MasukThe city lights blurred beneath Estella’s gaze.
She stood on the balcony of her apartment, arms folded tightly across her chest, letting the cold night air bite into her skin. It helped—slightly. Kept her grounded. But not enough. Because the file was still there. Burned into her mind. Duan Dyne — Internal Risk Factor. Her father. Not a victim. A liability. Estella exhaled slowly, her breath unsteady for the first time that day. “Just a system error…” she murmured. But even she didn’t believe it. Her phone vibrated in her hand. A message lit up the screen. Linda: You’re not okay. Don’t lie. Come to Circle Sky. Estella stared at it for a moment. Then typed back. Estella: Ten minutes. The bar was already alive when she arrived. Low lights. Soft music. Conversations blending into white noise. Normal. Everything felt normal. Too normal. “Wow,” Linda said the moment she saw her. “You look like you’ve been run over by your own life.” Estella let out a quiet laugh and slid onto the stool beside her. “That obvious?” “Painfully.” Linda pushed a glass toward her. “Drink first. Talk later.” Estella didn’t argue. She took the glass and swallowed half of it in one go. The burn hit her throat instantly. Good. She needed that. Something sharp. Something real. Across the city, Aizen stared at his phone. Terry had sent a photo. Estella. At a bar. Alone. Already drinking. His jaw tightened slightly. “Where?” he asked. “Circle Sky,” Terry replied. “She’s been there for about twenty minutes.” A pause. Then Aizen stood. “I’ll handle it.” ** By the time he arrived, the atmosphere had shifted. Estella was no longer sitting straight. Her head rested briefly against her arm, fingers loosely holding a half-empty glass. And there was a man standing too close. Too comfortable. Aizen didn’t speak. Didn’t need to. He stepped in. Positioned himself between them. One look was enough. The man backed off without protest. Estella blinked slowly as she lifted her head. Her vision swayed—but she recognized him. “…Mr. Deveraux?” Her voice was softer than usual. Unsteady. Aizen studied her for a moment. “Stand up.” A command. Not a request. Estella smiled faintly. “You always show up at the worst time.” “And you always stay longer than you should,” he replied. She let out a quiet breath, shaking her head slightly. “Why are you here?” Aizen didn’t answer immediately. Which was answer enough. Estella let out a soft laugh. “Right,” she murmured. “Of course.” Her gaze sharpened—just a little. Even through the haze of alcohol. “Everything’s part of your plan, isn’t it?” Aizen’s expression didn’t change. But something in his silence confirmed it. And that— Hurt more than it should have. “I’m just a variable to you,” Estella said quietly. “Something to observe. Something to use.” Her fingers tightened slightly around his sleeve. “Am I wrong?” Aizen looked at her. Really looked this time. And for a second— He didn’t answer. That was enough. Estella pulled him closer and kissed him. No hesitation. No warning. It wasn’t soft. It wasn’t careful. It was reckless. Like she was trying to erase something— Or prove something. Aizen froze. For half a second. Then he kissed her back. Deeper. Harder. His hand moved to her waist, steadying her as her balance faltered. The world narrowed. To breath. To heat. To the space between them that disappeared too quickly. It was different from the first time. Less controlled. More dangerous. Because this time— They both knew what they were doing. And neither of them stopped. Until Aizen did. Abruptly. He pulled back, his breathing uneven, his gaze dark. “Enough.” Estella looked at him, dazed. “Why?” she whispered. Aizen held her there for a moment longer. Too close. Too aware. “Because I won’t make the same mistake twice.” The words were quiet. But they carried weight. And for the first time— They sounded like a warning. Not to her. But to himself. ** The drive back was silent. Estella leaned her head against the window, eyes half-closed. She didn’t ask where they were going. Didn’t question anything. For once— She let someone else take control. Her apartment was dim when they arrived. Aizen stepped inside, scanning the space instinctively. Small. Minimal. Too quiet. He helped her to the bedroom, lowering her carefully onto the bed. Estella barely stirred. Her breathing steady now. Almost peaceful. Aizen straightened, about to leave— Then his gaze caught something. A photo. On the nightstand. Estella. And Lionel. Younger. Smiling. Unburdened. A version of her he had never known. Aizen stared at it longer than he should have. Then— “Don’t…” The voice was faint. He turned. Estella shifted slightly, eyes still closed. “Don’t make me… like them…” The words were