LOGIN
I don’t believe in fate.
I believe in timing, leverage, and control. That’s how I built everything. My name is William Torecampo. If you’ve heard it, it’s probably because of money. Or power. Or something that made people uncomfortable enough to remember me. I don’t mind either way. Fear and respect look the same from a distance. I was twenty-eight when I closed my first billion-dollar deal. People called it luck. Some said I was born into it. They didn’t see the nights I barely slept, the risks I took, the things I had to become just to stay ahead. No one ever sees that part. They just see the result. And the result is simple. I get what I want. Always. At least, that’s what I used to believe. — “Sir, the board is waiting.” I didn’t look up right away. My fingers tapped once against the glass table, slow and steady, the only sound in the room aside from the faint hum of the city outside. Thirty floors up, everything feels smaller. Problems. People. Consequences. That’s the advantage of being above everyone else. “Let them wait,” I said. There was a slight pause before my assistant answered. “They’ve been waiting for fifteen minutes.” “Then they can wait five more.” Silence again. She knew better than to argue. I finally stood, adjusting the cuff of my suit. Black. Clean. No unnecessary details. I don’t like distractions. When I walk into a room, I prefer people to focus on one thing only. Me. The boardroom doors opened the moment I approached. Conversations died instantly. Twelve men and two women sat around the long table, all of them older, all of them experienced, and every single one of them watching me like I was something they still hadn’t figured out. Good. “Mr. Torecampo,” one of them started, forcing a polite smile. “We were beginning to think—” “I know what you were thinking,” I cut in, taking my seat at the head of the table. “You always think too much. That’s why you need me.” A few exchanged looks. None of them spoke. I slid the file in front of me open, scanning the numbers I already memorized hours ago. “The acquisition goes through tonight,” I continued. “No delays. No revisions.” One of the older directors cleared his throat. “There are risks involved, William. The company we’re trying to absorb has… connections.” I glanced up. “Everything has connections.” “Not like this,” he insisted. “We’re talking about people who don’t operate within legal boundaries.” I leaned back slightly, studying him. “Are you afraid?” “It’s not about fear. It’s about being smart.” “Then be smart and listen to me.” My voice stayed calm, but it carried enough weight to shut him up. “We don’t step back because something is dangerous. We step forward and make it ours before anyone else can.” The room fell quiet again. That’s how it always goes. They hesitate. I decide. Meeting ended ten minutes later. Signed papers. Final approvals. Another piece added to my empire. Just another day. — By the time I got back to my penthouse, it was already past midnight. The city looked different at this hour. Less noise. More shadows. The kind of quiet that makes people honest with themselves, whether they like it or not. I poured myself a drink but didn’t touch it right away. Instead, I walked toward the floor-to-ceiling windows, watching the lights flicker in the distance. Most people would call this success. Power. Wealth. Freedom. But success has a cost. It always does. And I paid mine early. I don’t get attached. I don’t get distracted. I don’t let anything or anyone become important enough to ruin what I’ve built. That’s the rule. And I follow my rules. A knock on the door broke the silence. I didn’t move. “You’re late.” “It wasn’t easy to confirm,” my head of security said as he stepped inside. He looked tense, which already told me this wasn’t a normal update. That got my attention. “Talk.” He handed me a thin folder. “The company we’re acquiring? You were right. It’s not just business.” I flipped it open, eyes scanning quickly. Names. Transactions. Hidden connections. Then I saw it. A surname. One I recognized. “Say it,” I told him. “It’s tied to a mafia family,” he said carefully. “Not just any family. One of the most powerful ones operating quietly in the region.” I closed the folder. For a second, the room felt heavier. Not fear. Never that. Interest. “And?” I asked. “They don’t like people interfering with their assets.” A small smile formed on my lips. “Good,” I said. He frowned slightly. “Good?” “I was getting bored.” He didn’t laugh. Smart man. “There’s more,” he added. “There’s someone else involved. Not officially, but her name keeps coming up.” I didn’t say anything, just waited. “A daughter,” he continued. “She doesn’t stay in the shadows like the others. People who’ve seen her say she’s… different.” “Different how?” He hesitated. “Unpredictable. Dangerous.” I let out a quiet breath, finally taking a sip of my drink. “Everyone is dangerous,” I said. “They just need the right reason.” “She might be that reason.” I closed the folder again, this time slower. “Get me everything on her.” “Already working on it.” “Good.” He nodded once before leaving the room, the door shutting softly behind him. Silence returned. But it didn’t feel the same anymore. I looked back at the city, my reflection staring right back at me in the glass. Calm. Composed. Untouchable. That’s who I am. That’s who I’ve always been. But something had shifted. A new variable. A new risk. And for the first time in a long time, I felt it—that familiar pull of something I couldn’t fully control yet. Most people would walk away from that. Avoid it. Forget it. I don’t. I move closer. Because the more dangerous something is, the more valuable it becomes. And if there’s one thing about me that never changes— I don’t walk away from what I want. Even if it destroys me. Especially then.The words did not feel real at first.Never let William discover what he really is.The sentence stayed suspended in the air of the library like something unfinished, like a thought that should not have been written down but was anyway. William read it again in his mind even after Thea had stopped holding the page. Even after silence took over the room completely.Nobody moved.Nobody spoke.Even the mansion itself felt quieter, as if it had leaned in to listen.Thea was the first to break.“What does that mean?”Her voice came out smaller than before. Not scared exactly, but unstable in a way William had never heard from her.He didn’t answer immediately. His eyes stayed on the paper, on the handwriting that belonged to a dead man who somehow still managed to control the room.Elena took a step back.“I don’t like that line,” she whispered.Rafael exhaled sharply.“Yeah, no kidding.”But William didn’t react to them.Because his mind had already started working in a different directi
