Chapter 2 – *Boardroom Aftershocks*

1002 Words
“Congratulations," Lana's voice crackled through Sierra's earpiece as she stepped out of the elevator. “You just broke the internet." Sierra smirked. “Good. Now let's make it a controlled burn." “Helios PR is spinning you as a strategic ghost-ace. Julian West's boardroom face was..." “Pale?" “More like carved granite. One commentator said he looked like he'd seen a ghost." Sierra paused outside a café. “He has." --- Inside WestTech's executive floor, Julian tossed his stylus across the desk. “She torched our entire Pentagon angle," Everett Kane said, not bothering to hide his disdain. “Who is she really?" “She's a consultant," Julian replied evenly. “Who happened to be well-prepared." “Come on, Julian. This wasn't just preparation. She anticipated our timelines, crushed our encryption claims, even referenced components still in R&D. This was personal." Julian said nothing. His fingers drummed on his desk. Everett leaned in. “You want me to dig deeper?" Julian's stare sharpened. “Do it discreetly. She's not just another contractor." Everett raised an eyebrow. “You remember her?" “No." A lie. It tasted like metal on his tongue. “But I think I should." --- Across town, Sierra stirred sugar into her espresso without drinking it. “I've got a name," Lana said, sliding into the booth. “Everett Kane. VP of Strategic Growth. He's been with WestTech longer than Julian. Rumors say he's gunning for the top job." Sierra raised an eyebrow. “Interesting. Does he know Julian's unwell?" Lana blinked. “Unwell?" Sierra hesitated. “Never mind." “Did he recognize you?" “No. He looked at me like I was just another problem to eliminate." “That's cold." “Colder than you think," Sierra murmured. “But not dead. Not yet." --- That evening, Julian sat in his penthouse, silent but not alone. Dr. Lang folded his arms. “You're pushing it. Stress triggers arrhythmia. Ignoring it could lead to full-blown cardiomyopathy." “I don't have time for rest," Julian replied, eyes locked on the tablet displaying Sierra's face from the gala. “You've been having memory episodes. Migraines. You requested neural scans six months ago and then canceled." Julian stood. “I'm functioning." Lang's voice lowered. “You were in a coma for sixteen days. You remember that, right?" Silence. “Julian. What happened that night?" Julian's jaw clenched. “Nothing I can prove." Lang sighed. “Then start by remembering." --- Meanwhile, Sierra opened her encrypted cloud archive. Dozens of files glowed against the darkness of her SoHo loft. One folder stood apart: **Phoenix.** She tapped it open. The stolen drive she'd decrypted last year now revealed lines of system logs—anomalies from the night of the crash. Vehicle override. GPS drift. AI auto-correction failure. Authorization code: JW-0117. Her breath caught. Julian's credentials. She stared at the screen. “Why would you...?" Before she could finish the question, a soft chime signaled a new message. **Sender: Unknown** **Subject: You're not ready.** No text. Just a blurred image—her standing near the wreckage, barely conscious. It hadn't been public. It hadn't been possible. Her hands trembled. Someone was watching. --- The next morning, Julian's executive assistant tapped lightly on his office door. “There's media outside." “Let them speculate." “Also... this arrived by private courier." She set a thick envelope on his desk. No return address. Julian opened it slowly. Inside: one glossy photo. A surveillance still of Sierra Hale—three years ago, Vancouver International Airport. Red-eyed. Disoriented. The backside read: *She was never meant to survive.* Julian stood so quickly the chair toppled. His chest pulsed erratically. He gripped the desk until it passed. --- Later that afternoon, Sierra paced her office, holding a burner phone. “I need a favor," she said into the line. “Neuro records. Anyone tied to WestTech with cardiac treatment histories." “Why?" “Because I think Julian West is dying—and he's hiding it." Lana cursed softly. “You're still angry, aren't you?" “Furious." “Then why dig into his medical records?" Sierra paused. “Because I need to know if I'm fighting a man or a ghost." --- Julian lay on a scan table, eyes closed. The PET scanner whirred, neon-blue rings circling him like orbiting judgment. Dr. Lang stood in the observation room, lips tight. Minutes later, the results loaded. Hippocampal scarring. Frontal-lobe signal degradation. Memory inconsistency. Elevated cortisol. Ventricular strain. Lang looked through the glass. “You're going to forget her again, aren't you?" he whispered to himself. --- Sierra stared at the anomaly logs on her laptop. The AI navigation override hadn't killed her—it had *corrected* in time. Corrected against Julian's original input. There was a second authorization buried deeper—encrypted, but signed with a familiar string: **JW-AltKey02 – Redundancy Protocol Active.** “Someone tried to save me…" she murmured. “Someone inside." She swallowed hard. “Julian. What did you do?" --- Julian paced his penthouse, heart thumping against his ribs. He pulled out a leather-bound journal, tucked in a drawer he hadn't opened in years. Inside: one torn page. A promise scribbled hastily in sharp ink. *If I can't stay, I'll find a way back.* His own writing. Beside it: a photo. Sierra. Laughing in the lab, coffee in one hand, goggles on her head. Blurry. But warm. He shut the journal, breathing shallow. --- That night, Sierra stood on her balcony overlooking the Hudson. She dialed Lana. “He didn't forget me," she said, voice low. “Not by choice." “You're sure?" “No. But I'm beginning to doubt everything I was sure about." Lightning split the sky. Rain began to fall. Sierra didn't move. “He told me to forget him," she whispered. “But every time I close my eyes, I remember something new." She looked down at her reflection in the glass. Strong. Determined. Alone. “Tomorrow," she said, “we raise the stakes."
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