Chapter 4: The Throne and the Traitor

1701 Words
The hand Elara placed on the leather headrest was steady, but her touch was cold enough to make Marcus Thorne shiver. The entire room fell into a silence so thick it felt like the air had been sucked out of the building. Men and women who controlled billions of dollars sat frozen, their coffee cups halfway to their lips. Marcus didn't turn around immediately. He stared straight ahead at the empty space where his power had just evaporated. His face, usually tan and polished, turned a sickly shade of gray. "Get out of my chair, Marcus," Elara said. Her voice was low, melodic, and carried the weight of a death sentence. Marcus cleared his throat, trying to find his voice. He forced a jagged, nervous laugh and slowly rotated the chair. He looked up at her, his eyes darting to the board members to see if anyone would stand with him. No one moved. "Elara," he stammered, his smirk twitching into a grimace. "This is... a surprise. We heard rumors, of course, but we assumed they were just market manipulations. You have been gone for a long time. Eight years is a lifetime in tech." "And yet, I see you haven't managed to learn anything new in that lifetime," Elara replied. She didn't wait for him to stand. She leaned forward, her face inches from his. "You were speaking about a vote. About my vacancy. Please, continue. I would love to hear how you plan to replace the woman who built the foundation you are currently sitting on." Marcus pushed himself out of the chair, his movements clumsy. He stepped to the side, trying to regain some shred of dignity. "We were just concerned about the stability of the company, Elara. The stockholders were restless. Without a visible leader, Hamilton Global was vulnerable. I was only trying to protect your legacy." "My legacy does not need protection from a man who tries to steal it in the dark," Elara said. She sat down in the high-backed chair. It was warm from his body, and she felt a flash of disgust. She looked at the board members, her gaze lingering on each one until they looked away. "I have been watching. I have seen the 'protection' you offered. The Thorne-Aegis merger? It is a disaster wrapped in a bribe. You wanted to sell our data architecture to your brother-in-law's firm for pennies on the dollar." A murmur of shock rippled through the room. One of the older board members, a woman named Beverly who had been with Elara since the beginning, leaned forward. "Is this true, Marcus?" Beverly asked, her voice sharp. "She’s speculating!" Marcus shouted, his composure finally breaking. "She’s been hiding in some suburban hole for a decade! She has no idea how the market has changed. Elara, you are out of touch. You are a ghost. You think you can just walk back in here after playing house and tell us how to run a global empire?” Elara opened the leather folder Arthur Sterling had given her. She pulled out a single sheet of paper and slid it across the polished wood table. "That is a record of your private communications with Aegis over the last six months, Marcus. It includes the offshore account details where your 'consulting fee' was deposited. It also includes the resignation letters for every person in this room who signed off on that deal." The room went ice cold. Three board members at the far end of the table turned pale and pushed their chairs back. "You can't have those records," Marcus whispered, his eyes wide. "Those servers are encrypted." "I wrote the encryption, Marcus," Elara said. "Did you really think I wouldn't leave a backdoor in my own house?" She stood up and walked to the floor-to-ceiling window. Below them, Manhattan was waking up. The lights of the city were being replaced by the gray glow of dawn. Somewhere down there, in a cheap motel or a parked car, Ryan was probably counting his remaining change. "Security will escort Mr. Thorne and the others out of the building," Elara said, her back to the room. "Their personal belongings will be couriered to them. Their stock options are being frozen pending a full forensic audit. Does anyone else have a concern about my 'visibility'?" "No, Ms. Hamilton," Beverly said softly. "Welcome home." As the security team led a shouting Marcus out of the room, Elara felt a wave of exhaustion hit her. The adrenaline was fading, leaving behind the raw ache of the last twenty-four hours. She thought of Mia, who was sleeping in the office suite next door. She thought of Chloe, who was likely currently throwing a tantrum in the back of a car on her way to the mountains. Her phone buzzed. It was a private line. "Yes?" she answered. "He's at the front gate," Silas’s voice came through. "Ryan. He took a taxi. He’s trying to convince the guards that you’re being