Rain had been falling since late afternoon.
Not the dramatic kind that rattled windows or flooded streets, but a steady drizzle that seemed determined to settle over the city and stay there. From the fifth floor of The Tribune building, the world outside looked blurred and distant, hidden behind streaks of water and glowing streetlights.
Inside, the newsroom was alive. Phones rang. Televisions murmured and reporters hurried between desks carrying folders and half-finished coffees. Somewhere near the editor's office, two journalists were arguing over a headline. It was noisy,chaotic and messy and Elena Rossi loved every second of it.
Most people thought journalism was glamorous. They imagined reporters exposing government scandals, standing bravely in front of cameras, and collecting awards for uncovering the truth.
The reality was far less exciting. Most days involved endless research, unanswered emails, missed deadlines, and stories that died before they ever reached print.
Elena knew that reality better than anyone. At twenty-six, she was still waiting for her breakthrough. Still waiting for the story that would make people take her seriously. Still waiting for the opportunity that seemed to arrive so easily for everyone except her.
"You're still here?"
The familiar voice pulled her from her thoughts.
Elena glanced up to find Ben Carter standing beside her desk.
His coat was already on. His car keys dangled from one finger.
And judging by the look on his face, he was wondering why she hadn't gone home hours ago.
"I'm working."
Ben looked pointedly at the clock on the wall.
"It's almost eight."
"I'm aware."
"Normal people stop working eventually."
"Normal people aren't trying to save their careers."
Ben rolled his eyes.
"Your career doesn't need saving."
"My editor would disagree."
"Your editor disagrees with everybody."
"Fair point."
That earned a laugh.
Ben glanced at the stack of papers covering her desk.
"What is this one anyway?"
"Corruption investigation."
"The same one you've been obsessing over for three weeks?"
"The very same."
"You know if it were others they would've dropped it by now."
Elena looked down at the documents. Maybe most people would have but something about this story bothered her. The deeper she dug, the stranger it became. It should have been simple. A local politician accepting bribes. Nothing unusual. Corruption stories appeared every day. Yet every time she uncovered a piece of information, another mystery appeared.
One suspicious payment led to another company. That company led to another account. That account led to another name. The trail seemed endless.
And somehow every road circled back to the same destination. One name.
Luca Moretti.
Ben noticed her expression.
"Oh no."
"What?"
"You're doing that thing again."
"What thing?"
"The thing where your eyes get all intense and scary."
Elena laughed.
"My eyes are not scary."
"They absolutely are."
She shook her head and returned to her laptop.
Ben leaned closer.
"Seriously though, what's so special about this guy?"
Elena stared at the screen.
"That's what I'm trying to figure out."
Everyone knew who Luca Moretti was. You'd have to be living under a rock not to.
His face appeared regularly on magazine cover. .Business journals praised him. Investors admired him. Politicians attended his charity events. He was one of the richest men in the country ,Successful,Powerful and Untouchable.
The kind of man whose life looked perfect from the outside yet somehow his name kept appearing in her investigation.
Like a shadow lurking behind every document she touched. It made her suspicious.
People with nothing to hide rarely worked that hard to stay invisible.
"You should go home," Ben said.
"I will."
"You said that two hours ago."
"I mean it this time."
"Liar."
He grabbed his coffee.
"Try not to solve the entire city's corruption problem tonight."
"No promises."
With one final wave, he disappeared into the crowd. A few minutes later, the newsroom began to feel too quiet. The energy that had filled the room all day slowly drained away.
Elena barely noticed. She was too focused on the spreadsheet glowing on her screen. Rows of numbers stretched endlessly before her. Transactions.Transfers.Accounts.
At first glance, everything looked normal.
But Elena had spent enough time investigating financial records to know when something felt wrong. And this felt very wrong. She opened another file then another and another. The pattern became clearer.
Money moved between companies that appeared unrelated. Those companies connected to investors and then connected to corporation, foundations. And hidden within those connections was a familiar name.
