LOGINThe system logs were gone.
Not partially corrupted. Not delayed. Not “under review.”
Gone.
Lucas stared at the blank audit screen in silence, his jaw tightening slowly as the reality settled in.
Someone had not only accessed Alpha Zee systems, they had cleaned their trail like they knew exactly how he would investigate.
That was not amateur sabotage.
That was inside knowledge.
“Bring me the backup servers,” Lucas said coldly.
The IT manager hesitated. “Sir, those logs were purged from backup too.”
Lucas turned sharply.
“Impossible.”
The man swallowed. “We checked twice.”
A long, suffocating silence followed.
Then Lucas exhaled slowly through his nose.
“This wasn’t just access,” he said. “This was preparation.”
Someone had planned this long before Vivian ever saw that email.
***
Vivian sat on her bed, staring at her phone like it might attack her.
No new messages.
No clarification.
Just the silence after the threat.
Her mind replayed everything again and again:
The fake termination email. Jane’s hesitation. The anonymous warning. The cold voice on the phone.
“You don’t belong in that world.”
She pressed her palms against her stomach.
“I do belong somewhere,” she whispered. “Just not in chaos.”
Her phone suddenly lit up.
A message from HR:
“Please ignore any previous system notification regarding your employment status. You remain active.”
Vivian frowned.
So it really was fake.
But instead of relief, she felt worse.
Because now it wasn’t just confusion. It was targeted.
Someone had wanted her to believe she was being pushed out.
And they succeeded.
***
Back at the company, Jane moved carefully through restricted corridors, her heels clicking softly against polished floors.
She wasn’t supposed to be here.
But Lucas had sent her one instruction:
“Check physical access logs. Not digital. Physical.”
Jane reached the server room.
The security guard nodded as she passed.
Too easily. That alone made her uneasy.
Inside, she found the technician on duty reviewing CCTV backups.
“I need footage from yesterday morning,” she said.
The technician hesitated. “Which section?”
“HR system terminal area.”
A few clicks.
The screen loaded.
Jane leaned in.
At first, nothing unusual- employees passing, routine movement.
Then...
A figure. Female. Pausing near the restricted terminal.
Jane’s breath slowed.
Sandra.
Team leader in Vivian’s department.
Sandra looked around calmly before pulling out a key card.
She swiped.
The system unlocked.
Jane’s stomach tightened.
“That’s not supposed to happen,” she whispered.
The technician frowned. “That’s executive override access.”
Jane stepped back slowly.
Everything clicked into place. Vivian hadn’t been paranoid. She had been targeted.
***
Lucas stood in his office as Jane played the footage. He didn’t blink once.
Sandra appeared on screen again- this time entering HR backend access and interacting with termination protocols.
No hesitation. No panic.
Calculated. Professional. Intentional.
Lucas’s expression darkened.
“Pause it,” he said quietly.
Jane obeyed.
The image froze on Sandra’s face.
Lucas stared at it for a long moment.
Then he spoke.
“She didn’t act alone.”
Jane turned sharply. “Sir?”
Lucas leaned back slightly, eyes narrowing.
“No one bypasses that level of clearance without help,” he said. “Or approval.”
A pause.
Then he added:
“Someone is protecting her.”
The room went quiet.
Jane swallowed. “What do we do?”
Lucas’s voice dropped.
“We find out who.”
***
That evening, Vivian tried returning to normal life.
But normal no longer existed.
Every notification made her flinch.
Every unknown number felt like a threat.
Even the hallway outside her apartment felt different, too quiet, too aware.
She placed a protective hand over her stomach.
“I don’t even know who I’m fighting,” she whispered.
Her phone rang again.
She froze.
Unknown number.
She answered slowly.
Silence.
Then...
Breathing.
Heavy.
Intentional.
Vivian’s voice trembled. “Who is this?”
A pause.
Then a woman’s voice, calm and cold:
“You should have accepted the warning.”
The call ended.
