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The board meeting erupted into chaos as Jeffery Rothwell stood near the window, his calm demeanor a stark contrast to the storm brewing around him.
"We need results, Jeffery," the chairman barked, his voice slicing through the tension. "Not promises, not excuses, Results." The directors eyes fixed on Jeffery, awaiting a response. Rumors about Jeffery's private associations had spread faster than any memo could contain. Directors shifted uncomfortably, suspicion written across subtle gestures. "Mr. Rothwell," one director said sharply, "we've been promised a stabilizing plan, yet there is no evidence. Is someone aligned with this strategy, or are we relying on conjecture?" Jeffery remained calm. "The plan is active and confidential. Execution will be verified shortly." Across the city, Clara slipped into Eclipse Breed, the organization that had trained her for years. A new batch of recruits stiffened under her gaze, their poise faltering as they sensed her authority. She was the top operative, the senior instructor, and her presence commanded respect. Every movement, every gesture, every glance was deliberate. Nothing escaped her attention. The chairman's expression hardened. "Verification must be immediate. Our confidence in leadership depends on certainty. Otherwise, we risk assuming this is a bluff." Bluff, the word cut sharp. Every second without evidence allowed doubt to root. He glanced toward the door. Time was running out. Every board member's glance felt heavier, a subtle accusation pressing against his authority. Clara moved through the room, her eyes locking onto the senior instructor. "You leave for the Rothwell assignment today," the woman said, voice cold. "Confirm all protocols are understood." Clara pulled a folder from a desk, her eyes scanning the contract rules printed in unambiguous language. She read them line by line: No pregnancy may occur, Violation equals death. Do not fall in love with the client. Emotional entanglement equals death. Do not breach or alter the contract before completion. Violation equals death. Maintain absolute discretion. Any exposure equals death (for organization's sake). Personal survival depends entirely on compliance. She signed off on the review. Timing, execution, and logistics were aligned. Rothwell Tower awaited, the board in session, and her arrival would determine the outcome. In preparation, she checked her equipment. Documents, comms devices, and timing mechanisms were meticulously arranged in her bag. Each item accounted for, nothing could go wrong. Eclipse Breed had trained her for years to anticipate contingencies, to plan for every possibility, to react without hesitation. Failure was never an option. Her mind drifted briefly to the mission's core risk: Jeffery Rothwell himself. He was more than a target, he was precise, intelligent, and dominant. Falling in love with him would be catastrophic. Emotional entanglement was forbidden. She reminded herself of the rules: obedience, discretion, and detachment were paramount. Clara's eyes narrowed as she reviewed the file on Jeffery Rothwell. Born into wealth, educated in the best schools, and ruthless in business. She knew his schedule, his preferences, and his vulnerabilities. She knew how to get close to him, how to manipulate him, and how to control him. Back at Rothwell Tower, impatience had reached a breaking point. Directors whispered among themselves, glances sharp and accusing. "We have been waiting for hours," the chairman said finally, voice firm. "Your assurances have yielded nothing tangible. The board is losing confidence." A younger director added, "It seems increasingly likely you have misled us. We cannot continue to wait indefinitely." Jeffery's jaw tightened. He had expected doubt, but not outright disbelief. He looked toward the door, imagining her steps precision, confidence, adherence to protocol but there was nothing, only silence. The chairman exchanged a glance with the senior directors. "If there is no immediate proof, we have no choice. The control of Rothwell Enterprises will be transferred to Malcolm Rothwell, effective immediately." The words hit like ice. The boardroom murmured with consensus. Every tick of the clock seemed to deepen the weight of failure. Jeffery's mind raced through contingencies. If the operative failed to arrive, if the plan collapsed, everything would be lost, and his uncle would seize the empire with ruthless precision. Every movement in the room, glances to one another, shifting of chairs, the tightening of fists played out under his scrutiny. His authority left no room for doubt or distraction. Each executive felt the weight of their uncertainty like a physical pressure against their chest. Minutes dragged like hours. The younger members of the board whispered among themselves, eyes darting toward the door, hands fidgeting with pens and tablets. Every second of delay magnified the fear of failure, the sense that Jeffery’s patience was finite, and the consequences of misstep would be swift and absolute. Jeffery moved slightly, brushing a hand against the window sill, not in gesture but as a silent assertion of dominance. Directors flinched subtly, recognizing, even unconsciously, that their minutes of hesitation were under inspection. The tension was thick, almost suffocating. Even the chairman, usually impervious, ran a hand across his forehead, the weight of doubt pressing down. The room held its breath, every member acutely aware that the balance of power rested on one unseen factor, the operative who had yet to appear. Without proof, without confirmation, the empire could shift in the blink of an eye. And Jeffery, standing silently by the window, embodied the patience and menace of a predator awaiting its moment. Then, in the tense silence, the door opened.He picked up the chart and started writing with unsteady hands, noting every intervention and vital sign.Outside the hospital, the press had not left. They had been waiting since the car first arrived hours ago, and they were still there - cameras ready, microphones out, restless and hungry. The footage from the amusement park played on every screen and every phone: Clara on the stage in the peach dress making her pregnancy announcement, the crowd cheering, then the sudden shots and chaos. Jeffery dropping to one knee. Logan's car speeding away."Mrs. Clara Rothwell shot at anniversary celebration following pregnancy announcement. Condition still unknown. No statement from the Rothwell family."The city that had been celebrating that evening had turned into something else. People talked in groups. They watched the videos again and again. They felt helpless, the way people do when something big happens to someone they feel like they know.The Rothwell camp had said nothing yet.They
