the table, while two senior advisors and a regulatory consultant waited in disciplined silence. The screen behind him displayed a single agenda item
The briefing began without ceremony.Nathaniel listened in silence as the projections shifted across the screen, each slide more precise than the last. Port schematics. Regulatory timelines. Investment exposure. The room was sealed. Phones off. Assistants excluded.Only his core remained.Lucas sto
Nathaniel Crosswell did not approach Lillian Bloom immediately.That restraint was deliberate.He remained near the edge of the hall, jacket folded neatly over his arm, attention seemingly divided between a quiet exchange with Lucas and the larger room beyond them. In truth, he was observing the st







