Chapter 1: The Glass Tower

1006 Words
Allegra Monroe stood at the foot of the Voss Industries tower, seventy-eight stories of mirrored steel slicing into Manhattan’s sky. It gleamed like a blade in the sun; beautiful, brutal, and built by the man she came to destroy. Five years, two months, and seventeen days since her father’s body had been found slumped at his desk with his pill bottle empty and the family photo faced down. She adjusted the leather portfolio under her arm, containing the forged résumés and fake letters that drained the little that was left of her savings. Her reflection in the glass showed no trace of the girl who once wept in the same clothes for three days straight. She wore corporate armor of silk in charcoal color for cold control. Behind her, the city moved, but ahead, her war began. “You going in or waiting for it to fall?” a man muttered as he brushed past. Allegra exhaled, touched the cracked watch on her wrist, which was her father’s final birthday gift, and stepped through the revolving door. Inside, the lobby buzzed: IDs scanned, heels clicked, elevator bells pinged. CNBC blared on a massive screen: “Another acquisition by Damian Voss...” She forced herself neither to look nor flinch at the name that had gutted her family. "Good morning. "Allegra Monroe, here for Human Resources," she said. Rodriguez, the guard, checked her name. “Thirty-two. Elevator bank C.” She clipped on the badge. It felt heavier than it should. The elevator was crowded, air thick with perfume, ambition, and silence. On the thirty-first floor, only one woman remained; she was in her mid-forties, immaculate and sharp. “Interview?” the woman asked, not looking at her. “Strategic analyst.” “Ambitious. Most start lower.” “Yale MBA. Deloitte. McKinsey. Lies, polished and memorized. The woman turned, assessing. “Victoria Hargrove.” Corporate development.” A pulse skipped through Allegra’s throat. Hargrove? The ice-cold mouthpiece who’d announced her father’s company’s “liquidation” on live TV. "Victoria’s eyes narrowed. “Said Monroe. Uncommon name.” The doors opened, and Allegra stepped out before the truth cracked through her composure. "Good luck," Hargrove called after her. "You'll need it." Trevor from HR met her with a smile and a tablet. As they walked through the glass corridors, her phone vibrated. Nicholas, again. Her brother’s messages ranged from "Be careful" to "Are you insane?" She ignored it. In the meeting room, she saw Voss’s empire up close: clean lines, cold strategy, efficiency over empathy. Like the hospital where they’d tried and failed to save her father. Trevor opened a door. “Jennifer will be right in.” Alone, Allegra stared out at Central Park. Her grandfather built Monroe Industries in a garage. He expanded it with grit and vision, but Voss dismantled it in weeks. Jennifer Winters arrived with a corporate smile. “Your résumé is impressive. Unusual for this level.” “I’m after growth, not titles,” Allegra said. Another script rehearsed to perfection. Jennifer nodded. “Let’s start with your work at Deloitte…” Allegra delivered her pitch like a trained weapon. It was smooth, convincing, everything she'd practiced. The background checks would hold. The references were actors, and the story is airtight. Then Jennifer’s phone buzzed. Her expression shifted. “I’m sorry,” she said. “Mr. Voss would like to attend the interview.” Allegra went cold. This wasn’t the plan. He wasn’t supposed to be here. The door opened. He walked in. Damian Voss. Taller and sharper than expected. His every move was deliberate. The kind of man who could buy cities and never look back. He sat across from her without a glance at her résumé. “Why’d you leave McKinsey?” he asked. She gave the line about wanting focused industry work. “You applied to three other consultancies last month.” Her heart thudded. How did he know? “I was exploring options,” she said smoothly. “But Voss Industries shifted my priorities.” He leaned forward. “People leave consulting because of burnout, failure, or opportunity. Which is it for you?” She matched his stare. “Opportunity.” He smiled, barely. “What's your vision?” “To help shape markets instead of following them.” His eyes flickered, maybe with amusement or something darker. “Your greatest weakness?” he asked. “Patience,” she said. It slipped out before she could stop it. “When I see a goal, I go after it.” He laughed. Brief. Real. “Finally, honesty.” Then he stood. “Jennifer she starts tomorrow. Skip the rest.” Jennifer blinked. “Sir, we haven’t.” “I have.” He turned to Allegra. “Unless you need time to decide?” She rose. “No. I accept.” As he reached the door, he paused. “The watch,” he said. “Odd choice." Broken clocks bring bad luck.” Allegra touched the glass face. “Some things are worth keeping even when broken.” His expression shifted, unreadable. Then he left. Jennifer turned to her, stunned. “That’s never happened. He must see something in you.” Or did he see a threat, Allegra thought. “Word of advice?” Jennifer added. “When Voss pays attention, it’s because he’s promoting you or watching you.” Forty minutes later, papers signed, fingerprints scanned, Allegra exited the building. In a nearby café, she pulled out her burner phone and texted the only contact saved: I’m in, placement expedited. Possible exposure. The reply came fast: Identity secured, proceed. First objective: Lazarus files. Allegra looked back at the tower. Somewhere inside it, behind the polished glass and dead smiles, was everything she needed to destroy Damian Voss. Justice. Revenge. Closure. Tomorrow, she'll walk in not as a recruit but as a weapon. “One floor at a time,” she whispered. And beneath the murmur of the crowd, her father’s broken watch ticked on, jagged, relentless, and unstoppable.
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