Croft POV
The news alert chimed on my phone, a soft, expensive sound in the silence of my study. I read the headline, and a laugh, cold and sharp as shattered crystal, escaped me: Stanley Morgan, Titan of Industry, Arrested on Multiple Counts of Fraud and Corruption.
Fool. Arrogant, blustering fool.
He actually thought he’d won. He’d stood in my office six months ago, promising to snatch the Liang-Po deal from under me, his chest puffed out like a prize peacock. “It’s just business, Croft,” he’d sneered, his voice dripping with condescension. “Don’t take it personally. Some of us are just built for this. Others… Well, you had a good run.”
I’d said nothing then. Just watched him, this boy playing at being a king. But I’d made a promise to myself, one I’d whispered to him as he left: You are a gnat, Stanley. And I will show you how a giant swats a gnat. You are too small to contend with me.
And now, the swat had landed. Perfectly.
My part had been clean and surgical, providing the channels, the legal machinery, and the pressure points in the DA’s office. But the masterpiece was hers Jennifer. She was the one who had slipped into his fortress and opened the gates from the inside. The ledgers, the videos, the audio… she delivered it all on a silver platter, her eyes burning with a cold fire that I recognized all too well. It was the fire of calculated, patient vengeance. I admired it greatly.
With Stanley caged, a new opportunity presented itself. Jennifer was now fabulously and independently wealthy, the primary beneficiary of the asset seizures and civil suits I’d helped her orchestrate. But she was adrift a weapon without a war. I found myself intrigued.
She was more than just an instrument of revenge; she was a piece of exquisite, hardened porcelain, forged in a kiln of her husband’s making. I wanted her, not just as an ally. I wanted that sharp mind and that iron will beside me.
I wanted to possess the very thing that had destroyed my enemy.
It began with the gallery. She’d mentioned it offhandedly once, a dream she’d buried under years of Stanley’s abuse. A space for emerging artists, a place that wasn’t cold and transactional but alive. I made it happen. We used a fraction of the money we’d wrested from Stanley’s crumbling empire. I found a beautiful, brutalist building in a revitalizing part of the city. “The Jenni Gallery,” she named it, a final, elegant twist of the knife.
The night of the grand opening was a triumph. The city’s elite came, not out of sympathy but out of curiosity that quickly turned to genuine admiration. Jennifer stood at the center of it all, radiant in a gown of deep emerald, her smile no longer cruel but confident. Powerful. She was no longer Stanley Morgan’s victim; she was a force in her own right.
I watched her from across the room, a glass of Whiskey in my hand. This was the moment. The alliance had served its purpose. Now, it was time to pivot and build something new. I didn’t need a partner in crime; I needed a partner in life. Someone whose strength matched my own. I would not rush her; I would be a constant, reliable presence, a confidant, a protector. I would show her a world of power and refinement, a world Stanley could never have offered her, and I would let her come to me. The strategy was set.
But first, there was one last piece of business to attend to: A victory lap I had been savoring.
The following week, I arranged a visit to the federal detention center where Stanley was being held pending trial. He looked… diminished. The expensive suit was replaced by a shapeless orange jumpsuit. His trademark tan had faded to a sallow grey, but the arrogance was still there, burning in his eyes like a fever.
He sneered as I sat down opposite him in the visitation room, the thick glass between us. “Come to gloat, old man?” His voice was tinny through the phone receiver.
“Gloat?” I said, my voice calm, a whisper of silk. “No, Stanley. I came to admire my handiwork and to thank you.”
His knuckles whitened around the receiver. “Thank me?”
“For being such a predictable, arrogant fool. You thought snatching Liang-Po was a victory. You were too blind to see it was the bait. You were so busy boasting to your wife, so sure of your own invincibility, that you never saw the trap being laid at your own feet. You played yourself, Stanley. I just provided the stage.”
His face contorted, a mask of pure, undiluted hatred. “You think this is over? You and that treacherous b***h? I’ll be out of here sooner than you think. My lawyers are the best money can buy. And when I’m out, I’ll destroy you. I’ll grind your company into dust, and I’ll make Jennifer wish she’d died with that brat she was carrying!”
The air left my lungs. I had known, intellectually, about the miscarriage. But to hear him use it as a weapon, so casually, so viciously… it solidified everything. This was not a man; this was a rabid animal.
I leaned forward, my voice dropping to a deadly whisper. “You are never getting out, Stanley. The evidence is insurmountable. The videos of you beating your wife, the audio of you detailing bribery schemes… it’s not just financial; it’s domestic abuse. The public hates you. The judge hates you. You are finished.”
He slammed his fist against the glass. “You’re a dead man, Croft! A relic! My money and my name will get me out of this! I’m a billionaire!”
“Were,” I corrected him coldly. “You were a billionaire. Your assets are frozen, your accounts seized. What wasn’t taken by the government now belongs to Jennifer. She’s using your money to build a rather stunning art gallery.
Spittle flew from his mouth as he yelled, “I’LL BURN IT TO THE GROUND! I’LL BURN EVERYTHING YOU HAVE!”
“You have nothing,” I said, my voice flat and final. “You have no money. No power. No wife. No legacy. You are a cautionary tale, a footnote in my biography. You thought you could contend with me, but you were always too small. You were a gnat, Stanley. And I swatted you.”
With a guttural roar of fury, he did something then, something so primal and pathetic it confirmed his utter defeat. He leaned forward and spat a thick, viscous wad of saliva directly onto the glass between us.
“You’re an old cargo, Croft!” he screamed, his voice cracking. “A rotting ship! I’m coming for you! I’m coming for both of you! You hear me? YOU’RE DEAD!”
I didn’t flinch. I simply looked at the spit slowly sliding down the partition, a perfect symbol of his entire existence: base, ugly, and ultimately inconsequential.
I placed the receiver back in its cradle, cutting off the sound of his incoherent screaming. I stood, straightened the cuffs of my suit jacket, and gave him one last, long look. I didn’t smile; I simply let him see the absolute, unshakable certainty in my eyes: he was already forgotten.
I turned and walked out, the heavy security doors closing behind me, silencing his rage forever. The air outside was clean. The future was wide open. And my next move, the most strategic one of all, was waiting for me at an art gallery. The game was far from over; it had simply entered a new and far more interesting phase.