Vivian stood there shaking, phone slipping slightly in her hand.
This wasn’t workplace politics anymore. This was personal.
***
Lucas didn’t wait for morning.
He entered Sandra’s office that same night.
No knock.
No warning.
Sandra looked up, startled.
“Sir...”
“Close the door,” Lucas said flatly.
Her smile flickered. “Is something wrong?”
Lucas walked in slowly, placing the printed CCTV still on her desk.
Sandra glanced at it.
Then looked up again.
Unbothered.
“Do you know what this is?” he asked.
Sandra tilted her head slightly. “CCTV footage.”
“That’s you accessing HR termination systems without authorization.”
A pause.
Then Sandra smiled faintly.
“I was auditing a system glitch.”
Lucas’s eyes narrowed dangerously.
“Audit logs don’t require executive override access.”
Sandra shrugged lightly. “It was urgent.”
Lucas stepped closer.
“Vivian’s termination email was sent under my credentials,” he said slowly. “Explain that.”
For the first time, Sandra’s expression shifted- barely.
Then she leaned back.
“Maybe someone is trying to make you look careless.”
Lucas stared at her.
Cold.
Unblinking.
“You’re lying,” he said.
Sandra’s smile returned.
“Prove it.”
Silence.
Heavy.
Suffocating.
Then Lucas turned and walked out.
No argument.
No escalation.
Just decision.
He already knew what she was.
He just needed evidence that would survive corporate war.
***
That night, Vivian received a knock at her door.
She froze.
Three knocks.
Slow.
Controlled.
She approached cautiously.
“Who is it?”
A familiar voice answered from outside.
“Open the door, Vivian.”
Her breath stopped.
Lucas.
She hesitated, then unlocked it.
The door opened.
Lucas stood there, expression unreadable.
For a moment, neither spoke.
Then he said quietly:
“You’re not safe.”
Vivian’s grip tightened on the door handle.
“What are you talking about?”
Lucas stepped slightly closer.
“Someone inside my company is targeting you,” he said. “And they’re not done.”
Vivian swallowed hard.
“Why me?”
Lucas looked at her for a long moment.
Then answered:
“Because they think hurting you is the only way to get to me.”
Silence.
Then Vivian whispered:
“Who is it?”
Lucas’s eyes darkened.
One word: “Sandra.”
Before Vivian could respond, her apartment hallway lights flickered off.
And from somewhere in the dark corridor outside her door, a slow, deliberate set of footsteps began approaching.
The doorknob turned slowly.Not hurried. Not forced.Controlled.Like whoever stood outside already knew the door would open for them eventually.Vivian stepped back instinctively, her heart hammering against her ribs.“Lucas?” she called out, voice shaky.No answer..Another slow turn of the knob.Then, a firm stop.Silence.The kind of silence that felt intentional, like someone was waiting for permission without asking for it.Vivian grabbed a small glass vase from her table, holding it tightly. Her hands were shaking now.“Who’s there?” she demanded louder.A pause.Then a voice came through the door.Male. Calm. Familiar.“Vivian. It’s me.”Lucas.Her grip loosened slightly. But she didn’t move.“How did you...” she started.“I never left the building,” he said.Then the lock clicked again. The door opened.Lucas stepped inside. His eyes immediately scanned her face.“You’re pale,” he said.Vivian stared at him, still clutching the vase. “Someone was just trying to get in here.”
The footsteps stopped right outside Vivian’s door.Not rushing. Not hesitant.Deliberate. Measured.Vivian stood frozen, one hand still gripping the door handle, the other instinctively covering her stomach.Lucas shifted slightly in front of her, blocking her line of sight to the corridor.“Don’t open it,” he said quietly.A pause.Then the footsteps stopped entirely.Silence followed.Too clean.Too intentional.Then, a faint click echoed through the hallway.Like a door shutting somewhere far away.Lucas’s jaw tightened.“They’re testing you,” he muttered.Vivian swallowed hard. “Testing me for what?”Lucas didn’t answer immediately. His eyes stayed fixed on the peephole, as if he expected it to blink back.Finally, he said, “To see how easy you are to reach.”***Against Vivian’s protest, Lucas refused to leave.“I’m not asking,” he said flatly when she tried.“This is my house,” Vivian snapped weakly. “You don’t just...”“I do when you’re in danger,” he cut in.That silenced her.
