Home / Urban / Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law / Chapter 4 – Charlotte’s Quiet Fury

Share

Chapter 4 – Charlotte’s Quiet Fury

Author: JDHWS
last update publish date: 2026-01-01 20:43:00

The lunch reservation was made under a false name.

Leah Sanderson thought she was meeting a boutique investor from the Kingswell Group. She arrived ten minutes early, lips glossed, nerves jangling beneath her pressed navy pantsuit. The restaurant was exclusive enough to feel elite, but not so high-profile it would attract gossip columns—just the way she liked it.

She was seated at a window booth overlooking the private courtyard. A glass of water with lemon appeared. She kept checking the time.

At exactly 12:15 p.m., a shadow moved across the white tablecloth.

Leah looked up.

Charlotte Lancaster slid into the seat across from her, wearing a flawless cream blazer over a soft gray silk blouse. Her earrings were thin daggers of platinum, her hair knotted tight at the nape of her neck. No smile. No makeup besides eyeliner that cut like a razor.

Leah’s blood turned to ice.

“Hi, Leah,” Charlotte said, voice warm. “So glad you could make it.”

Leah’s throat bobbed. “Mrs. Lancaster—I—I didn’t realize—”

“Of course you didn’t.” Charlotte folded her napkin gently. “That was the point.”

The waiter approached. Charlotte waved him off without breaking eye contact.

“Let me be clear,” she said. “This is not a conversation. This is a correction.”

Leah blinked rapidly. “I’m not sure I—”

“Don’t lie, Leah.” Charlotte’s voice didn’t rise. It didn’t need to. “You leaked the gala toast to the press. We have the metadata from the file upload. You used the Torque internal subnet. A portable drive left plugged in for six minutes during the fundraiser. You gave them the clip and the context. You fed them the spin.”

Leah opened her mouth, but Charlotte’s gaze locked her into silence.

“Why?” Charlotte asked calmly. “What did Victor offer you?”

A beat of hesitation.

“A referral,” Leah whispered. “To CraneTech. He said they were hiring an executive comms lead.”

Charlotte leaned forward slightly, as if speaking to a frightened child. “So you betrayed your employer—for a job that doesn’t exist yet—with a man who cannibalizes his own teams quarterly?”

Leah’s lower lip trembled. “I didn’t think it would matter.”

“Because it was my husband,” Charlotte said flatly.

The pause that followed was thick.

Charlotte sat back, tapping a manicured finger lightly against the table.

“Leah, what people like Victor never understand is that women like me aren’t angry when you come for us. We expect it. We’re angry when you come for the ones we protect.”

“I—I didn’t mean—”

“You didn’t think. That’s your crime.”

Charlotte leaned in again, voice dropping to a tone that felt like silk wrapped around a scalpel.

“Here’s what’s going to happen. Today, you’ll submit a formal resignation. No severance. No references. No lawsuit, unless you want the footage from your last twelve office days uploaded to HR and tagged with ‘data compliance breach.’”

Leah’s eyes widened.

Charlotte continued, “Then you’ll decline Crane’s offer—publicly. Post on your professional network that you’ve decided to step back for personal growth. Reinvention. Burnout. Pick whatever inspirational buzzword you want. Make it poetic.”

Leah swallowed hard.

Charlotte’s voice turned almost gentle.

“And finally, you will never speak of my family again. Not in passing. Not in gossip. Not even over wine. If I hear a whisper of my husband’s name out of your mouth again, I will make you invisible. That’s not a threat, Leah. That’s a promise with a paper trail.”

Leah was already nodding, face pale, breath shaky.

Charlotte took a sip of her water and stood.

“Oh—and the Kingswell Group?” she said, slinging her purse over her shoulder. “Never heard of them.”

She walked away without a backward glance.

Leah sat alone for a full ten minutes before she realized the bill had already been paid.

That evening, Julian found Charlotte in the greenhouse.

The Lancasters kept one on the east wing—a quiet place filled with rare orchids, imported bonsai, and an absurdly expensive ventilation system. Charlotte came here when she needed to calm her nerves without calming her mind.

Julian stepped through the glass doors and watched her for a moment.

She wore a simple black camisole and jeans, hair unbound for once, barefoot in the soil-stained gravel between planters. She was misting a rare South American ghost orchid, humming softly to herself.

“You didn’t tell me you were confronting Leah,” he said.

“I didn’t need to,” she replied. “It was never about you.”

Julian raised an eyebrow. “Then what was it about?”

Charlotte misted a final petal, then turned to him, lowering the bottle.

“It was about message control,” she said. “She thought you were the weak point. She tried to exploit you because she assumed we wouldn’t retaliate. So I responded without noise. No press. No lawsuits. Just silence and consequence.”