fragmented. Barely conscious. But they landed. Aizen didn’t move. Didn’t respond. Because for the first time— He wasn’t sure what she meant. Or worse— He did. ** The next morning— Everything collapsed. Valcor wasn’t trending for its projects. Or its growth. Or its expansion. It was trending for a scandal. Photos flooded every major outlet. Aizen. And Estella. At the bar. Close. Too close. The headlines were brutal. “VALCOR CEO INVOLVED WITH SUBORDINATE—ABUSE OF POWER?” “SCANDAL INSIDE ORION PROJECT—IS THIS THE REAL RISK?” Public opinion split instantly. Investors reacted. The market trembled. And Estella— Walked straight into it. ** The moment she stepped into the building, she felt it. The silence. The stares. The whispers that stopped when she passed. Terry approached her desk within minutes. “Miss Duan,” he said calmly. “You’re needed in the conference room.” Not a request. A summons. ** The room was already full. Legal. PR. Internal audit. And at the center— Aizen. Estella walked in without hesitation. Without expression. The screen behind her lit up. The photos. Clear. Undeniable. “Is this what you consider professional conduct, Miss Duan?” The question came sharp. Direct. Estella glanced at the screen once. Then back at them. “I did not invite Mr. Deveraux to that location.” A shift. Subtle. But immediate. Now the attention moved. To him. But Aizen didn’t speak. Didn’t defend. Didn’t deny. He simply watched. As if observing a situation— Not participating in it. ** “This is no longer about intent,” someone from PR said. “It’s about impact. The company’s reputation is already taking damage.” Silence followed. Then— Aizen spoke. Calm. Controlled. “We don’t need explanations.” The room stilled. “We need resolution.” His gaze moved. Stopped on Estella. Sharp. Measured. Unforgiving. “Fix it.” Two words. That was all. No support. No protection. Just expectation. And consequence. The meeting ended quickly. Too quickly. Leaving Estella alone in the aftermath. The screen still displayed her image. Frozen. Judged. Defined by something she couldn’t control. Her phone vibrated. A message appeared. Unknown number. No name. No identity. Just one line. If you want to survive this—stop trusting him. Estella stared at it. Longer than she should have. Then slowly lifted her gaze. Her reflection stared back at her from the dark screen. Calm. But different. Because now— She understood something she hadn’t before. This wasn’t just a mistake. This wasn’t just a scandal. This was positioning. And she was already in the center of it. Whether she wanted to be— Or not.Benedict Deveraux had barely returned to the mansion's study when the butler knocked twice on the heavy wooden door."Mr. Laurent is here, sir."Benedict didn't look up from the documents spread across his desk."Send him in."A few seconds later, Victor Laurent stepped inside.Unlike his usual polished smile, today's expression was cold and unreadable. He closed the door himself before walking toward the seating area by the floor-to-ceiling windows.Neither man offered a handshake.Neither bothered with pleasantries.Benedict finally stood, carrying his cup of coffee with him."I assume you didn't come all the way here to congratulate me."Victor let out a dry chuckle."I don't think either of us is in the mood for congratulations."Silence settled between them.The atmosphere felt heavier than it ever had before.Victor reached into his briefcase and slid a tablet across the coffee table.The screen displayed dozens of headlines.Zero Degree Financial Crimes Expand.Government Inves
The conference room on the twelfth floor of the National Intelligence Division fell silent the moment Lionel Duan stepped inside.No one greeted him.They didn't need to.Every person seated around the long table had already read the reinstatement order bearing his name. After five years listed as Missing in Action, Lionel Duan was officially back.He placed a thick black folder on the table before turning toward the large digital screen mounted on the wall."Let's begin."The room lights dimmed.A single diagram appeared.At the very center...ZERO DEGREE HOLDINGSLines stretched outward toward several familiar names.Vraux Industries.Troyan Group.Orion Project.Further down...another file appeared.A photograph of the abandoned warehouse.Burned concrete walls.Collapsed steel shelves.Evidence tags scattered across the image.Lionel picked up a laser pointer."This warehouse."A red dot landed on the photograph."Everyone believes the Zero Degree investigation starts with financ