The system logs were gone.Not partially corrupted. Not delayed. Not “under review.”Gone.Lucas stared at the blank audit screen in silence, his jaw tightening slowly as the reality settled in.Someone had not only accessed Alpha Zee systems, they had cleaned their trail like they knew exactly how he would investigate.That was not amateur sabotage.That was inside knowledge.“Bring me the backup servers,” Lucas said coldly.The IT manager hesitated. “Sir, those logs were purged from backup too.”Lucas turned sharply.“Impossible.”The man swallowed. “We checked twice.”A long, suffocating silence followed.Then Lucas exhaled slowly through his nose.“This wasn’t just access,” he said. “This was preparation.”Someone had planned this long before Vivian ever saw that email.***Vivian sat on her bed, staring at her phone like it might attack her.No new messages.No clarification.Just the silence after the threat.Her mind replayed everything again and again:The fake termination ema
Vivian stared at her laptop screen until the words blurred into one unreadable smear.“TERMINATION CONFIRMATION EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY.”Her breath caught.“No… no, no, this has to be a mistake.”Her fingers trembled as she refreshed the page again, hoping it would magically disappear. It didn’t. The company email system had already logged her out of internal access. Her ID badge access had been revoked too.Just like that, she was erased. From Alpha Zee.She sat frozen for a full minute, unable to move. The office around her continued like nothing had happened- phones ringing, keyboards clicking, colleagues laughing softly at distant jokes.But her world had tilted.She stood abruptly, nearly knocking over her chair.“Maybe it’s a system error,” she whispered to herself. “Maybe HR is updating records…”But even as she said it, she knew.This wasn’t a system error.This was intentional.She walked through the hallway with stiff steps, her heart pounding louder with each step. Every cow
Vivian barely remembered how she got into the taxi. Her legs had moved on their own, like her body had detached itself from her thoughts and decided survival was the only priority left.Now she sat in the backseat, staring through the window as the mansion disappeared behind layers of trees and iron gates.Her phone was still in her hand. The message remained open."You can’t run from this. Not anymore."Her thumb hovered over the screen.Delete?Reply?Report?None of it felt useful.Instead, she locked the phone and pressed it against her chest like it could steady her breathing.The taxi driver glanced at her through the rearview mirror.“You okay, madam?”Vivian forced a nod. “Yes, just take me home.”But even as she said it, something inside her tightened.Home.Did she even have one anymore?***At Alpha Zee Headquarters, Lucas Kingsley stood in front of his office window, staring down at the city below.Everything looked orderly from up here.Clean. Predictable.Unlike the chao
Vivian stood rooted in place, her heartbeat loud in her ears, like it was trying to drown out everything else in the room.The mansion suddenly felt smaller than it had minutes ago.Too many eyes. Too much silence. Too much power gathered in one place, Lucas at the center of it, seated like he owned not just the house, but the air itself.Evelyn’s warm hand still lingered lightly on Vivian’s wrist, as if trying to steady her, but Vivian wasn’t shaking anymore.She had made her decision.“I appreciate everything,” Vivian said carefully, her voice controlled but firm. “But I can’t accept any contract. Not like this.”Evelyn’s brows lifted slightly. “My dear...”“No, ma’am,” Vivian interrupted gently, but firmly. “I understand your concern. I really do. Especially for the baby. But I will not sell my child’s existence into an agreement I don’t fully believe in.”Lucas let out a quiet breath through his nose, almost amused.He leaned back slightly in his chair, watching her like she was a







