LOGINPOV: Lena Moretti
I should have kept running. Every survival instinct I had was screaming at me to get out of the building, find a phone, call someone. But call who? My father was the one who put me here. My stepsister would sell the information to the highest bidder. And the police don't get involved in Crane family business. Nobody does. So when the man in the doorway stepped aside and said, "You look like you could use a room with a lock on your side of the door," I walked in. The room was a small study. Books on the shelves, a leather couch, a desk with papers scattered across it. He closed the door behind me and I flinched at the sound. He noticed. He moved to the other side of the room, putting the desk between us, and set his glass down. "Sit if you want. Or don't. But you're bleeding." I touched the back of my head. My fingers came away with a smear of red. I hadn't felt it until now. He pulled open a desk drawer, took out a cloth napkin, and slid it across the surface toward me. He didn't bring it to me. He let me come to it. I picked it up and pressed it against the back of my skull. "I'm Ezra," he said. Like I didn't know. Everyone knew who Ezra Crane was. The second son. Disowned at twenty-one after some kind of violent falling out with his father. He'd built his own empire since then. Blackthorn Holdings. The name showed up in financial papers like a ghost. Nobody talked about him at Crane family events. He was the black sheep, the cautionary tale, the brother Julian mentioned only in whispers and warnings. The one even Victor seemed careful around. "I know who you are," I said. "Good. Then you know I'm not the welcoming committee." He leaned against the wall and watched me with those dark, calculating eyes. "What did Julian do?" I didn't answer right away. My torn dress answered for me, but I needed a second to decide how much to give this man. He was a Crane. Different breed, maybe, but the same blood. "He outlined his expectations for the marriage," I said. "I didn't meet them." Something shifted in his face. Not sympathy. Something sharper. "Did he force himself on you?" "He tried. I got out before it went further." He nodded once. Slow. His jaw tightened and then released. He picked up his glass, took a sip, set it down again. Then he asked me the question that changed everything. "Do you want out?" Three words. Simple. No hesitation in his voice. No preamble. Just a straight line drawn between where I was and where I could be. "Yes," I said. "But wanting out and getting out are different things." "Not necessarily." He pulled open another drawer and took out a folder. Set it on the desk between us. "I've been planning something for a long time. My father. Julian. The entire Crane operation. I'm going to dismantle it from the inside. Piece by piece. But I need something I didn't have until about five minutes ago." "What's that?" "A wife." I stared at him. He stared back. Neither of us blinked. "Marry me instead," he said. "Tomorrow. At Julian's wedding. In front of everyone he's ever wanted to impress. You walk down that aisle and you choose me. Publicly. Permanently." My mouth was dry. "And what exactly would I be signing up for?" "You play the devoted wife. You help me access financial information I can't get on my own. Your accounting skills are useful to me. Don't look surprised, I do my research. In return, I protect you from Julian. The Moretti debt disappears. And when it's done, when the Crane empire is ash, you walk away free. Clean. No strings." "Except the string where I'm married to you." "A legal formality. We divorce when the job is finished." I pressed the napkin harder against my head. The bleeding was slowing. My thoughts weren't. I looked at the folder on the desk. Inside, I could see the edge of a document. A marriage certificate. Already prepared. My name was on it. He'd been planning this before tonight. Before the rehearsal dinner. Maybe before I ever set foot in this house. "How long have you had that ready?" "Long enough." "You were going to approach me anyway. Even if Julian hadn't done what he did tonight." "Yes." At least he was honest about it. Or honest enough. With men like this, you never got the full truth. You got the version that served their purposes. But his version was still better than Julian's. A con artist who tells you the game is rigged is still more useful than one who pretends it isn't. "Why me?" I asked. "Why not just hire some woman to play the role?" "Because it has to be you. Julian's bride. The one thing my father promised him. I take you and I take the first piece off the board." He paused. Then, quieter: "Because my brother took everything from me. Now I'm going to take everything from him. Starting with you." There it was. The truth underneath the deal. I wasn't a person to him. I was a weapon. A move in a war I didn't start and didn't fully understand. He wanted to hurt his brother and his father, and I was the sharpest tool available. But here's the thing about being used. When you've been treated like currency your entire life, you learn to recognize the difference between someone who will spend you carelessly and someone who will at least keep you in good condition because they need you functional. Ezra needed me functional. Julian just needed me quiet. I looked at the marriage certificate. I looked at Ezra. Tall, scarred, cold-eyed, dangerous in a way that didn't bother hiding itself. He wasn't safe. He wasn't kind. He wasn't offering me a rescue. He was offering me a different cage with a door I might eventually learn to pick. But it was the only door that wasn't locked from the outside. "Give me a pen," I said. He handed me one without a word. I signed my name on the line next to his. Lena Moretti, soon to be Lena Crane. A different Crane than planned. A worse one, maybe. Or a better one. I'd figure that out tomorrow. My hand was still shaking when I set the pen down.POV: Lena Moretti She showed up on a Thursday evening. No call. No warning. Just Gianna standing on the brownstone's front steps looking like she hadn't slept in days, pressing the buzzer with the nervous energy of someone who wasn't sure they'd be let inside and was prepared to stand there until the decision was made for them. Naomi flagged her on the security feed before I saw her. "Your stepsister is at the front door. She's alone. No phone visible. No vehicle parked nearby. She walked here." Naomi paused. "She didn't track you. She tracked me. Followed me from a coffee shop this morning. She's been tailing me for two days." Smart. Gianna couldn't find the brownstone by searching for me because the location was buried under layers of corporate obfuscation. But Naomi moved through the city every day, meeting contacts, coordinating security, running the operational logistics of the takedown. Following Naomi meant finding the hub. Gianna had stopped trying to track the hidden woman
