The archive door still carried Lila’s warmth from when she’d closed it. Her own breath sounded way too loud in the tight little room. She kept running her thumb over her father’s photo, as if the paper might suddenly give her another story, a gentler one.
A shadow flickered at the doorway.
She went still.
“Don’t scream,” someone said from the dark, calm and low like he had all the time in the world—and none of it for her.
She didn’t move. “Who’s there?”
A light snapped on in the corner. Daniel strolled in, hands buried in his pockets like he owned the place. He smiled, but his eyes didn’t bother.
“You’re brave,” he said. “Or stupid. Hard to say.”
“You sent me that photo,” Lila blurted out before she could stop herself. “Why?”
He came closer. The air in the archive was thick with paper and some harsh metallic tang—old machines, maybe, or too much disinfectant. Up close, Daniel smelled like money and cold mornings, expensive coffee and a smile you didn’t trust.
“Because you’re in the right place,” he said. “Because you need to see, not just feel. And because, honestly, discretion’s overrated.”
Lila clenched her jaw. “What do you want from me?”
He shrugged, almost lazy. “I want the truth. I want the board to remember people died for their greed. But most of all? I want people to understand what Lucien’s protecting.”
She glared. “You’re using my father’s death like it’s just one more chess piece.”
He let out a soft laugh. “Everyone uses pieces, Lila. You think you’re the only one who lost something? I lost too. The difference is, I’m willing to get it back.”
“You don’t get to decide that for me.”
“Not alone.” He pulled a USB stick from his jacket and slid it across the table. “Everything’s on here. Audit logs. Communications. Emails where they begged for the bad data to go through. If I put this online, Cole Medical falls apart. Investors run. People end up in handcuffs.”
Lila’s fingers hovered over the stick, like it might bite. “Why give it to me?”
“You’re useful,” Daniel said, matter-of-fact. “You’re the kind of face the press will run with. You know the story from the inside. And if you go public, if you start shouting, it’s your name they’ll drag through the mud.”
“You really think I’d go to the press?”
He shook his head, smirking. “No. You think like a nurse. You follow rules. You weren’t built for headlines.” He leaned in, voice dropping. “Here’s how it works. I turn up the pressure. I aim it. People get scared. They slip up. The truth leaks out.”
She swallowed. “So what, you want me to be your puppet?”
“I want you to be reasonable.” He tapped the USB. “Marry him. Stand next to Lucien at the press conference. Suddenly it’s a story about loyalty and moving forward, not about scandal. The public gets distracted. Meanwhile I send the files to the right people, the board gets the boot, and you get to walk out with the truth—where someone can actually use it.”
“Marry him?” Even saying it sounded insane. “Are you out of your mind?”
Daniel didn’t blink. “It’s just for show. A year, maybe less. You get a stage, I get the board gone, you release the files when the dust settles. No one gets hurt—except the ones who deserve it.”
“You want me to trade my whole life for a plan you cooked up behind my back.”
He shook his head. “No. I want you to choose. Help me and I handle things quietly. Maybe your family gets spared some of the fallout. Or you walk, and I dump everything right now. And I mean everything—files tying your father’s withdrawal to the day they ignored him, the forgeries. Names. The kind of stuff that’ll make them trample you just to save themselves.”
Her mouth went dry. “You wouldn’t—”
“Try me,” he said, almost bored.
A siren wailed far off—just enough to remind her the world was still out there, still moving. Lila’s hands curled around the photo until it bent.
“You want me to marry the man who signed off on my father’s trial.” Her voice felt small, but she didn’t look away. “You want me to stand next to him while you destroy him.”
“I want you to stand beside him for one day,” Daniel said. “Make it look real. Kiss his cheek for the cameras, hold his arm. Give them what they want. I leak the files, and the people who ran the trial look like the villains—not you. And if you want, you can demand a public inquiry after, playing the loyal daughter.”
She counted her options in silence—none of them good. She watched his hands, the slight twitch behind his back, saw the way a man used to running the show measures every move. His next words came softer.
“You don’t have to love him. You don’t have to stay.” He left it hanging. “You just have to make the cameras see what I want them to.”
“Why me?” The question itched at her. “Why not just leak it anonymously?”
Daniel’s smile was sharp. “Anonymous tips get buried. But a face with a name—a nurse whose father died—people listen. You’re the reason they’ll care enough to do something.”
She pictured Lucien at that glass wall—just a man she barely knew, his black signature scrawled on her father’s file. She remembered the way he looked when she’d slammed those papers down on his desk. Something flickered across his face. Pain, maybe. Regret. Or maybe he was just acting.
“You’re a monster,” she told him.
He crossed his arms. “No, I’m a method.”
Silence stretched out. Daniel reached inside his coat again, pulled out a small recorder, and held it toward her. “Say it out loud. Tell yourself you’re only doing this for the truth. Make a promise—let the recorder hear it. People want confession. They want the drama. The press eats that up.”
She stared at him like he’d set a burning coal in front of her. The air turned cold. Her hands shook. She could see her father, bent over his cane, asking for just one more day. She remembered his smile when she brought him tea. The memory closed around her throat.
“You’ll prove you’ll release the files? After—” She lost her words.
“You have my word,” he said. He tapped the USB. “And this. I’ll send a copy to a couple journalists right now. But they won’t print it until you play your part. They’ll hold it until the story fits what I need.”
She pushed the recorder away, slow and careful. “And if I say no?”
He shrugged, like he didn’t care either way. “Then I go public tonight. Your name gets dragged through the mud. The hospital quietly buries you as some unstable relative. Or they blame someone else. Or they burn you.” His voice stayed low. “It’s your choice.”
The fluorescent lights buzzed. Somewhere out in the hall, footsteps echoed—fast, metal on tile.
Lila bent the corner of a photo until it tore. She wanted to scream, to storm out and shout in the lobby, to smash every vase, rip down every banner, make the world see her father wasn’t just a number.
But all she managed was a single question. “Why do you hate him so much?”
Daniel’s smile softened, just a little. “Because he could’ve stopped it. Because he let his empire pick appearances over people. Because he made the choice that killed my sister.”
That hit her hard. He’d lost someone too. Not some faceless villain—a person.
“And you think a fake marriage fixes that?” she whispered.
“I think leverage fixes things,” he said. “One public image, one private leak. Chaos, then cleanup. People bow.”
A loud click from the door snapped both their heads up.
Lucien stood in the doorway—coat open, hair a bit wild, eyes sharp as blades. He didn’t come in. He didn’t have to.
“You’re in the wrong place, Mr. Cole,” Daniel said, voice smooth as oil.
Lucien’s jaw clenched. He looked at Lila, just once, and she couldn’t read him at all.
“Get out,” he told Daniel.
Daniel let out a soft laugh. “I’m not leaving until she answers.”
Lucien’s voice dropped, low and dangerous. “You’re better than this.”
Daniel’s smile stayed put. “And you’re not enough for this.”
The air grew thin. The space between them felt like a wire stretched to breaking.
Lucien stepped forward, just one step.
“You don’t touch her,” he said. Not to Daniel. To Lila.
The words landed in her chest.
And suddenly, with a sharp, clear certainty, she knew this wasn’t really about truth anymore.
It was about these men fighting over it.
And she was the ground they fought on.