로그인Adrian’s POVThe Chairman’s office was my father’s old throne, and I hated it the moment I sat down in the oversized leather chair.He used to call it built for a king.Of course he would.The chair creaked under my weight, too soft, too large, too full of everything he had left behind. The room still carried him in the worst ways. The cigar smoke that had soaked into the curtains over the years. The dark polish on the mahogany. The heavy silence that seemed to live in the walls. It all smelled like him.Not just expensive cigars.Betrayal.Rot.A legacy ruined from the inside out.I stared out through the panoramic window at the city lights below. New York looked beautiful from that height, like nothing bad had ever happened inside these walls. Like a man hadn’t tried to burn his own name to the ground just to keep his grip on power. The city didn’t care. It glittered anyway.My desk was cleared of Edmund’s things now. His old photographs, his little personal trophies, the objects he
Aria's povThe flight back to Seattle was the quietest six hours of my life.Not peaceful. Not exactly. Just quiet in that strange, floating way that makes your own thoughts sound louder than the engine.Leo was stretched across two seats beside me, one small arm thrown over his toy airplane like he was afraid someone might steal it in his sleep. His face was soft and relaxed, completely unguarded. Every so often, he made a tiny sound in his sleep, the kind that makes your chest ache for no reason at all.I looked at him, then out the window, then back at him again.The little airplane Adrian had bought him at the airport rested in his hand like a last-minute peace offering. Leo had lit up when he got it. That smile had been genuine, bright, impossible to miss.And that was the problem.It had made me smile too.Which meant now I had to sit with the complicated feeling that followed.I didn’t read. I didn’t work. I didn’t even put on music.I just stared at the clouds and let my thoug
Aria’s POVThe boardroom had been a battlefield.And somehow, we had survived it.Edmund was gone. Truly gone this time — not lurking behind contracts or whispered threats or manipulations disguised as concern. The suffocating pressure that had hung over my work, my son, my life for years had finally lifted.I should have felt victorious.Instead, I felt… quiet.Like the world after a storm — when the thunder stops but the air still smells like rain and broken things.Adrian had stayed behind to stabilize the company. The board was united now, shaken into cooperation by fear and necessity. The vaccine project was secure. Funding restored. Public confidence already being managed.On paper, everything was finally right.But emotional wounds didn’t follow corporate timelines.As I stepped into the penthouse, the silence greeted me first. Not peaceful silence — hollow silence. The kind that echoes too loudly.It was time to leave.Most of my bags were already packed, lined neatly near the
Adrian’s POVThe boardroom had gone dead quiet in that ugly way silence does when everyone is too scared to speak first.All eyes were on Edmund.He didn’t look smug anymore. That had burned off fast. His face had turned a sickly gray, and he looked cornered, like some wild thing realizing the room had walls.“These are fabrications,” he snapped at last.His voice cracked on the last word.He slammed his fist on the table hard enough to make the water glasses jump.“AI-generated. Deepfakes. All of it. Adrian, you’ve gone too far.” His finger was shaking when he pointed at me. “You’re trying to destroy me with technology. This is a smear campaign. A desperate attempt to seize control.”A few board members stirred. Murmurs started low around the table.That was the thing about men like Edmund. They always thought panic still sounded like power.I let the noise rise for a second, then lifted a hand.It died again.“I expected you to say that,” I said calmly. “Which is why I brought someo
Aria's POVThe air in the boardroom felt like static. My hands were steady, but my pulse was loud in my ears. I had insisted on being here — not because I liked drama, but because my name and the work were on the line. I’d told Adrian I’d come: “As lead researcher, I have a right to see who’s going to run the company tied to this vaccine.” He’d given me that look — the one that meant don’t make this harder than it has to be — but he didn’t stop me. Good. I needed to be a witness.Across the table sat the board, faces carved from marble and old money. At the head of the table was Edmund, smirk practically custom-made for the occasion. He looked like a man who had practiced winning in front of mirrors. Calm, polished, arrogant. A predator in a blazer.Adrian — Adrian — started with the safe play, because that’s what he does best: data first. He walked them through the vaccine results like he was reading them aloud to a jury. Careful slides, clean numbers, faces in the room relaxing just
Adrian’s POVThe penthouse was a study in quiet. Only the keyboard clicks and the occasional rustle of paper broke the hush. Leo and Aria were finally asleep, but sleep felt like a luxury someone else got to keep. Not me. Not tonight.My office had turned into a war room. Screens glowed with spreadsheets, bank transfers, encrypted threads. I ripped through transaction histories like a man looking for loose threads that would unravel an entire sweater. The vaccine was the headline, the shiny thing for cameras. The real rot was deeper: embezzlement, shell companies, suspicious invoices—Edmund’s fingerprints across the ledger. Every line I highlighted felt like another nail driven into the coffin of his empire. The more I dug, the colder and clearer my purpose became.It was going to be brutal. I knew the cost. Stocks would tank. Investors would freak. Our name would be dragged through the mud. But the alternative—letting him keep siphoning money, keep poisoning the company, let him walk
Edmund’s POVStupid. Stupid. It felt like the city lights were mocking me.I stood on the edge of the private dock, the salt air slapping against my skin, but I couldn't feel the cold. I was too busy feeling the heat of pure, unadulterated rage radiating from my chest. My hands were balled into f
Adrian’s POVI stared at Julian, my brain trying to process what he’d just said. Buy her life? Again?"What do you mean, buy her life?" I stepped closer, my voice dropping to a dangerous level. "Talk, Julian. What did Veronica do?"Julian didn't flinch. He just stood there with that smug, protectiv
Aria’s POVI took in the view of the beautiful scenery and... I hated it. Don't get me wrong. The whole place was beautiful and all that, but who cares about the beauty of anything if peace doesn't even come with it?For all I cared at that moment, I just fucking wanted to go home. Being anywhere n
Adrian’s POVThe digital clock on my dashboard flickered to 3:30 AM.The city was dead, but my brain was on fire. I couldn't stop thinking about what Julian said. Buying her life. Again. The thought of Veronica standing over Aria with a check like she was an item on a clearance rack made me want t







