LOGINI didn’t sleep after the second message dropped.
I stayed at my desk until morning Someone was feeding me information. Two messages from two different numbers, each one arriving right when I found something new. They were watching me, and the only question I couldn’t answer was the motive behind it. I closed my laptop, got ready, and told myself to stay focused. I had a name, two signatures, and dates tied to the worst time in my father’s life. That was enough to work with, it was more than I had yesterday. I went downstairs. Adrian was already loading bags into the car himself. There was no sign of his driver or staff around. He tossed the last one in and looked up when he saw me. “Ready?” he asked. “Yes.” We left the estate and I let the silence sit because I needed it. Adrian drove with one hand loose on the wheel. The usual tension in his shoulders had eased. He looked different out here, like he could finally breathe. I turned toward the window and kept my thoughts to myself. Raymond Holt’s property sat at the end of a private road two hours outside the city. Iron gates, flawless grounds, and an old stone house that felt quietly powerful. I knew more about Holt than he would have been comfortable with. His name appeared in the Vela documents. He was not the architect of the structure, but he understood it completely and had benefited from it for years. I needed to see his private records to understand how deep his involvement went. That was why I was here. Holt greeted us, I smiled, shook his hand, and gave him exactly what the moment needed. Eight of us sat around the dinner table that night. The conversation flowed. I played my part beside Adrian, warm but careful, while I quietly studied everyone in the room. Adrian seemed different here, he looked more real. He listened with actual interest. He asked real questions. And somewhere between courses, he turned that attention on me. “What do you think of Holt?” he asked quietly. “He’s a good host,” I said. Adrian looked at me. “That’s not what I asked.” I reached for my water. “That's all I can say right now.” He let it drop. The next morning, Holt pulled Adrian aside for a business talk after breakfast. I waited twenty minutes, then moved. Holt’s study room was on the ground floor. The door opened easily. A folder lay open on the desk, internal Tao Industries records that had no business being there. I pulled out my second phone and started taking photos, I was just on the third page when the door opened behind me. Adrian stood in the doorway. His eyes took in everything: me, the open folder, the phone in my hand, and then turned his eyes to my face. “I was looking for a pen,” I said, setting the phone down with mild embarrassment. “Some papers slipped. I was just straightening them.” He kept looking at me. I held his gaze and said nothing more. Any extra words would only make it worse. The room stayed silent. “I’m not going to ask,” he said finally. Then, he stared at the documents on the desk a moment longer than he needed to. His eyes moved over the top page briefly, as if he already knew what was inside. Then he turned and walked away. I stood there listening to his footsteps fade down the hall. A man who could look straight at the truth and choose not to name it was far more dangerous. My hands stayed steady as I finished photographing the pages. The drive back to Silverton carried a heavier silence than the one on the way out. Neither of us spoke. He drove for a long time without speaking. Then he said, without taking his eyes off the road, “Holt has been meeting my father privately every two weeks for three years, none of those secret meetings were recorded. I kept my face still and my eyes on the passing road. “I noticed it eight months ago,” he said. “I haven’t been able to find out the reason for those meetings.” He wasn’t really talking to me, he didn’t ask me anything regarding what he said. He simply put the information in the car between us and left it there. I said nothing. We reached the estate in the evening. I went straight to my room, upstairs. I uploaded the twelve pages to my secure drive and started connecting the dots. On the final page, one name appeared in the transfer authorizations. The same name from the Vela Holdings registration. The same person was tied to the exact window when my father’s company collapsed. I opened a new document and began building the map. Twenty minutes later, my laptop chimed. An email from an internal Tao Industries address I didn’t recognize. It had been routed through multiple external servers. The subject line was blank. The body held four words: Stop looking. Leave now. I read it once, then traced the address. It belonged to the 41st floor. A floor that didn’t appear in any directory I had ever seen. According to every record, it didn’t exist.He did not celebrate.I did not expect him to, that was not how he was built. After a win, he stayed the same as always, focused on what came next. Any celebration he felt stayed inside and lasted only a short time before he turned back to the problems that were still waiting.There were still problems.The fraud investigation moved forward through official channels. Once it started, it did not stop. Dominic faced real legal trouble. The board would need weeks to handle it carefully. The stock price had not recovered, and news stories kept coming. The regulatory process had its own schedule and demands. It did not pause just because the proxy fight ended.Adrian worked through the aftermath with steady efficiency. He had a long list of tasks and started on it before the boardroom door even closed.I was not on that list; I was not on the work list either, and I was not part of the professional steps that came next. I helped get us here, with the documents, the four days of meetings, t
