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Chapter 6 — The Cost of Reputation

作者: Monica Wild
last update 公開日: 2026-04-10 19:29:55

The building felt different the moment Estella stepped inside.

Not quieter.

Sharper.

Like every whisper had teeth.

No one greeted her.

No one even pretended to.

Screens lit up as she passed. Conversations dropped mid-sentence. Eyes followed her—not openly, but enough.

She didn’t slow down.

Didn’t react.

Didn’t give them anything.

Control first.

Always.

Her heels echoed against the marble floor as she walked straight to her desk. The moment she sat down, her screen flickered alive—

And the headlines hit her all at once.

“VALCOR CEO IN LATE-NIGHT SCANDAL WITH SECRETARY”

“PROFESSIONAL OR PERSONAL? INSIDE AIZEN DEVERAUX’S CONTROVERSY”

“INSIDER RELATIONSHIP THREATENS INVESTOR CONFIDENCE”

Photos.

Clear enough to remove doubt.

Aizen standing too close.

His hand on her arm.

Her leaning into him—just slightly, just enough.

Taken outside the bar.

Taken at the wrong moment.

Or the right one.

Estella stared at the screen.

Not shocked.

Not even surprised.

Just… calculating.

“They’re saying you planned it.”

The voice came from beside her.

Vivianne Spencer didn’t sit. She leaned against the desk, arms crossed, eyes sharp.

“Of course they are,” Estella replied calmly.

“They’re saying you seduced him for the position.”

Estella clicked one of the articles open. Scanned it once.

Efficient.

Detached.

“Is that the most damaging angle?” she asked.

Vivian studied her.

“You’re not even going to deny it?”

“Denial doesn’t stabilize stock prices.”

A pause.

Then, quieter:

“They’re not just attacking you, Estella. Valcor stock dropped three percent in pre-market.”

That made her fingers stop.

Three percent.

Fast.

Aggressive.

Someone pushed this.

Not just gossip.

Weaponized narrative.

“Terry’s looking for you,” Vivian added. “Executive meeting.”

Of course.

Estella stood.

“Then let’s not keep them waiting.”

**

The conference room was already full.

Board members. Legal. PR.

And at the center—

Aizen Deveraux.

He didn’t look at her when she walked in.

Didn’t acknowledge her presence.

As if she were just another variable.

“Miss Duan,” one of the board members began, voice cold, “would you like to explain this situation?”

The screen behind them lit up.

More photos.

Different angles.

Same implication.

Estella didn’t sit.

Didn’t look away.

“I was at the location shown,” she said. “Mr. Deveraux arrived later.”

“And the nature of your relationship?”

A beat.

Silence stretched.

Then—

“Professional.”

A few of them almost smiled.

“Do you expect us to believe that?”

“No,” Estella replied calmly. “I expect you to focus on the actual risk.”

That shifted the room.

Slightly.

“The risk,” she continued, “is not the implication. It’s the timing.”

Aizen’s fingers tapped once against the table.

Just once.

“Go on,” he said.

First time he spoke.

Still not looking at her.

“The release was coordinated,” Estella said. “Pre-market timing. Multi-platform distribution. That’s not opportunistic media—it’s targeted.”

“To what end?” someone asked.

“Pressure,” she replied. “On Valcor. On leadership. On Project Orion.”

Silence again.

This time—

Listening.

“So you’re suggesting this is an external attack?” another pressed.

“I’m suggesting,” Estella said evenly, “that someone is testing how easily Valcor destabilizes.”

“And you?” the first man cut in. “What role do you play in that?”

There it was.

The real question.

Estella met his gaze.

“I’m the easiest target.”

No denial.

No defense.

Just truth.

That landed harder than anything else she could have said.

**

The investigation concluded faster than Estella expected.

Too fast.

Which meant one thing—

A decision had already been made before she walked into that room.

The conference doors opened.

And this time, they didn’t close behind her.

Employees were still around.

Not close enough to listen.

But close enough to watch.

That was worse.

Estella stepped out first, posture straight, expression composed. Aizen followed a step behind—calm, unreadable, as if the past hour had been nothing more than routine.

But the silence outside…

Shifted.

People slowed down.

Screens lowered.

Eyes turned.

No one spoke.

Not yet.

Aizen stopped walking.

Right in the middle of the floor.

Deliberate.

Estella felt it immediately.

This wasn’t over.

“Miss Duan.”

His voice wasn’t loud.

But it carried.

Clean. Controlled. Precise.

Every head turned fully now.

Estella stopped.

Turned back.

Met his gaze.

Professional.

Steady.

Even now.

“The investigation concludes that there is no direct evidence of internal negligence from your side,” Aizen said.