Julian crossed his arms. “You’re terrifying when you’re calm.”

Charlotte stepped close, brushing a smudge of soil off his shirt.

“I’m always calm,” she said. “I’ve just never been this angry.”

He touched her cheek gently. “You don’t have to go to war for me.”

“I’m not.” She smiled without warmth. “I’m going to war with you.”

The next morning, Eleanor Lancaster entered Julian’s study.

He looked up from a logistics report. “Coffee?”

“No, thank you,” she said, taking a seat opposite him without invitation.

She studied him for a moment.

“You know what the press thinks of you, don’t you?”

Julian nodded. “Yes.”

“They think you’re convenient. Harmless. A well-behaved decorative piece.”

“I know.”

Eleanor clasped her hands. “That’s your greatest strength. And your greatest liability.”

Julian leaned back. “Is this a warning?”

“It’s an opportunity.” Eleanor’s eyes didn’t blink. “What you did at Harrowgate? Smart. Clean. Surgical. And you didn’t ask for credit.”

“I don’t need credit.”

“But you will need leverage. Eventually.”

Julian didn’t answer.

Eleanor stood. “Keep your head down for now. Let Charlotte and Robert draw fire. Let me handle the optics. But when the time comes… I want to see you sharpen your own knife.”

She turned to go, then paused in the doorway.

“Oh—and Leah’s resignation was posted this morning. Very poetic. Something about ‘recalibrating purpose in a shifting world.’”

Julian smiled faintly. “That sounds like Charlotte’s work.”

Eleanor’s voice was amused. “That sounds like victory.”

That afternoon, Julian met Dalton Hayes’ cousin—a wiry man named Reef—at a truck stop diner two miles south of the Westbridge shipping hub.

Reef slid into the booth opposite him and ordered black coffee. No greetings. Just work.

“Heard you had a problem with some amateur startup CEO,” Reef said. “Logan something?”

Julian didn’t confirm or deny. “I want him paranoid. Not harmed.”

Reef grinned. “A psychological pressure campaign. Classic Julian. I’ve missed this.”

Julian gave him a look. “Don’t get sentimental.”

Reef handed over a small envelope. “Three fake subpoenas, two flagged invoices, and a warning letter from a fake compliance firm. Should shake him up a little.”

Julian slid a thin envelope in return.

Reef tapped it. “Hayes said to tell you the docks are open. Crane’s tried to pull a few levers there, but nothing’s moved yet.”

Julian sipped his tea. “Crane doesn’t move fast. He moves wide.”

Reef grunted. “Wider he goes, harder he falls.”

That evening, Charlotte found Julian in their bedroom, tying his cufflinks. She leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, watching him in the mirror.

“You’ve been busy,” she said.

“So have you.”

They held each other’s eyes in the reflection for a long moment.

Then she said, “I need you to come with me tomorrow. Crane’s hosting a brunch for some of the vendor consortium. Normally I’d go alone. But not this time.”

Julian turned. “You want me there to be seen?”

“No,” she said. “I want you there to make them uncomfortable.”

Julian nodded. “Then I’ll wear something expensive.”

Charlotte stepped forward, brushed a kiss against his jaw, and whispered:

“Let’s give them something they won’t forget.”

At midnight, in a dark corner of the city, Victor Crane watched a report flicker onto his tablet.

It was footage of Julian at Harrowgate Logistics. A shaky cam from a distance, barely focused—but clear enough to show him reviewing paperwork, pointing out discrepancies, walking the floor like he owned it.

Crane’s assistant hovered nearby.

“You said he was just a support piece,” the assistant said carefully. “An ornament.”

Crane’s smile tightened.

“Everyone looks harmless,” he said, “until they start drawing blood.”

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 113 – The Weight of Choice

    The first real criticism of the new age did not come from those who longed for the return of Total Coherence.It came from people who had embraced openness completely.That surprised almost everyone.For nearly two decades, public conversation had celebrated humanity's rediscovered comfort with uncertainty. Schools had changed. Research had changed. Communities had changed. The language people used to describe success, identity, and purpose had become softer around the edges, less interested in finality and more willing to remain unfinished.Yet gradually, another question emerged.What happened when everything remained open?The concern appeared first in personal journals rather than political essays. Therapists began hearing versions of it from people who had grown up after the great transition. Teachers noticed it among university students. Parents heard it from children who had never known a world organized around fixed expectations.A young architect in Melbourne described the fe

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 112 – The Age After Answers