Clara had been moved from the operating room to a private bed on the same floor. The machines came with her beeping steadily, breathing for her, watching every small sign of life. The small team that had stood through all seven hours of surgery now stood quietly around the edges of the room, tired and silent.The doctor stood at the foot of the bed, his shoulders heavy. Jeffery stood near the door, hands inside his pockets, watching everything with that same calm face he had worn since they arrived."The injection, sir," the doctor said. His voice was low and careful. "We are in a position where both options carry serious consequences, and I need you to understand that before we decide anything."He looked directly at Jeffery."If we give it to her now, it will wipe her memory the way you want. But her body has just been through seven hours of surgery. Her brain is under more stress than it has ever been in her life. Giving her the agent right now means the chances of her surviving i
Logan hit the accelerator the moment the car doors closed. The city blurred past the windows. Traffic tried to slow them down but Logan went around it anyway, cutting through small gaps, pushing the engine harder than it was meant to go. The tires screeched at every turn.Jeffery sat in the back with Clara across his lap. His hand pressed hard against her wounds, trying to hold the blood in. The peach dress was soaked through. She was barely breathing. He checked his watch. Looked at the road ahead. Checked his watch again."Faster," he said."Sir I am already..""If you cannot drive faster then stop the car and let me drive."Logan drove faster.The hospital entrance was ready when they arrived. Two nurses stood outside with a stretcher. The doors were propped open. The path had already been cleared.The car stopped hard. Jeffery kicked the door open before Logan could turn off the engine. He lifted Clara himself, both arms under her, and placed her on the stretcher in one smooth mo
The peach dress lay waiting on the bed. Full length, long sleeves, high neck. The kind of dress that hid everything. She stared at it for a long moment, her stomach already knotted tight. She didn't touch it. Today was the day. The whole city would be watching her stand beside Jeffery like the perfect wife while Eclipse Breed hunted her head for half a billion dollars.She walked to the window instead.The door opened behind her.Jeffery stood there, already dressed in a sharp suit. His eyes went to the dress, then to her."Put it on," he said."It covers everything. I can't wear it," Clara replied, still facing the window."Put it on, Clara."She turned slowly. For a second she thought about fighting him again, but the memory of his hands on her last night still burned."They want your head. If they cannot get that, they might start with your legs. Even if you lose one today, it should stay hidden under expensive fabric."Clara held his stare, then picked up the dress. The fabric fe
The car sat two blocks from a quiet restaurant, engine off, windows fogged from the cool evening air. A man had been waiting in the driver's seat for twenty minutes when Adrian finally climbed in. No greetings, no small talk. Just the comfortable silence of two men who had buried enough secrets together to skip the unnecessary words.The man spoke first, keeping his voice low."Since you're back in the city, sir, Malcolm's been asking about Daniel. Keeps wanting to know when his reliable shadow is coming back to work."Adrian stared straight ahead through the windshield, watching the empty street. Daniel. That name had wrapped around him for years like a second skin he couldn't quite peel off. The quiet, dependable employee who showed up on time, filed his reports without complaint, and blended into the furniture at Rothwell Enterprises. Working under Malcolm as Daniel had given him keys to rooms no outsider could have entered-late-night conversations, hidden files, movements that pow
The knock hit the door like a fist that had already decided it was coming through regardless.Clara sat up in the dark.She had not been sleeping. She had been lying with her eyes open listening to a quiet house and a loud head, and the knock pulled her upright before she had finished deciding to move. She crossed to the door and opened it.Jeffery stood in the corridor.Smoke on his clothes. Eyes that had not softened from whatever the night had asked of them. A smirk sitting on his mouth that had nothing warm behind it.He walked past her into the room.She turned to face him."I just got back from your organization," he said. He closed the door. "Safe houses...All gone." He looked at her the way he looked at things he had already finished thinking about. "The best part is they did not need me to point the finger. They looked at everything and landed on you. Their own girl chose her husband over the mission. Sold them out."Clara's mouth opened."What?" The word came out before sh
It had been three days since Clara was chained to the bed.Three long days without any food. Three days of darkness, silence, and unbearable weakness slowly eating through her body little by little until even lifting her fingers started feeling difficult. The room no longer smelled fresh anymore.
The mansion remained silent long after midnight, yet the silence itself felt heavier . Smoke lingered thickly across Jeffery’s study while several empty alcohol bottles rested carelessly across the table beside him.The dim light above barely touched his face properly, but even within the shadows,
“Who sent you.”Clara’s body trembled violently as tears rolled endlessly down her face. Her chest rose unevenly while she struggled to breathe properly under the pressure of his grip around her throat. “Je…ffe…ry…” she choked weakly, her voice cracking badly. “I’m dying…”Jeffery’s eyes remained f
Clara woke up slowly, her head feeling unusually heavy as faint sunlight spread quietly across the unfamiliar ceiling above her. For several long seconds, everything around her felt disconnected, like her mind was still trapped halfway inside a dream she could not completely remember. Even the sil