A pause.

Relief almost had a chance to exist—

Before he continued.

“However—”

There it was.

The word that erased everything before it.

“You were the access point used in a breach tied to Project Orion.”

Murmurs started.

Soft.

Sharp.

Unforgiving.

Estella didn’t react.

Didn’t move.

But she felt it—

The shift.

From suspicion…

To judgment.

Aizen’s gaze didn’t waver.

“As a result,” he continued, “this falls under operational failure within your scope.”

Not accusation.

Not emotion.

Just classification.

Which made it worse.

“Effective immediately,” he added, “you are suspended from all high-level access related to Orion.”

A beat.

“You will retain your position—”

Another pause.

Long enough.

“—under probation.”

This time, the whispers weren’t subtle.

They spread.

Fast.

“Additionally,” Aizen finished, “you will submit a full recovery strategy to stabilize both internal confidence and external market response.”

His voice lowered slightly.

But not enough.

“Failure to do so will result in termination.”

Silence followed.

Heavy.

Crushing.

Public.

Final.

Aizen didn’t look at her again.

Didn’t wait for a response.

He turned—

And walked away.

Just like that.

Leaving everything behind.

Including her.

For a moment—

Estella didn’t move.

Didn’t breathe.

Didn’t think.

Because something inside her—

Cracked.

Not visibly.

Not completely.

But enough.

Enough to feel it.

The weight.

The humiliation.

The reality of what just happened.

Not cleared.

Not trusted.

Not protected.

Used—

Then marked.

A low voice whispered from somewhere behind.

“Probation…?”

“Did you see the photos?”

“She really thought she could get away with it…”

Another one, softer—but sharper:

“Pretty face doesn’t fix incompetence.”

Estella heard all of it.

Every word.

Every glance.

Every assumption.

She could feel their eyes—

Not curious anymore.

Judging.

Measuring.

Dismissing.

Her fingers curled slightly at her side.

Not shaking.

Not yet.

She forced a breath in.

Slow.

Controlled.

Then another.

And another.

Until the noise blurred into background static.

She adjusted her posture.

Lifted her chin.

And walked.

Back to her desk.

Every step measured.

Every movement precise.

As if nothing had happened.

As if she hadn’t just been reduced—

In front of everyone.

She sat down.

Opened her screen.

And for the first time since morning—

Her reflection stared back at her.

Calm.

Composed.

Unbroken.

But her eyes—

Colder.

Sharper.

Different.

Minutes passed.

Or maybe longer.

Time didn’t feel stable anymore.

Only one thing did.

The need to understand.

Estella reopened the system logs.

Not the surface-level ones.

The deeper layer.

The ones that weren’t meant to be accessed without clearance.

Her clearance.

The one that had just been stripped.

But the system—

Hadn’t caught up yet.

Her fingers moved quickly.

Efficient.

Precise.

She traced the breach again.

Step by step.

Node by node.

Until—

That same anomaly appeared.

Access Route: Internal Relay

Clearance Level: Executive Tier

Her pulse slowed.

Not fear.

Focus.

She pushed deeper.

Override.

Bypass.

One more layer.

The system hesitated.

Then—

Opened.

Just for a second.

But that was enough.

Authorization Key Detected.

Her eyes locked onto the line that followed.

And this time—

There was no ambiguity.

No assumption.

No possibility of error.

Authorization: A. Deveraux

Estella stopped breathing.

The room didn’t move.

The noise didn’t exist.

Nothing did—

Except that line.

She read it again.

Once.

Twice.

As if repetition might change it.

It didn’t.

Not suspected.

Not implied.

Not indirect.

Confirmed.

Her hand hovered above the keyboard.

Frozen.

Because suddenly—

Everything aligned.

The timing.

The execution.

The narrative.

The way he didn’t defend her.

The way he used her.

The way he—

Chose this.

A slow breath left her lips.

Unsteady.

For the first time—

Not controlled.

“Of course…”

The whisper barely existed.

But the realization did.

Clear.

Sharp.

Irreversible.

Her gaze lifted slightly—

Toward the glass office across the floor.

Empty now.

Dark.

Untouchable.

Just like him.

Estella leaned back slowly.

Her chest rose and fell once.

Twice.

Then steadied.

Because whatever had just broken—

Wasn’t her.

It was something else.

Something far more dangerous.

Trust.

And once that was gone—

There was nothing left to protect.

Her lips curved slightly.

Not a smile.

Something colder.

“Alright…”

This time, her voice didn’t shake.

Didn’t hesitate.

Didn’t doubt.

Because now—

She wasn’t playing to survive anymore.

She was playing to win.

And the man who thought he controlled the board—

Had just made his first real mistake.

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