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Chapter 9: The War Room

Author: Caroline
last update publish date: 2026-05-14 19:08:21

The boardrooms of the Hawthorne Group were designed to make people feel small.

High ceilings, floor-to-ceiling glass overlooking the jagged teeth of the Manhattan skyline, and a table made of a single slab of obsidian that seemed to swallow the light.

It was a space built for dominance, for the cold arithmetic of power.

Elias stood by the window, his reflection ghostly against the backdrop of the city.

He felt the weight of his father’s gaze on his back long before Victor spoke. It was a physical pressure, like the atmosphere at the bottom of the ocean.

"You’re quiet, Elias," Victor said.

He was sitting at the head of the table, his fingers steepled.

"Usually, when someone threatens a two-billion-dollar acquisition with a federal audit, you have three counter-offensives ready before the coffee is served."

Elias turned slowly. He had spent the last twenty minutes practicing his pulse. If he could control his heart rate, he could control the mask.

"I was analyzing the environmental impact data Blackwood cited. It’s a surgical strike, Father. He didn't go for the broad strokes; he went for the specific migratory patterns of the silt in the harbor. It’s designed to trigger a mandatory thirty-day stay."

"I don't care about the silt," Victor snapped, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "I care about the optics. Blackwood is trying to paint us as the old guard, the corporate dinosaurs who don't care about the future.

He’s playing to the press, and the press is eating it up. He’s coming here today for the preliminary hearing. I want him dismantled."

*He’s coming here.*

Elias felt the air in his lungs turn to lead. "Here? To our offices?"

"It’s a neutral site mediation," Sophia said, walking in with a stack of legal briefs. She looked tired, a rarity for her.

"The city council insisted. They want to see if the two giants can play nice before they're forced to pick a side. It starts in ten minutes."

Elias nodded, his mind racing. He reached for his water glass, his movements precise, calculated. He was the Perfect Son. He was the heir. He was a machine. But inside, he was a man standing on the edge of a cliff, waiting for the wind to push him.

The mediation room was smaller, more intimate, and significantly more claustrophobic. The air conditioning was humming at a frantic pace, but Elias felt a bead of sweat trace the line of his spine.

When the door opened, the room’s temperature seemed to drop ten degrees.

Damien Blackwood walked in alone. No assistants, no fleet of lawyers. Just a man in a charcoal suit that fit him like armor, carrying a single leather portfolio. He didn't look like a disruptor; he looked like the inevitable.

Elias didn't look up immediately. He focused on the cap of his fountain pen. He listened to the sound of Damien’s footsteps—the same deliberate, predatory rhythm he had heard in the dark of *The Veil*. Every step was a drumbeat in Elias’s chest.

"Victor," Damien said, his voice smooth and resonant. "Thank you for hosting. I know how much you value your home turf."

"Sit down, Blackwood," Victor said, not rising. "Let’s see if we can end this farce before the SEC gets involved."

Damien sat directly across from Elias.

The silence that followed was a living thing. It stretched, thinned, and vibrated with the unspoken truth of what had happened forty-eight hours ago.

Elias finally forced himself to look up.

He expected a wink. He expected a smirk. He expected some sign of the man who had whispered

*“Let’s be ruined”* into his ear.

Instead, he met the gaze of a stranger.

Damien’s eyes were cold, professional, and entirely unreadable. He looked at Elias as if he were just another obstacle to be cleared, another line item on a balance sheet. The disconnect was jarring. It was a physical ache in Elias’s chest—the realization that the man who had seen him at his most vulnerable was now the man trying to bankrupt his family.

"The environmental study is flawed, Elias," Damien said, addressing him directly for the first time.

The sound of his name in this room, in front of his father and Sophia, felt like a gunshot. Elias felt a surge of heat crawl up his neck.

"The study was conducted by the top firm in the country, Damien," Elias replied, his voice surprisingly steady. He used Damien's first name—a move of calculated familiarity designed to show he wasn't intimidated.

"Your objections are a stall tactic. You’re trying to drive down the share price so you can make a play for the secondary port."

"I'm trying to ensure that in fifty years, there’s still a harbor to build a port in," Damien countered. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the obsidian table. The movement brought him closer, and for a split second, the professional mask slipped.

