ログインCassian Vale didn't wait for the emergency board meeting to finish before forcing the private call through.The secure study where I had been working shifted into low amber lighting as evening settled over the estate. Beyond the floor-to-ceiling glass, estate security moved through the grounds in pairs, speaking quietly into earpieces.Something had changed.I felt it before Cassian Vale even spoke."Eva Monroe needs to leave the estate immediately."I looked up from the files spread across the conference table.The tone was wrong.A message flashed across my tablet from Vale Holdings' legal division.UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS ATTEMPTS DETECTED — FAMILY TRUST RECORDS UNDER REVIEWMy eyes narrowed.Then I looked back at the screen."What's happening?"Cassian Vale didn't answer directly.That was the first thing I noticed.The second thing was worse.Cassian Vale already knew exactly what was happening."Eva Monroe leaves tonight."I leaned back slowly, glancing at the documents covering the
The courtroom door seals behind me with a heavy hydraulic click that sounds too final for something still technically “in progress.” Inside the Valecorp forensic chamber, nothing feels still. Not even the air. It hums with layered systems running beyond visible control—feeds, corrections, and rechecks, all stacked on top of each other like the building itself is arguing with itself.I keep my eyes on the main interface wall.VALE-2 LEGACY ACCESS is already open.The label alone changes the room. Every analyst here straightens without meaning to. Even the ones pretending they’re not nervous stop typing for half a second, like their hands forgot what they were doing.Cassian Vale is not physically in the chamber, but his presence is everywhere anyway—through secured remote access, through authentication lines that keep stabilizing and re-stabilizing the system like it recognizes him before it recognizes anyone else.He doesn’t speak.The ex-fiancée’s identity file loads across three mi
The chamber doesn’t feel like a room anymore.It feels like something sealed off from reality, held together by layered authentication gates and silent systems that keep rechecking themselves like they don’t trust their own existence.Eva Monroe stands just behind the forensic interface line, fingers resting near the edge of the control console but not touching it. Every surface hums faintly. Not loud enough to be alarming. Just persistent. Like the building is thinking too hard.Across the chamber, the VALE-2 archival recovery interface is already running.It shouldn’t be unstable yet, but it is.The ex-fiancée’s identity file loads clean for half a second, then it breaks.“DECEASED — VERIFIED CIVIL TERMINATION.”A pause, then it flips.“INACTIVE PERSONNEL RECORD — PENDING SYSTEM CONFIRMATION.”Another pause. Shorter this time, then something worse appears.“UNVERIFIED CONTINUITY BREACH — IDENTITY DISPLACEMENT ALERT.”A junior analyst exhales sharply. “That’s just corruption. Legacy
The courtroom felt different the moment the judge called proceedings back in.Not quieter. Not calmer.Just… unstable in a way no one could quite name.The clerks tried again to pull the VALE-2-linked archive through the court system. I watched their screens from the witness side while my fingers stayed folded too tightly on the table. Every refresh made that same low error pulse crawl across the main display.Cassian Vale’s ex-death record opened, held for half a second, then broke apart.“VERIFIED — CIVIL DEATH CONFIRMATION.”Gone.“DATA INTEGRITY WARNING.”Gone again.A space where a human life was supposed to be recorded like a fixed fact.The prosecution leaned forward like they could force it into stability by staring harder. One of them muttered something about “technical corruption,” like repeating the phrase would make it true.But it wasn’t corruption. Corruption looked messy. This looked… structured. Like the system was trying different versions of reality and refusing to
The courthouse steps feel colder than they should.Not weather-cold. Something else. Something sharper.A press of bodies, cameras, and noise that doesn’t behave like normal sound anymore. It stacks. Layers on layers. Every shout overlaps the next until nothing is fully clear except one name repeated again and again.Cassian Vale.I notice him before the security line fully parts.Cassian Vale walks like the crowd is already finished with him.No hesitation. No rush either. Just controlled movement through a space that is actively trying to swallow him. Valecorp security forms a moving barrier around Cassian Vale, but it barely matters. Reporters lean past them, phones stretched forward like weapons.“Cassian Vale—did you kill her?”“Is Valecorp hiding evidence?”“Did VALE-2 erase the footage?”Flashes hit his face in uneven bursts. White light, then shadow again.Cassian Vale doesn’t answer.Not even a glance toward the voices demanding something—anything—from him.I stand near the s
What immediately stood out was not the presence of reporters or cameras, but the prevailing sense of certainty.Every screen throughout Valecorp's executive lobby displayed the same narrative. While the wording varied across networks, the conclusion remained consistent.Cassian Vale was facing allegations of murder, involvement in a cover-up, and the suppression of evidence.Although the headlines differed in their presentation of the details, they all led to the same conclusion.Cassian Vale was presumed guilty.I stood near the back wall, arms folded, watching another commentator dissect surveillance gaps connected to the ex-fiancée case.None of them knew the whole story.The problem was neither did I.Yet somehow that didn't stop anyone from acting certain.A security officer approached the executive elevators."Mr. Vale is moving now.”The room shifted as headsets crackled and personnel repositioned themselves.Seconds later, Cassian stepped out.In a dark suit, he looked exhaus
Eva's POVThe east wing seemed to breathe around them, with shutters gently lowering and lights dimming just enough to keep the glare at bay. The corridors felt like they were narrowing, as if the house itself was shifting to welcome a new order. Julian Vale moved with a calm purpose, Harper Vale
Eva's Point Of ViewI started in the gallery corridor, where light from tall windows fell across the polished floors. Portraits of Vale ancestors stared down at me with painted neutrality. Faces I recognized from estate records, but some were missing. Gaps, corners left intentionally blank. I ling
Eva Point Of ViewThe morning kicked off pretty much like any other—well, as much as a morning at the Vale estate ever really feels normal. The house around me stirred to life in layers. Locks clicked open just as I approached, lights flickered on with a soft hum, and overhead, sensors traced i
Eva’s POVThe south wing smelled wrong.Not spoiled—just sealed tight. It felt like the air had been trapped for ages, just waiting for someone daring enough to take a breath. I tightened my grip on the key card, its smooth plastic cool against my palm, and swiped it across the scanner. Cassian’s