POV: Lena Moretti I found the books on his nightstand on a Monday. I wasn't snooping. I was looking for a phone charger I'd left in the living room and wandered past his open door and there they were. Three of them. Stacked in order of thickness. "What to Expect When You're Expecting." "The Birth Partner." And a thinner one called "New Father's Survival Guide" with a sticky note marking a chapter about the first six weeks. He hadn't mentioned them. Hadn't quoted statistics at me about fetal development or offered unsolicited advice about breathing techniques. Hadn't done any of the things that a man reading pregnancy books might do to demonstrate that he was reading pregnancy books. He was just reading them. Quietly. Privately. The way he did everything that mattered to him, behind closed doors where nobody could see the effort. I didn't mention the books either. I just noted them. Filed them in the growing folder of evidence that Ezra Crane was trying to become a different kind of
POV: Lena Moretti He brought me the documents on a Saturday morning. I was at the kitchen table reviewing witness preparation notes for Hana's deposition when he walked in carrying a folder that looked different from the case materials we'd been working with. Thinner. Cleaner. The kind of folder that contains something personal rather than operational. He set it in front of me without speaking. Then he sat in the chair across the table and waited. The same patient waiting he'd been practicing since Cambria. No pressure. No pitch. Just presence and the folder and the understanding that whatever happened next was my decision. I opened it. Inside was a revised marriage contract. Not the original that I'd signed in his study with shaking hands and a bleeding scalp. A new one. Drafted by Dominic, based on the legal formatting and the precise language that only Dominic's particular brand of obsessive lawyering could produce. But the terms were Ezra's. I could tell because they were the o
POV: Lena Moretti Naomi's surveillance captured the entire conversation. Not video. Audio only, pulled from a tap on Victor's private phone line that Naomi's team had maintained for months. I listened to it in real time from the brownstone kitchen, Ezra beside me, both of us leaning toward the speaker like witnesses at a trial watching evidence unfold. Julian arrived at Victor's penthouse at eight o'clock that evening. The restructuring documents were in his hand. I knew this because the first sound on the recording was paper hitting a surface. Hard. The slap of documents dropped onto a table by a man who wanted the sound to communicate something before his mouth did. "Explain this." Julian's voice. Controlled. The same tone he'd used when he whispered threats in my ear at social events. Measured. Professional. The voice of a man who had been trained to contain his fury and deploy it strategically rather than wastefully. "Explain what?" Victor. Calm. Unbothered. The tone of a man
POV: Lena MorettiThe idea came to me at three in the morning while the rest of the brownstone slept. I was at the kitchen table reviewing the restructuring documents for the fourth time, tracing the liability transfer timeline, when the strategic opportunity became clear. Victor's exit strategy had a vulnerability. Not in the paperwork. In the people.Julian didn't know he was being set up. The press conference had played as a proud succession. Father handing the reins to son. Julian had stood behind Victor looking satisfied and vindicated, the golden heir finally receiving his due. He had no idea that the company he'd just inherited was a loaded weapon pointed at his own head. The criminal liability embedded in those corporate entities would surface the moment the prosecution went public, and Julian, as the legal owner of record, would be the one standing in the blast radius.If Julian found out what Victor was doing, the carefully orchestrated succession would collapse into chaos.
POV: Lena Moretti Victor held the press conference on a Thursday. Live coverage. Major networks. The full apparatus of a billionaire commanding public attention because he had something to announce and the world was expected to listen. I watched it from the brownstone kitchen on Naomi's tablet, standing at the counter with a cup of tea I kept forgetting to drink. The rest of the team was scattered through the house, each person working their assigned task. But when Victor Crane appeared on screen, everyone stopped. Even Dominic looked up from his legal pad. Even Naomi paused her security review. Some men command attention simply by existing in a room. Victor was one of them. It was his most dangerous quality. He looked composed. Rested. Wearing a dark suit that cost more than most people's cars. Standing behind a podium at Crane Tower with the company logo behind him and the confidence of a man who had been controlling narratives for thirty years and saw no reason to stop now. "Af
POV: Lena Moretti After the board meeting, I couldn't stop thinking about Victor's face when he looked at me. The warmth in it. The recognition. Like I was a door to a room he'd been locked out of for decades. It made me want to scrub my skin. It also made me want to understand. So I went back to
POV: Lena Moretti The trap sprung on a Friday. Naomi's external surveillance picked up the signal at 9:14 AM. Julian made a phone call to his personal broker requesting information about a pharmaceutical acquisition target in Southeast Asia. The same fake target I'd designed as bait number four. S
POV: Lena Moretti The idea came to me at breakfast. Ezra was eating toast and reading access logs and pretending that eight hours ago he hadn't been kissing my neck on his desk. I was drinking coffee and pretending the same thing. We were getting good at pretending. Practice makes perfect. "Canar
POV: Lena Moretti They found the device at 1:47 AM. A transmitter the size of a matchbox, hardwired into the ventilation system on the forty-seventh floor, three floors below the penthouse. It was broadcasting on an encrypted frequency that Naomi's team traced to a relay point six blocks away. Fro