held against your will. He’s telling the press that you’ve had a mental breakdown and he’s here to 'rescue' his wife." Elara closed her eyes for a moment. The sheer persistence of Ryan’s delusion was almost impressive. He still thought he was the hero of the story. He still thought she was a prize to be claimed. "Let the press hear him, Silas," Elara said. "Let them record every word. And then, I want the legal team to release the video of the gala. All of it. The part where he calls me a servant. The part where he laughs at me with Chloe. Let the world see the man who wants to 'rescue' me." "And the guards?" "Keep him outside," Elara said. "In the rain. I want him to watch the monitors in the lobby. I’m about to go live for the morning market opening. I want him to see exactly who he threw away." Ten minutes later, Elara stood in the center of the Hamilton Global media room. A small army of makeup artists and stylists had worked miracles on her in record time. She wore a suit of midnight blue silk. Her skin was glowing, her eyes sharp and clear. "Five seconds, Ms. Hamilton," the director whispered. Elara looked into the camera lens. She didn't see a million viewers. She saw Ryan’s face. She saw the way he used to look at her with that mixture of pity and boredom. "Three... two... one..." "Good morning," Elara said, her voice steady and resonant. "I am Elara Hamilton. For the last eight years, I have lived a quiet life. I have been a wife and a mother. I have seen the world from the perspective of those who are often invisible. I have seen how the powerful treat those they think are beneath them." On the street below, Ryan stood behind a police barricade, soaked to the bone. He looked up at the massive jumbotron on the side of the Hamilton building. His jaw dropped as Elara’s face filled the screen, fifty feet tall and radiant. "I returned to Hamilton Global today because my company, like my life, needed a reminder of its true value," Elara continued. "To my partners, I say: we are stronger than ever. To my enemies, I say: I am watching. And to the man who told me I was replaceable..." Elara paused. She leaned slightly toward the camera, her eyes boring through the screen. "I am the one who decides who is replaceable. And today, I have replaced you with myself.” The broadcast cut to the Hamilton logo. The stock market opened, and the ticker at the bottom of the screen showed the Hamilton Global line shooting upward like a rocket. Ryan slumped against the barricade. A reporter shoved a microphone into his face. "Mr. Voss! Are you really her husband? Did you know she was a billionaire? How does it feel to be the man who lost the Iron Queen?" Ryan didn't answer. He couldn't. He watched as a black SUV pulled up to the curb. Silas Vance stepped out. He didn't look at the press. He walked straight to Ryan and handed him a small, plastic bag. "What is this?" Ryan asked, his voice trembling. "Your life," Silas said. "It’s everything Elara left behind in the house. Your high school trophy, your lucky socks, and the wedding ring you bought her on sale." "I want to talk to her," Ryan pleaded. "Just five minutes. Please. I can explain everything." "You already explained everything, Ryan. For eight years. She was just the only one listening," Silas said. He turned to leave, then stopped. "Oh, and the taxi you took here? The driver is waiting for payment. Since your cards are dead, I suggest you start walking. It’s a long way back to the suburbs." Ryan looked at the plastic bag in his hands. He looked up at the one hundredth floor where the lights were blazing. He could see a silhouette standing at the window. It was her. He knew it was her. He began to scream her name, a raw, desperate sound that was drowned out by the roar of the city and the clicking of a hundred cameras. In the penthouse, Elara turned away from the window. She picked up a ringing phone. "Ms. Hamilton," a voice said. "This is the head of the Tokyo branch. We have a situation with the AI initiative." "I'm listening," Elara said, sitting down at her desk and opening a blank digital file. "Start from the beginning." But as she spoke, the office door burst open. A security guard looked frantic. "Ma'am, I'm sorry to interrupt, but we have a security breach in the lower levels. Someone didn't just bypass the gates, they used a Hamilton family override code." Elara froze. There was only one other person who had that code, and it wasn't Ryan. "Who is it?" she demanded. The guard looked at his tablet, his face turning pale. "It's your sister, Ma'am. The one the world thinks died ten years ago." The elevator at the end of the hall chimed. Elara stood up, her heart finally skipping a beat
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD