Masks At Day Light

663 Words
Adrian’s eyes flicked to the drive, then back to her. “You’re not wrong. You said you have something solid, but this...” he tapped the drive with his finger “sn’t enough. You need a pattern. Financial trails. People who’ll talk.” Aria nodded, her jaw tight. “That’s the problem. Everyone who could talk either vanished or was bought.” He leaned forward slightly. “Then we build our own case. Quietly.” She hesitated. “You think I should go back inside the system?” Adrian’s gaze was steady. “You already are. You work at Harborline Imports, correct? You’re in the right place you just haven’t realized it yet.” Her heartbeat quickened. “Harborline… Ethan’s been laundering through them?” Adrian didn’t answer directly. Instead, he slid a folder toward her. “Bank transactions. Off-shore accounts. Some names match the shell companies tied to DonovanCorp. But we’re missing the connector.” Aria studied the papers, her fingers trembling. A name stood out . One she hadn’t seen in years among the non-work staff. Michael Jones, the cleaner. She froze. “This man… he was hired by my late dad for decades as a cleaner in the company and I’m pretty sure he knows more than I know. Adrian’s brow furrowed. “Then find him. Whatever he saw, Ethan made sure no one else would.” Aria exhaled slowly. “If I find him, it could expose me.” He gave a small, wry smile. “If you don’t, Ethan wins again.” The silence that followed was heavy, charged. Aria stared at the drive, then at the folder — symbols of two kinds of truth: one digital, one human. She finally spoke, her voice calm but laced with steel. “I won’t just bring him down, Detective. I’ll make sure he sees it happen.” Adrian’s eyes softened, impressed. “Then we’ll need more than evidence. We’ll need trust.” Aria looked out the window, watching the rain blur the city lights. Trust, the one thing she swore she’d never give again. But maybe, just maybe, this time was different. Morning light filtered through the wide glass windows of Harborline Imports, throwing pale reflections across the polished desks. Phones rang. Forklifts beeped outside the loading docks. Everything looked ordinary but for Aria Donovan, nothing was. She kept her eyes on the spreadsheet glowing across her screen, fingers moving with measured calm. Every number she entered, every shipment she approved, she read twice, looking for patterns hidden in plain sight. It was routine work. It was safe. And it was the perfect disguise. “Still drowning in data, Amelia?” a warm voice teased. Aria’s fingers paused on the keyboard before she glanced up. Daniel, her partner on the logistics team leaned against her desk, sleeves rolled up, tie loose, that usual half-smile resting on his lips. To everyone else, he was the easygoing colleague who joked his way through deadlines. But Aria had begun to notice small things . The way he watched people, how he never asked careless questions. His calmness felt… trained. She forced a polite smile. “Someone has to make sure the company doesn’t sink.” Daniel chuckled. “That’s why they keep you around. Reliable. Quiet.” His tone was light, but something sharp hid underneath it. Aria tilted her head. “Quiet doesn’t mean blind.” Their eyes met, a fleeting moment, quick enough for both to pretend it didn’t happen. He broke the silence first. “We’re getting an inspection soon. You’ll probably have to work late.” “I always do,” she replied smoothly. He hesitated before turning away. “You know, you’re not like the others here. You pay attention… maybe too much.” Her heartbeat stuttered, but her face remained unreadable. “Is that supposed to be a compliment?” Daniel’s lips curved into something between a smile and a warning. “Depends on who’s watching.”
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD