LOGINThe Divided Front
Benita Hayes The glass elevator of the Knight Power Holdings building shot upward like a silver bullet. I stood as far from Adrian as the small space allowed, my reflection staring back at me from the polished chrome—pale, professional, and perched on the edge of a breakdown. "Stop checking your watch," Adrian said, his eyes fixed on the digital stock ticker running across the elevator’s internal screen. "It makes you look like you have somewhere better to be. In this building, there is nowhere better to be." "I’m checking the time because I sent an encrypted file to my best friend, Mia, twenty minutes ago," I whispered, glancing at the security camera in the corner. "If she hasn't acknowledged it, it means the Knight firewall flagged it." Adrian finally looked at me. His expression was unreadable. "You sent company data to an outside source on your first morning?" "I sent a 'hello' embedded with a tracer to see how closely your father is monitoring my outgoing communications," I corrected, my chin lifting. "I’m observant, remember? I don't move until I know where the tripwires are." The elevator chimed, and the doors slid open to a floor that looked more like a command center than an office. White marble, black steel, and walls of glass that overlooked the sprawling city. "Adrian! You’re late. By four minutes. I was about to start the meeting without you and declare myself King." A man with messy dark hair and a grin that felt dangerously infectious leaned against a glass desk. This was Luca Moretti, Adrian’s right-hand man and, from what I’d heard, the only person who could survive Adrian’s temper for more than a week. "The variables changed, Luca," Adrian muttered, walking past him toward the corner office. "This is Benita. She’s... my wife. And she’s working the Hayes transition." Luca’s eyes landed on me, bright and unnervingly intelligent. He pushed off the desk and offered a hand. "The 'Special Assistant.' I’ve heard. I’ve also seen your work on the Singapore audits, Benita. If you ever get tired of being a Knight, come work for me. I pay in sanity and actual coffee breaks." "Benita!" A familiar, high-pitched squeal echoed from the lobby. I turned just as a whirlwind of bright pink silk and blonde hair collided with me. Mia Carter. My best friend, and the only person in the world who treated me like a human being instead of a case study. "Mia! Lower your voice," I hissed, hugging her back. "I can't! You’re married! To him!" She pulled back, pointing a manicured finger toward Adrian’s office. "He’s like a very handsome, very scary robot. Are you okay? Did he make you sign a non-disclosure agreement just to eat breakfast?" "Something like that," I whispered. "Mia, I need you to be my eyes in the marketing department. Vanessa is here. She’s shadowing the team." Mia’s face instantly darkened. "The Step-Monster Junior? Say no more. I’ll make sure her 'shadowing' involves a lot of filing in the basement." "Benita. In my office. Now." Adrian’s voice boomed from across the floor. I gave Mia a quick squeeze and walked toward the glass doors. As I stepped inside, the door clicked shut with a heavy, pressurized sound. "Sit," Adrian commanded, gesturing to a chair opposite his desk. "We have a problem." "Besides my sister moving into your house?" "Look at this." He turned his monitor toward me. It was a security feed from the Knight Estate. My stomach dropped. The camera was positioned in the hallway outside our bedroom. Vanessa was standing there, a set of master keys in her hand. She looked over her shoulder once, then slid the key into the lock of our suite and disappeared inside. "She’s snooping," I whispered, my blood running cold. "Adrian, my private journals are in that room. The notes I took on my father's files—" "I had them moved to the floor safe before we left," Adrian said, his voice surprisingly calm. "But that isn't the point. She’s looking for proof that this marriage is a sham. If she finds two separate pillows or realizes we aren't sharing the same space, she’ll run straight to my father." I stood up, pacing the length of the office. "We have to go back." "No," Adrian said, standing as well. He walked around the desk until he was standing directly in front of me. "We let her look. And then, we give her exactly what she’s looking for." "What does that mean?" "It means," Adrian said, reaching out to tuck a stray curl behind my ear, his touch lingering just a second too long, "that when we go