The board meeting was called for nine o’clock. This was not a normal session. It was an emergency meeting that required a certain number of members to be present and proper notice. The company was in the middle of a real crisis. Nathaniel had filed the counter documents at six forty-seven the previous night, forty-three minutes before the deadline. The legal argument against Hargreave’s fast-tracked proxy was strong and complete. It was built on full evidence instead of pieces.I knew this because I helped put it together.I arrived at the Tao Industries boardroom at eight thirty with Nathaniel and the legal team, I carried the full package of documents we had worked on for four days. Adrian was already there.He came first, as expected.The room filled up at eight fifty. Seven board members sat around the table. Four lawyers joined them, and two crisis communications people stood at the back, alert and ready to handle what came after the meeting. Dominic was present too. He showed th
Adrian POVI had read everything.Not only the fraud documents. I finished those in the hotel room during those long thirty-six hours. The financial records, the regulatory filings, and the forty-three pages that changed how I saw fifteen years of my own work. I had also gone through the rest. The public record of Harper Bennett, the investigative journalist. Once I knew what to look for, the information was there.I read about the Carver inquiry. The deputy minister. The way she used embedded access, three years of articles under her real name before she changed it for this investigation. Her work showed real patience and strong sourcing. A clear line between what was proven and what was only suggested.She was very good at her job.I had always known she was sharp. I felt it in the first few weeks. Her attention stood out in every room and every conversation. I started sharing more with her because that kind of focus deserved it, I knew she was intelligent, but I never understood wh
The real work together started on Thursday morning. Nathaniel set everything up with his usual efficiency. He knew the only stable thing between us right now was the professional side. So he created a clear structure. We shared documents through a secure system and coordinated with the legal team. We had a daily briefing at nine o’clock that required both of us to show up, stay focused, and get things done.The work itself was serious. The fraud was real, the regulatory process was real. Hargreave’s filing had turned into a contested legal fight, and Nathaniel’s team handled it with sharp precision now that they had the full evidence. The job needed full attention, clear thinking, and the combined knowledge of two people who saw different pieces of the same puzzle.We did the work.The first briefing lasted three hours. We sat on opposite sides of Nathaniel’s conference table with all the documents spread between us. We moved through them with the kind of focus that comes when you are
Adrian came back on Wednesday evening. He did not call or send a message ahead of time. I heard the key turn in the lock the same way I had heard it for eighteen months. That sound had become part of me without me meaning for it to happen. I could not unlearn it now. I was sitting in the living room with the two pages from the notepad still in my bag. The apartment felt quiet. I did not get up and go to the door. I stayed right where I was.I heard him step inside. The familiar sounds of someone coming home filled the hallway. The rustle of his coat, the jingle of keys, and the short pause as he adjusted to being back in a place he had left days earlier. Then everything went quiet again. His footsteps moved down the hall, and a moment later he stood in the doorway of the living room.He looked like a man who had finished thinking about something and he came back, because the next part needed him to be here in person.He sat down in the chair at an angle from mine. Neither of us spoke
I sat down at the kitchen table early Tuesday morning and wrote it all out, it was nothing about the newspaper, or the legal filing. This was just for me. For the same reason I kept a separate file about the victims, the same reason I had once written two short lines in a notebook instead of letting the thoughts spin endlessly in my head. Some truths need to live on paper before you can really see them clearly. Writing forces honesty in a way thinking alone never does.I used a plain notepad, the ordinary one I kept for personal thoughts: just simple paper and a pen.I started with the hardest part.I wrote down everything I had taken from Adrian without him knowing.I listed the access I had gained to his professional world. I had used it to build a story he never agreed to be part of. Eighteen months of being close to him started under pretenses. The contract looked like a normal social arrangement, but I never told him its real purpose. I hid the investigation behind every smile an







