Adrian knew he couldn't go to the police. Not yet. Not without solid proof that would hold up in court. He also couldn't go to the authorities without understanding the full extent of what he was dealing with. Someone had murdered his mother, and that same someone had orchestrated his marriage to Victoria. Everything had been planned.
He needed time to think, and he needed a safe place to do it.
Adrian had an old friend named Marcus—not the Nolan heir, but a different Marcus. Marcus Chen was a private investigator who had helped Adrian years ago with a small legal matter. They had stayed in touch, though they weren't close. It was the kind of friendship that could be reactivated in times of need.
Adrian found a payphone in a train station and called Marcus's office. Twenty minutes later, they were meeting in a small park on the outskirts of the city.
"You look terrible," Marcus said, handing Adrian a coffee.
"I feel worse," Adrian replied. He spent the next hour explaining everything—his mother's death, the poisoning, the USB drive, and his suspicions about Victoria and her father.
Marcus listened without interrupting, his expression growing darker with each revelation. When Adrian finished, Marcus took a long sip of his coffee before speaking.
"This is bigger than just a murder," Marcus said quietly. "If what you're saying is true, then we're talking about a conspiracy that involves multiple people. And Sterling Pharmaceuticals is a major player in this city. They have connections everywhere—in government, in law enforcement, in the media."
"I know," Adrian said. "That's why I can't go to the police yet."
"You need to be very careful," Marcus warned. "If they've already killed your mother and are now threatening you, they won't hesitate to eliminate you if they feel threatened. You need to disappear for a while."
Adrian had been thinking the same thing. "I need somewhere to stay. Somewhere they won't think to look."
"I know a place," Marcus said. "An old safe house that I used to use for protection cases. It's not much, but it's secure and off the grid. I'll set it up for you."
That evening, Adrian was installed in a small apartment above an antique bookstore in the poorest part of the city. It was the kind of place where nobody asked questions and everybody minded their own business. The owner, an old man named Mr. Liu, didn't even ask for Adrian's real name.
Over the next few days, Adrian worked constantly. Marcus provided him with the tools he needed—a laptop with encryption software, a secure phone, and access to various databases. Adrian used these tools to dig deeper into Dr. Sterling's past.
What he found was astounding.
Dr. Sterling had indeed created Silendox, but it wasn't originally designed as a weapon. It was supposed to be a revolutionary treatment for a rare autoimmune disease. However, something had gone wrong. The drug had severe side effects when used incorrectly. Instead of being honest about the failures, Dr. Sterling had buried the research and shifted his company's focus to other projects.
But he had never stopped experimenting with Silendox. Over the years, Adrian discovered, Dr. Sterling had used Silendox on at least three other people—all of them inconvenient business rivals or people who had discovered his secrets.
Adrian's mother had been his most recent victim, but her case had been different. She hadn't just discovered Silendox. She had figured out its formula and how to create an antidote.
Adrian found his mother's research notes buried in a separate folder on the USB drive. She had been working on a cure—a way to neutralize Silendox in the human body. It was brilliant work, the kind of work that would have revolutionized medicine.
But before she could complete it, she had died.
Adrian realized then that his mother had been deliberately kept from finishing her work. Someone—probably Dr. Sterling himself—had accelerated the poisoning once he realized what she was doing.
Adrian also discovered something else: Victoria was not Dr. Sterling's daughter by birth. She was his adopted daughter, and she had been brought into the family business at a young age. Adrian found documents showing that Victoria had been trained in pharmaceutical chemistry and had assisted her father on several research projects.
The divorce, Adrian now understood, was not about Marcus Nolan or incompatibility. It was about cutting Adrian out of Victoria's life before he could discover the truth. She was protecting her family's secret.
On the sixth day of his isolation, Adrian received a visit from Marcus. The investigator looked excited and terrified in equal measure.
"I found something," Marcus said, spreading a folder on the table. "Your mother's death was officially ruled as natural causes due to complications from her disease. But I managed to get a copy of the original autopsy report—the one that was never made public."
Adrian leaned forward.
"The autopsy clearly shows traces of Silendox," Marcus continued. "Someone at the medical examiner's office altered the official report before it was released. The original doctor who performed the autopsy? He died in a car accident three weeks after signing his name to that report."
Adrian felt sick. "They killed the doctor to cover it up."
"That's the pattern," Marcus confirmed. "Anyone who gets too close to the truth doesn't stay around for long. Your mother suspected this too. Look."
Marcus opened another file. It was a video of Adrian's mother, clearly taken on her final day. In it, she was dictating her last will and testament to a lawyer. Adrian recognized the lawyer—it was someone his mother had known for decades, someone she trusted completely.
"Your mother gave everything to this lawyer," Marcus explained. "All her research, all her evidence, everything. She told the lawyer that if anything happened to her, the evidence should be released to the media and the authorities. But the lawyer never received it. Your mother died before she could formally transfer everything."
"Where is the lawyer now?" Adrian asked.
"Dead," Marcus said. "Heart attack, two years ago. Clean, no signs of foul play. But we both know what probably happened."
Adrian stood up and paced the small room. His mother had tried to protect her research by entrusting it to someone else, but that person had also been eliminated. The Sterlings had covered their tracks very carefully.
"There's one more thing," Marcus said hesitantly. "I've been monitoring Sterling Pharmaceuticals' activities. They're about to launch a new product—something they're calling 'Vitalis.' It's supposed to be a revolutionary treatment for aging. But based on what I've found, I think Vitalis is actually a refined version of Silendox."
Adrian stopped pacing. "What do you mean?"
"I mean they're planning to sell it to the public. And I mean that if people take it without knowing what it really is, they'll slowly poison themselves. Your mother's poison was accidental—she didn't know she was taking it. But with Vitalis, they'll be poisoning millions of people intentionally. And they'll make billions of dollars doing it."
Adrian felt cold rage building inside him. "When is the launch?"
"Three weeks," Marcus said. "There's going to be a big gala event at Sterling Tower. Victoria will be there. Dr. Sterling will be there. All the investors, all the media, everyone important in this city will be there."
Adrian understood what he had to do. He had to expose them before the launch. He had to make sure that Vitalis never reached the market. And he had to do it in a way that would be undeniable, that would leave no room for cover-ups or bribes.
But how?
Adrian began to formulate a plan—one that would require him to go back to the one person he had trusted most. One that would require him to infiltrate Sterling Tower and access their computer systems. One that was almost impossible and incredibly dangerous.