home tonight, we don't just act like a couple. we become a spectacle. If Vanessa wants to spy, we’ll give her a show she’ll never forget. Adrian Knight I watched the realization dawn on Benita’s face. She was smart enough to know what I was suggesting, and she was terrified of it. The truth was, I didn't need Vanessa to snoop to know this was a dangerous game. My father was playing three-dimensional chess with our lives. Bringing Vanessa into the house was a classic move to destabilize the "contract." He wanted Benita isolated, and he wanted me distracted. But as I looked at Benita—standing in my office, her eyes fierce despite the fear—I realized my father had made a mistake. He thought Benita was a weak link. He didn't realize she was the catalyst. "Luca," I barked into the intercom. "Yeah, Boss?" "Cancel the afternoon briefings. I’m taking my wife to lunch. Somewhere very public. Somewhere with a lot of cameras." "The Plaza?" Luca asked, his voice sounding amused. "Or the bistro where all the gossip columnists hang out?" "Both," I said, my gaze never leaving Benita’s. "It’s time the world saw exactly how 'devoted' we are." I grabbed my coat and offered my arm to Benita. She hesitated for a heartbeat, then slipped her hand into mine. Her fingers were trembling, but her grip was firm. "Ready for your first performance?" I asked. "I’ve been performing my whole life, Adrian," she said, her voice dropping to a whisper. "Just try to keep up." As we walked through the lobby, I leaned in and kissed her temple. It was a calculated move, designed for the cameras I knew were stationed across the street. But as the scent of her hair hit me—something soft, like vanilla and old books—I felt a jolt of something that wasn't in the contract. The "Cold Heart" was starting to thaw, and that was the most dangerous betrayal of all.Pre-Market Panic **Benita Hayes** The sharp, mechanical buzzing of our cheap prepaid smartphone woke me at exactly 6:15 AM, the harsh sound vibrating violently against the bare wooden floorboards of Room 3B. The small apartment was already blazing hot from the massive commercial bread ovens operating directly below us, the thick, heavy scent of baking rye, sweet yeast, and toasted flour hanging like an immovable curtain in the dim morning light. I rolled over slowly on the bare mattress, my shoulder muscles aching fiercely from the cramped, unyielding space of the floor, and looked over at Adrian. He was already completely awake, sitting cross-legged near the foot of the bed with his rolled-up shirt sleeves heavily wrinkled and his dark hair messy. His sharp grey eyes were fixed with absolute, unblinking intensity on the small glowing screen in his palm. "It’s Luca," Adrian said, his deep baritone voice coming out as a gravelly rasp that vibrated right through the floorboards benea
The Sourdough MorningAdrian KnightThe air inside Room 3B smelled intensely of warm flour, yeast, and dark molasses when we finally unlocked the door at three o'clock in the morning. The industrial bakery directly beneath our floorboards had started its early morning production shift, and the heavy heat from their commercial ovens radiated up through the old pine floor, making the small apartment feel warm and strangely safe against the freezing rain outside.Benita dropped her leather bag onto the small wooden table, her shoulders slumping as the absolute exhaustion of the last forty-eight hours finally caught up with her. She didn't look like the pristine, untouchable heiress I had married in that formal church ceremony; her hair was damp from the storm, her black blazer was slightly wrinkled, and there was a faint smudge of graphite on her jaw from the printouts we had been analyzing. Yet, as she stood there in the dim light of our tiny kitchen, I realized I had never looked at a
The Ohio PlayBenita HayesThe hum of the warehouse didn't let up as the clock crawled past midnight. The air grew heavy with the sharp smell of old printer toner and the cheap, burnt chicory coffee Luca had picked up from an all-night bodega down the street. Outside, the rain had settled into a steady, rhythmic drumming against the corrugated metal roof of the warehouse, creating a strange, isolating barrier between our small room and the rest of the financial district. We were completely cut off from the high-rise offices and the polished mahogany tables, yet the entire future of Knight Power Holdings was being systematically dismantled on a dented metal desk right in front of me.My fingers felt stiff as I clicked through the secondary confirmation screens of the Ohio Energy Generation contract. The interface was outdated, built on a legacy framework that my father had designed back when the Hayes Group first laid down the cross-state power lines. It didn't look like a modern finan
The New BoardroomAdrian KnightThe air inside the warehouse office on 5th Street was thick with the scent of stale espresso grounds and cold rain when we climbed back through the rear entrance door at 9:00 PM. Luca was sitting cross-legged on top of his desk, three different cell phones laid out in front of him like a dealer's hand of cards, while Mia lay stretched out on the faded fabric sofa, her eyes completely bloodshot as she stared at the scrolling data feeds on her wall projector."You're alive," Luca said, tossing a plastic room key toward me the moment my wet shoes hit the linoleum floor. "The landlord at 4th Street called. He said the bakery downstairs just finished their evening shift, so your apartment is going to smell like sourdough bread until five tomorrow morning. Consider it a luxury upgrade.""Did my father try to contact the procurement sub-committee after the press conference?" I asked, laying the heavy green Hayes motherboards down onto my desk before hanging my
The Ghost in the Machine Benita Hayes The metallic smell of old copper and dust settled deep into my lungs as the heavy iron vault door groaned shut, locking us inside the server core. Outside, the steady rhythm of the heavy rain continued to batter the brick exterior of the building, but down here, the only sound was the high-pitched, mechanical whine of thousands of microprocessors spinning inside their metal cages. "They’re gone," Adrian said, stepping back into the glowing blue light of the terminal room. His custom white dress shirt was completely soaked through from the sprint across the gravel yard, sticking to the broad lines of his shoulders. He didn't look like an executive anymore. He looked like a man who had just survived a physical trench fight, his grey eyes reflecting the lines of code scrolling down my monitor. "Harrison is smart enough to know when a corporate paycheck isn't worth a federal obstruction charge. He’ll tell my father the basement was completely ina
The Iron CageAdrian KnightThe cold rain started falling hard and thick by the time our rental vehicle reached the desolate industrial sector on the edge of 8th Street. The sky had turned a bruising shade of slate grey, opening up to pour a relentless sheet of water over the cracked asphalt of the manufacturing district. The old Hayes research facility loomed ahead of us—a massive, weathered three-story brick building surrounded by a high, rusted chain-link fence that rattled violently in the rising wind. It stood as a stark, depressing contrast to the gleaming glass and polished steel towers of Knight Power Holdings back in the financial center, but this unassuming, forgotten location was the exact place where the actual technical value and intellectual property of the company had been built from scratch over years of grueling, uncredited labor.Two black luxury SUVs were parked idling near the covered loading dock at the side of the structure, their exhaust fumes mixing heavily wit
The Snake’s Nest Adrian KnightThe twenty-minute drive to the suburban Hayes estate was entirely different from our usual silent, awkward car rides. Benita didn't stare out the window at the rain, and she didn't check her watch in a panic. She sat perfectly rigid in the leather seat next to me, he
The Boardroom ExecutionAdrian KnightThe digital clock on the wall of the main boardroom read 7:55 AM.My father was already seated at the head of the long, polished mahogany table. He looked disgustingly relaxed, leaning back in his leather chair, casually scrolling through the morning’s global m
The Night Before the VoteBenita HayesI didn't bother changing out of my clothes. The forest-green trousers and cream blouse I had worn to the office felt tight and restrictive, but I didn't care. I just sat at the small glass desk in the corner of the bedroom, my laptop open, the screen throwing
The Broken LockBenita HayesThe drive back to the estate felt different. The silence inside the car wasn’t cold anymore; it was heavy with the weight of what we had just done. Adrian sat next to me, his fingers tapping a slow, thoughtful rhythm against his knee. He was quiet, but it wasn't his usu







