I had been in Dominic Tao’s building for three years without ever going above the thirty-eighth floor.
His executive suite was on the 40th floor, and the moment I stepped out of the elevator I understood why the separation existed.
Everything up here was different. The carpet was darker. The light was warm. The whole floor had the particular calmness of a place where decisions are made that shape people’s lives.
His assistant ushered us in without a word.
The office was big, with wall-to-wall glass stretching from floor to ceiling on two sides, and the whole of Silverton’s skyline arrayed behind his desk like a masterpiece on display. Dark furniture, clean surfaces, no personal things about him around his office, no photographs.
Dominic stood when we entered and greeted us like we had done him a personal favor.
We had, of course. The photo had hit eighty thousand shares before midnight and the press had run with the story he wanted: the Tao heir had settled, the family name was stable, the years of headlines about Adrian’s lifestyle were being quietly retired in favor of something more palatable.
Dominic had gotten exactly what he arranged for, and he was the kind of man who expressed satisfaction the way other people expressed everything else. He was warm with Adrian. He put a hand on his shoulder and commented about the coverage, and a smile that said: You did what I needed, and I acknowledge it.
Adrian welcomed it with a polite expression, the face I’m familiar with. Behind those eyes there were no real emotions. I sat in the chair across from Dominic’s desk and kept my hands relaxed on my lap. I responded properly during our conversation while I observed everything.
Then Adrian’s phone buzzed. He checked it, and said it was the legal team. He excused himself and went into the next room. The door closed slightly behind him. I could hear his voice faintly on the call.
I looked back at Dominic.
He was already looking at me.
He hadn’t moved. Hadn’t changed his expression. The smile was still there. But something underneath the surface of the room had shifted, the way a conversation shifts when the third person leaves and both people remaining know what comes next.
He leaned back in his chair.
“You’ve made quite an impression,” he said calmly. “The public likes you more than I expected.”
“I’m glad it’s been helpful,” I said.
“Mm.” A little sound. Not an agreement, just acknowledgment. “I want to make sure we understand each other, Harper. May I call you Harper?”
He didn’t wait for my answer.
He talked for about four minutes. His voice stayed warm and unhurried the entire time, the tone of a man having a perfectly reasonable conversation. He said he appreciated my cooperation. That he understood the arrangement represented a significant change in my situation. That he hoped I was managing the transition sensibly.
But underneath the reasonable words was a current, steady and cold, pulling in one direction the whole time.
Meaning: You are a secretary. You are here because you are useful. Do not mistake being useful for being significant.
He didn’t use those words, he used polite ones, the kind of language that left no fingerprints. He talked about the importance of discretion. About how the women who had been connected to Adrian over the years had found that understanding their role clearly tended to make everything easier for everyone involved.
He said casually, that the Tao family has a lot of influence, power and connections, in business and professional life in the city of Silverton.
He smiled the whole time.
I smiled back.
I didn’t move or adjust myself in my seat.
My face maintained calmness, and an attentive expression I had when I walked in. I held his gaze without flinching or reacting because that was exactly what he wanted, something to use against me.
But, he got nothing from me.
What I did instead was listen carefully and attentively, the way I had always listened to everything, storing them in my mind. Every word he chose, every implication he wrapped in politeness, every warning he delivered with a smile.
He was telling me exactly what kind of man he was.
I was paying close attention.
The next room door opened.
Adrian walked in and stopped just inside the room.
I don’t know exactly what he saw.
Perhaps it was the way his father looked, pleasant but quietly satisfied that he had made his point, or maybe it was my quiet composure, the very specific kind that only appears when a person has been trying hard to make sure the expression doesn't show.
Maybe after thirty-six years he simply knew his father well enough to read the temperature of the room his father had been alone in.
He looked at Dominic.
“That’s enough, Dad,” he said quietly. No drama, not in anger. Just a few words delivered in a tone that left no room for negotiation, the voice of someone who had made a decision and was not going to be talked out of it.
Dominic looked at his son.
The silence that followed was not comfortable. It was the silence of two people who had been circling the same argument for years, who knew too well that they were tired of it all, and had quietly agreed again to stop before things got out of hand.
Then Dominic picked up his pen and looked at his desk.
“I have calls to make,” he said pleasantly.
We left.
We descended into the elevator quietly without a word.
Adrian stood beside me and looked at the doors. Thirty-eight floors in silence, and then the lobby, and also in the car.
I didn’t show him any appreciation.
He didn’t mention it either.
We both let it sit there, unacknowledged, the way you leave something fragile alone because touching it might break it.
That evening, I sat at my desk with the Vela Holdings documents open on my laptop and read the same paragraph five times without absorbing a word of it.
I kept thinking about a room on the 40th floor. About a few quiet words said to a man who was not used to being spoken to that way by anyone. About the fact that there were no cameras up there, no audience, nobody whose opinion was going to be shaped by what happened in that room.
He had done it anyway.
I pressed my hands flat on the desk and made myself focus.
I pulled up the second reference document attached to Vela Holdings. The one I had been building context around for two days before going deeper. I went deeper now.
It was an internal record, eleven years old. It referenced Vela Holdings in connection with a series of transactions, and at the bottom was a signature I hadn’t seen before. A second name.
Not the first name from the earlier document.
Not Dominic Tao’s name either.
Someone different entirely.
Two names. Two separate individuals. Neither of them, Dominic. Both connected to the same entity, both appearing in the same document structure, both signing off on the same series of transactions.
I ran the dates.
My hands stopped moving on the keyboard.
The transaction dates fell inside a specific three-month window. In the fiscal quarter I knew better than any other in my research, because I had spent two years trying to understand what had happened during it. What decisions had been made? Which companies had moved money and where it had gone to and who had given the instructions.
My father’s company had collapsed through that exact window.
Not before, not after. Inside it, precisely, like something that had been timed.
I sat at my desk while the estate went quiet around me and the garden outside the window turned black, and I looked at two names I had never seen before, connected to the same dates that had changed my father’s life, and I understood that what I had been investigating for three years was significantly larger and significantly closer to my own history than I had ever known.
The document was still open on my screen at 4 a.m.
I had not moved from the chair.