The mansion seemed quieter when they walked back inside.As if it had been waiting.The grand entrance remained dimly lit by moonlight slipping through the tall windows. Dust floated lazily through the air, and every step echoed against the marble floor. Outside, Orlov and his people stayed where they were. Nobody followed.Nobody tried to stop them.That somehow felt stranger than violence.William walked beside Thea without saying anything. Rafael and Elena followed a few steps behind, both unusually silent.Everyone was thinking about the same thing.Their fathers had known each other.They had worked together.Orlov had known both of them.And somehow all of it had remained hidden for years.Nothing made sense anymore.Thea suddenly stopped walking.William looked at her.She was staring toward the staircase."I remember this place."Her voice sounded distant.She wasn't talking to anyone in particular."My father used to sit there."She pointed toward the bottom steps."He'd read
Nobody spoke.The night seemed to freeze around the mansion, every sound disappearing beneath the weight of Orlov's words.You remind me of your father.William remained completely still.For a moment, he thought he had misheard him.Then he remembered the photograph.Vienna.The man standing beside Elena.Rafael's expression when he recognized him.Every strange coincidence that suddenly didn't feel like a coincidence anymore.His father had known these people.Somehow.Somewhere.And nobody had ever mentioned it.William slowly looked at Orlov."You knew my father."It wasn't a question.The older man nodded once."Yes."Silence."How?"Orlov studied him carefully.For several seconds, he didn't answer.Then—"Your father was an intelligent man."William's expression hardened."That's not an answer.""No."The older man's gaze remained steady."It isn't."The silence between them became heavier.William had spent years believing he understood his father.Not completely, perhaps. No
For several long seconds, nobody inside the library moved.The headlights outside continued pouring through the tall windows, cutting through the darkness and turning the room into a battlefield divided by light and shadow. Footsteps echoed from somewhere beyond the walls, calm and unhurried, as if the people arriving had no reason to rush.Because they didn't.They knew exactly where everyone inside the mansion was.And that realization alone made the situation infinitely more dangerous.William slowly looked toward the windows again.Three vehicles.Maybe four.Enough people to surround the property completely.Enough to ensure nobody simply walked away.Rafael cursed quietly."I really hate being right."No one answered.Because nobody was interested in his accuracy at the moment.Thea remained staring toward the windows, her face pale but composed. There was fear in her eyes, but it wasn't the kind that caused panic. It looked familiar. The kind of fear that returned after years a
The drive to Quezon City felt different from every other move they had made until now.There was no uncertainty about the destination. No guessing. No searching for fragments of information hidden between conversations. They knew exactly where they were going.The problem was that so did Orlov.William sat in the driver's seat, his hands steady on the steering wheel while the city lights slid past the windows. Beside him, Thea remained unusually quiet. In the back seat, Rafael and Elena exchanged only occasional words, both understanding that this night carried consequences none of them could fully predict.The silence inside the vehicle wasn't comfortable.It was anticipation.And anticipation often felt heavier than fear.William glanced briefly toward Thea.She was staring outside.Lost somewhere inside her thoughts."You okay?"The question broke the silence.She didn't answer immediately.For several seconds, she simply watched the passing lights.Then—"No."The honesty surprise
The room remained completely silent after Elena's last words.Somewhere in Quezon City sat a file containing everything Thea's father had discovered before he disappeared.Everything.The word itself carried enormous weight.Because people did not vanish over ordinary information. They disappeared because they knew something dangerous enough to threaten structures built carefully over decades.And if Thea's father had hidden a file instead of destroying it, then he must have believed someone would eventually find it.Someone he trusted.Or someone capable of understanding its importance.William slowly looked at Elena."Why didn't you say this sooner?"She looked exhausted.Because she probably was."I was afraid.""You're still afraid."A weak smile appeared on her lips."Yes."That honesty somehow made her more believable.Fear had been present in every word she spoke since entering the office. Not dramatic fear. Not the kind people exaggerated.This looked different.This looked pe
The moment William left that building, he already knew the next move couldn’t look like one. That was the first rule now. Nothing direct. Nothing obvious. Not because he was afraid of being seen, but because he understood, finally, that being seen too clearly meant being understood, and being under
The city looked calm from above, the kind of calm people trusted too easily, but William knew better than to believe in stillness. Stillness only meant something was waiting. It always did. And now, standing in the quiet of his office long after most of his staff had gone home, he could feel it mor
William Torecampo did not believe in coincidences, not in business and especially not in war, and whatever this had become was no longer just a conflict of interests or a matter of territory. It had grown teeth. It had learned how to move without being seen, how to strike without leaving a trace,
I don’t chase people.If I need something, it comes to me.That’s how it’s always been.But as I stood in my office the morning after that meeting, staring at the city like it owed me answers, I already knew—this wasn’t going to follow my usual rules.“Sir, we’ve started digging deeper.”I didn’t t