Moretti Enterprises.
Her pulse quickened and slowly, she sat forward.
This wasn't proof not even close. But it was enough to make her curious. And curiosity had always been Elena's greatest strength. And occasionally her greatest weakness.
The office phone rang suddenly. The sound startled her.
She blinked.
The newsroom had become unusually quiet. Without realizing it, she had been working for nearly an hour. Most of the staff had gone home.
The ringing continued. She picked up.
"The Tribune."
Silence.
Elena frowned.
"Hello?"
Nothing.Only breathing. A strange chill crept down her spine.
"Who is this?"
The breathing stopped.
The line went dead. Slowly, she lowered the receiver. Weird. Probably a prank call.
At least that's what she told herself. Still, the uneasy feeling remained.
She glanced around the newsroom. Only a handful of lights remained on.
The cleaning staff had started their rounds.
Outside, rain continued tapping against the windows. For the first time all evening, she felt alone.
Her phone buzzed against the desk.
A text message from an unknown Number. Her stomach tightened.
She opened it.
One sentence appeared on the screen.
"Stop digging."
Elena stared.
A second passed.
Then another.
Her heartbeat quickened.
She typed quickly.
Who is this?
The reply arrived almost immediately.
"You're asking questions you shouldn't."
The room suddenly felt colder. She looked around again. No one appeared to be paying attention to her. No one seemed suspicious. Yet somebody knew. Somebody knew exactly what she was investigating.
Her fingers tightened around the phone.
Another message appeared.
"Walk away."
"Now."
The confidence she had felt all evening began to c***k. This wasn't random. This wasn't a prank.
Nobody knew about her research.
She hadn't published anything. She hadn't told her editor. She hadn't discussed Luca Moretti with anyone except Ben. So how could someone know?
A knot formed in her stomach.
The rational part of her mind tried to explain it away. Maybe someone had accessed her files. Maybe someone overheard a conversation. Maybe there was a perfectly innocent explanation.
But deep down she knew better. Instincts had kept her alive in journalism. And right now every instinct she possessed was screaming.
Something is wrong. Very wrong.
Her phone vibrated again.
Another message.
This one was different.
"Some stories aren't worth dying for."
Elena froze.
The words seemed to burn into the screen. For several seconds she couldn't move.
A thousand possibilities raced through her head.
Who sent this? How much did they know? Were they watching her? Had they been watching her for days? Weeks?
The questions came faster than answers and slowly she rose from her chair and walked toward the window.
Rain blurred the city below. Cars moved through intersections. People hurried along sidewalks carrying umbrellas. Everything looked normal.
Not anymore.
Her gaze drifted back toward her desk. Toward the stack of documents. Toward the files she'd spent weeks chasing. Toward the name that appeared again and again and again.
Luca Moretti.
Maybe there was nothing there. Maybe she was chasing shadows Or maybe she'd just stumbled onto the biggest story of her life. The kind of story journalists dreamed about. The kind of story powerful people killed to protect. The thought should have terrified her.
Instead, it sparked something else. Determination.
Fear sat heavily in her chest but beneath it was curiosity and curiosity had always won.
Elena walked back to her desk. She picked up the documents. Closed her laptop. And slipped everything carefully into her bag.
Whoever sent those messages wanted her to stop. That much was obvious. The problem was they had just made her want to continue.
Outside, thunder rumbled somewhere over the city.
Elena switched off her desk lamp and headed toward the elevators.
She didn't know it yet. She didn't know that one investigation was about to change her entire life. She didn't know that the man whose name filled her documents would soon become impossible to avoid. And she certainly didn't know that before the month was over, she would be forced into a world far darker and more dangerous than anything she had ever imagined.
All she knew was that someone wanted her afraid. Someone wanted her silent. And as the elevator doors slid shut behind her, Elena Rossi made a decision that would alter the course of her life forever. She was going to find the truth.
No matter who tried to stop her.