The silence that followed Adrian’s removal was not uncomfortable; it was expectant. As the heavy oak doors thudded shut, sealing away his desperate pleas, I turned back to the room. The “elites” of the city—the same ones who had smirked at Adrian’s arrogance moments ago—now watched me with a mixture of terror and awe.
I raised my glass. “Let the evening continue,” I said, my voice projecting with a clarity I hadn’t felt in years. “Tonight is about the future of Vanguard Dominion. And the future is no longer burdened by the past.”
The music resumed—a sharp, sophisticated cello arrangement—but the atmosphere had shifted. I was no longer a ghost in my own company; I was the sun around which they all orbited.
The Aftermath in the Penthouse
Two hours later, the gala was still in full swing, but I had retreated to the private executive suite overlooking the city. Mr. Blackwood stood by the floor-to-ceiling window, a tablet in hand.
“The audit has already begun, Madame,” Blackwood said softly. “We’ve frozen his corporate accounts and the joint credit lines. By sunrise, his access to the downtown penthouse will be revoked.”
“And the car?” I asked, looking at my reflection in the glass. The sapphire around my neck felt lighter now.
“The repossession team is at the Royal Monarch parking valet as we speak,” he replied. “He’ll be taking a taxi tonight. If he can find one that will take a declined card.”
I felt a twinge of something—not guilt, but a cold realization of how quickly a life built on someone else’s foundation can crumble. “What about Vanessa Blake?”
Blackwood hesitated. “She’s been seen in the lobby trying to distance herself from the ‘incident.’ She’s already sent three ‘urgent’ emails to your assistant claiming she was a victim of Adrian’s manipulation.”
“Ignore them,” I said. “She knew exactly whose hand she was holding.”
A Knock at the Door
A sharp rap at the suite door interrupted us. One of my security detail stepped in. “Madame, there is a man here. He doesn’t have an invite to the gala, but he insists he has something that belongs to you.”
“Who is he?”
“He says his name is Julian Thorne.”
I felt a spark of genuine surprise. Julian Thorne. The rival. The head of *Aetherius Group*—the only company that had ever dared to challenge Vanguard’s market share. He was known for being as brilliant as he was reclusive.
“Let him in,” I commanded.
Julian stepped into the room. He wasn’t in a tuxedo; he wore a dark charcoal suit, no tie, and an expression that suggested he found the entire world mildly amusing. In his hand, he held a small, charred piece of fabric.
It was a scrap of the silk dress Adrian had burned that afternoon.
“You dropped this in the hallway of your apartment building,” Julian said, his voice a smooth baritone. He walked forward, ignoring the security guards, and placed the scrap on the mahogany table between us.
“And you decided to hand-deliver trash to a gala?” I challenged, meeting his gaze.
“I decided to see if the rumors were true,” Julian said, a smirk playing on his lips. “The ‘Invisible Queen’ finally showing her face to execute her husband in front of the world? It was a performance I couldn’t miss.”
He leaned in closer, his eyes scanning the room before settling back on me.
“But be careful, Clara. You’ve just created a vacuum. Adrian was a fool, but he was a shield. Now, everyone knows who holds the keys to the kingdom. And there are people far more dangerous than a disgruntled VP who want those keys.”
The First Threat
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