In the depths of Damien’s pupils, Elias saw it. A flicker. A spark of the heat from *The Veil*. It was gone in an instant, replaced by the icy resolve of a CEO, but it was enough.

*He remembers.*

"The Hawthorne Group has a history of... cutting corners when the lights are low," Damien continued, his eyes locked on Elias’s. "I'm just turning the lights on. I thought you, of all people, would appreciate that, Elias. The clarity that comes with being seen."

Victor’s eyes narrowed. "What is that supposed to mean?"

"It means your son is a quick study," Damien said, shifting his gaze to Victor without breaking his predatory posture. "He knows that the truth is always more interesting than the performance. Isn't that right, Elias?"

The room felt like it was shrinking. Sophia was looking between them, her brow furrowed in confusion. Victor was radiating a quiet, murderous rage.

And Elias... Elias was drowning.

He felt the marks on his hips throb. He felt the ghost of the blindfold. He realized that Damien wasn't just here to talk about a port. He was here to play with his food. He was showing Elias that he could destroy him in the light just as easily as he had unmade him in the dark.

"The truth is that the port is going through," Elias said, his voice dropping an octave.

He leaned forward, mirroring Damien’s posture. "And no amount of 'seeing' is going to stop it. We have the permits, we have the backing, and we have the history.

You’re just a ghost in the machine, Damien. And ghosts eventually fade."

For the first time, Damien’s smile reached his eyes. It was a sharp, dangerous thing. "Ghosts only fade when the people haunted by them decide to stop believing in them.

Are you ready to stop believing, Elias?"

"That’s enough," Victor barked, slamming a hand on the table. "We’re here to discuss the audit, not philosophy. Blackwood, if you don't withdraw your petition by Friday, we’re filing a countersuit for tortious interference that will keep your legal team busy until the next century."

Damien stood up, his movements fluid and easy. "Friday. I’ll keep that in mind."

He picked up his portfolio and turned to leave, but paused at the door. He looked back at Elias, a long, slow look that felt like a caress and a threat.

"I’ll see you at the gala tonight, Elias," Damien said. "I hear the lighting is going to be spectacular. Very... revealing."

He disappeared into the hallway, leaving a vacuum of silence in his wake.

The aftermath was a blur of Victor’s shouting and Sophia’s worried questioning. Elias moved through it like a ghost. He went back to his office, locked the door, and slumped against it.

His heart was hammering so hard it felt like it was going to crack his ribs. He felt sick, exhilarated, and utterly terrified.

He walked over to his desk and saw his phone. There was a new notification. Not from the encrypted line this time, but a public tag on a business news app.

*“Blackwood Innovations to attend Hawthorne Engagement Gala. A sign of peace or a declaration of war?”*

Elias looked at his reflection in the glass of his office. He saw the Perfect Son. He saw the $5,000 suit. He saw the heir to a dynasty.

But he also saw the man who had sent a text asking *“What do you want?”* He realized then that the suspense wasn't in the port deal or the audit. It was in the gala. It was in the eight hours between now and the moment he would have to stand in a room full of people, under the "spectacular" lighting, and pretend that he didn't want Damien Blackwood to ruin him.

He opened his desk drawer and pulled out the black silk blindfold he had hidden there—the one he had stolen from *The Veil*. He ran the fabric through his fingers. It felt cold. It felt like the only real thing in his life.

The war room had been the first battle. But the gala... the gala was going to be a massacre.

He looked at the clock. 4:00 PM. Four hours left.

He picked up his phone and finally sent the text he had been holding back.

*“Tonight. No more games.”*

The reply came seconds later.

*“The games are just beginning, Elias. Wear the blue tie. I want to see how you look when you break.”*

Elias Hawthorne dropped the phone and started to laugh. It was a jagged, human sound that filled the empty office. He wasn't the Perfect Son anymore. He was a man who had finally found something worth losing everything for.

And as the sun began to set over the city, casting long, dark shadows across the obsidian table in the war room, Elias started to get ready for his own destruction.

He would wear the blue tie. He would stand under the lights. And he would wait for the man who was both his enemy and his only truth to finish what he had started in the dark.

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