LOGINOLIVIA’S POVShe placed the folder on the table between us.Not dramatically. Not with the specific ceremony of someone who understood the weight of what they were doing. Just placed it there the way you set something down when you had been carrying it for a long time and had finally arrived at the place where it belonged.It was a standard manila folder. Worn slightly at the corners. The kind that had been handled repeatedly. Taken out and looked at and put back and taken out again.I looked at it.Then at her.“Before I tell you what is in it,” she said carefully, “I need you to understand how I found it.”I nodded.She wrapped her hands around her tea again.“Leonard Cross has an office at the family home,” she said. “Not the corporate offices. The private one at the house in Greenwich that he has used for thirty years for correspondence he does not want on company records.” She paused. “Six months ago the house was being renovated. I was overseeing the interior work because Leon
OLIVIA’S POVElena had chosen the café.I had written back through the number she had included at the bottom of the note, a personal number she had specified was not connected to anything Adrian paid for, and she had replied within the hour with an address and a time.Saturday. Eleven AM. A place called Maison Petit on the west side.Not a well known location. The kind of place that existed quietly in its neighborhood without advertising itself. Small. Good light. The kind of café that attracted regulars rather than foot traffic, which meant the staff knew their customers and strangers were noticeable enough that anyone following Elena in would be visible.She had chosen well.I arrived eight minutes early.Ordered a coffee. Chose a table near the window but not directly against the glass. Watched the door.She came in at exactly eleven.She looked different from the wedding photographs.I had been prepared for the gala version of Elena Cross. The silver dress and the precise handshak
OLIVIA’S POVHe was quiet for a moment after I asked.Not the hesitation of someone who did not have an answer. Jaden always had answers. This was the specific pause of someone deciding something about how to give an answer.Then he said:“The decision is yours.”I stared at him.Four words.I sat across from him in the study and turned those four words over and felt something shift in the room that had nothing to do with Elena or the note or any of the strategy that surrounded all of it.“Jaden,” I said carefully. “You always have an opinion.”“I have several,” he said. “I also know that Elena Cross reached out to you specifically. Not to me. Not to my legal team. Not to Sarah Jules.” He paused. “To you. Whatever she is offering or asking, the trust that makes it possible exists between you and her. Not between her and anyone else in this.” He held my gaze. “That means the decision about what to do with it belongs to you.”I sat with that.The study held its quiet around us.I though
OLIVIA’S POVOn a Thursday afternoon, the notes arrived. Not through any digital channel. Not through the social media message that Elena had sent the first time, the one that had arrived on my phone with its careful phrasing and its woman to woman appeal that I had screenshot and shown to Jaden and eventually acted on at a café in the west side of the city.This was different.A handwritten envelope. My name on the front in handwriting that was neat and deliberate, the handwriting of someone who had been taught to write properly and had maintained the habit. Delivered to the house address by what Clara told me was a private courier service, not a standard delivery company, the kind that charged considerably more because what they were actually selling was discretion.I picked it up from the hall table where Clara had left it.Looked at my name on the front.Turned it over.No return address.I opened it in the sitting room.The note was three paragraphs.Written on heavy paper. The
OLIVIA’S POVThe house was different that evening.Not in any way I could have pointed to concretely. The furniture was in its usual configuration. Clara had made dinner the way she always made dinner. The staff moved through their routines with the same quiet efficiency.But something in the atmosphere had shifted.The specific quality of a house that contained a significant day and was still settling around it.I had spent the afternoon in the sitting room. Not reading. Not watching anything. Just being in the house while the day moved through its stages outside the window. The press conference coverage cycling through the news. The Cross Holdings stock numbers appearing in updates on my phone that I had not set up to receive but were arriving through news alerts anyway because the story had become large enough to trigger general financial news notifications.I had not gone back to the study after I knocked and Jaden said yes and I nodded and left.That moment had felt complete in i
JADEN’S POVI had watched a lot of press conferences in my career.They were a specific kind of theater. Everyone in the room understood the rules. The person at the podium had prepared for a defined set of questions and was managing the room toward those questions. The journalists had their own agenda and were managing toward that. The cameras were capturing both agendas simultaneously and the audience at home was watching the gap between them.I had watched enough of them to know that the interesting moment was never in the prepared statement.It was always in the gap.The four second pause. The micro shift in posture. The specific quality of silence that fell when a question landed somewhere the preparation had not reached.I stood at the window of my study with Ethan beside me and the television mounted on the far wall playing the Cross family press conference live and I watched for the gap.Ethan had positioned himself slightly to my left. Not beside me exactly. The specific dist
JADEN’S POVThe detail Olivia gave me opened something.Not immediately. It took Ethan forty minutes of pulling threads from the regulatory database before the shape of it became clear. I watched him work from across the desk with the particular focus of someone who understood that what he was look
OLIVIA’S POVI picked up the cup and drank the rest of the tea. I slowly set it back on the saucer with the particular deliberateness of someone deciding what they were going to do next by doing the most ordinary thing available first.I did not cry, I don't think I should,I noticed that. Note it
OLIVIA’S POVThe next day was Thursday, I was in the library reading this book that got my attention for days. It was very interesting that all my mind was in it and I couldn’t take my mind off it. Then I decided to take a break from reading, because I learnt that taking breaks relaxes your mind.
OLIVIA’S POVIt happened on a Wednesday afternoon.I was in my room folding laundry.It was one of the ordinary things I still insisted on doing myself. The staff offered every time with polite persistence and every time I thanked them and said I was fine, and I could handle folding my laundry. Th