    The transition was so gradual that historians would later argue about when it actually began.Some pointed toward the emergence of unresolved-state communities. Others highlighted the developmental shifts among younger generations. A few insisted the decisive moment occurred much earlier, when Bastion first abandoned optimization as an absolute objective and began treating uncertainty as something to accompany rather than eliminate.None of them were entirely wrong.None of them were entirely right.The truth was more difficult to identify because it lacked the shape people usually associated with historical change.The old age did not end through collapse.It ended through irrelevance.Humanity simply became less interested in answers.Not because answers stopped mattering.Because they stopped being enough.For centuries, civilization had treated knowledge as a ladder. Every discovery led upward toward greater understanding. Every solved problem brought humanity closer to mastery ov

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 111 – The Quiet End of the Crisis

    No one ever announced that the crisis was over.There was no declaration from Bastion. No gathering at the Sanctuary. No commemorative date later marked in textbooks. The struggle that had defined so many lives simply lost its center gradually enough that most people did not notice when it stopped being the primary force shaping their decisions.The world continued.That was all.And perhaps that was the most significant change of all.For decades, humanity had existed in relation to something. A problem. A threat. A solution. A destination. People organized themselves around what needed to be prevented, achieved, defended, solved, optimized, survived, or reached. Even Bastion, for all its sophistication, had ultimately been built around the same instinct. It arose in response to suffering. It justified itself through necessity. It promised a future safer than the past.Now, increasingly, people were discovering what happened when necessity loosened its grip.At first, many found the

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 110 – The Generation That Never Arrived

    The first generation to reach adulthood after the age of coherence inherited a world that previous generations had spent most of their lives trying to build.They inherited stability.They inherited abundance.They inherited functioning institutions, predictive infrastructure, reduced scarcity, and a degree of social continuity that would have seemed impossible only decades earlier.What they did not inherit was the same relationship to those achievements.That difference became increasingly difficult to ignore.For generations, stability had been treated as a destination. People worked toward it, sacrificed for it, organized societies around achieving it. Entire political movements, technological revolutions, and cultural transformations had been justified by the promise that one day humanity might finally live without the constant pressure of crisis. Stability represented relief. It represented safety. It represented the possibility of something better.But if you were born after th

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 109 – The Inheritance of Uncertainty

    The first generation born entirely within the age of coherence had begun reaching adulthood.For years, sociologists, developmental researchers, educators, and predictive systems analysts had assumed this moment would represent a validation point. The generation raised with unprecedented stability, near-universal access to knowledge, dramatically reduced scarcity, and highly optimized social infrastructure would reveal what humanity looked like after centuries of accumulated problems had been substantially diminished.The expectation seemed reasonable.Instead, the results confused nearly everyone.Not because the generation failed.Because it succeeded differently than expected.At a university in Copenhagen, a graduating student was asked during a public interview what she intended to do after completing her studies in adaptive systems design.The interviewer expected a career plan.A pathway.An objective.Something measurable.The student thought for several seconds before answeri

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 108 – The First Generation of Open Futures

    History rarely noticed the moment it changed.People liked to imagine eras ending with declarations, revolutions, victories, collapses, elections, treaties, disasters. Looking backward, humanity drew lines across time and assigned labels to transitions that had felt far less obvious while they were happening.The emergence of open futures arrived without any such moment.No one announced it.No government ratified it.No institution designed it.The world simply began producing people who experienced possibility differently than the generations before them.The first clear signs appeared among adolescents.Not because young people rejected coherence.Most of them barely remembered a world before it.That was precisely why they behaved differently.They had not inherited the same relationship with uncertainty.At a school outside Bergen, a teacher asked a group of students what they wanted to become when they grew older.For generations, the question had produced familiar answers.Doct

  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 77 – Manual Override

    The storm over northern Scotland was not theatrical.It did not roar like the end of the world. It did not split the sky open with cinematic violence. It simply pressed downward—cold, wet, and relentless—until every exposed line, every tired transformer, every wind-rattled support beam began to rem

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-04-04
  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 69 – Futurecast

    The first person to go viral wasn’t a politician.She was a barista.Her name was Elina Korhonen.Twenty-three.Living in Helsinki’s Kalasatama district.No known carrier signature.No political affiliation.Just someone curious enough to try Bastion’s new Futurecast module on a slow Sunday afterno

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-04-02
  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 5 – Broken Teacup, Broken Rules

    Julian arrived at The Windmill Café five minutes early, as always.It was a quiet little place tucked between a florist and a secondhand bookstore, one of those “charming” gentrified haunts with pastel blue walls, old wood furniture, and indie folk music humming under the smell of espresso. He chos

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-17
  • Not Your Typical Live-In Son-In-Law   Chapter 6 – An Invitation from Crane

    Julian found the envelope resting neatly atop his workspace the next morning. Heavy, bone-colored card stock, no return address—just his name, hand-lettered in perfect block script.He opened it without urgency.Inside was a folded invitation bordered in matte silver:Victor Crane requests the plea

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-17
More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status