Back at Valcor, the atmosphere had shifted again.The company looked busy as always, but beneath the polished smiles and neatly pressed suits, tension lingered in every hallway. Employees lowered their voices whenever Orion was mentioned. News alerts kept flashing across phones. Every department was waiting for the next headline.Ella had barely finished reviewing a stack of investor reports when Terry knocked lightly on her desk."Ms. Duan."She looked up."What is it?""I just received a notice from Legal."He handed her a sealed envelope."It came directly from the Financial Crimes Investigation Bureau."Ella accepted it calmly, though a flicker crossed her eyes."They sent it to Valcor?""They requested cooperation from all companies connected to Orion."She broke the seal.Inside was an official notice requesting financial records related to Zero Degree Holdings, including historical transactions involving Vraux Industries, Troyan Group, and Valcor Corporation.Exactly as she had
The front door opened again just after eight.Vivianne stepped inside with a tired sigh, slipping off her heels near the entrance."I swear, Orion is determined to ruin everyone's work-life balance."Devon looked up from his laptop and smiled."Long day?""The longest."She loosened her hair as she walked into the living room, only to stop when she noticed everyone gathered around the investigation board.Her eyes landed on Ella first."You came back."Ella nodded."We found something."Vivianne's expression immediately turned serious."Something big?"Jonathan looked toward Lionel before giving a small nod."I think it's time."Lionel walked to the table and picked up a weathered document inside a transparent evidence sleeve."This belongs to your father."Vivianne frowned."My... father?"Lionel handed it to her carefully."It was recovered from the warehouse."Vivianne stared at the familiar handwriting.Her breathing gradually slowed."...Dad."The single word escaped almost as a
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime.Lionel stepped into the Intelligence Division headquarters without slowing his pace.The polished marble floor reflected the morning lights. Officers in dark uniforms crossed the hallway carrying stacks of files, while analysts hurried between offices with tablets tucked under their arms. The building hadn't changed much in five years.Only the people had.A few conversations stopped the moment they noticed him.Someone froze halfway through taking a sip of coffee."...Is that...""No way...""I thought he was dead."The whispers followed Lionel down the corridor, but he didn't acknowledge them. His expression remained calm, unreadable, the same look that had earned him a reputation as one of the division's most difficult investigators years ago.At the end of the hallway, a familiar wooden door stood waiting.A brass nameplate was still attached.Lionel DuanChief, Special Transnational Crime UnitFor a brief moment, he simply looked at
No one spoke.The underground room seemed to hold its breath as Ella slowly lifted the lid of the archive box.The cardboard had become brittle with age. A slight movement nearly tore one corner apart.Inside were only a handful of surviving documents.Most had been ruined by humidity.Some pages had fused together.Others had blackened around the edges, leaving only fragments of words.Ella carefully unfolded the first readable sheet.It wasn't a research report.It was a logistics record.Her eyes moved quickly across the page before stopping at a familiar name.Project Mionier – Restricted Asset TransferThree companies.Three official investors.Vraux Industry.Troyan Group.Valcor Corporation.Below them...another line had been crossed out with black ink.Yet the original writing was still faintly visible beneath it.Ella inhaled sharply."...Zero Degree Holdings."Aizen's expression hardened."So they were already involved..."Phillip looked genuinely stunned."Impossible.""Ze
Morning arrived like nothing had happened.The glass facade of Valcor Technology still reflected the same pale sunlight. Employees still walked in with their coffee, their schedules, their quiet ambitions.But the moment Estella Duan stepped through the lobby doors, something shifted.It wasn’t lou
The building felt different the moment Estella stepped inside.Not quieter.Sharper.Like every whisper had teeth.No one greeted her.No one even pretended to.Screens lit up as she passed. Conversations dropped mid-sentence. Eyes followed her—not openly, but enough.She didn’t slow down.Didn’t r
The morning light over the golf course was too clean.Too calm.It didn’t match the tension tightening under Estella’s skin.She stood on the grass, adjusting her grip on the club—precise, controlled, exactly how she had been taught.From a distance, she looked flawless.Up close—She was holding h
The investigation room wasn’t cold.It just felt that way.Estella sat straight, hands folded on the table, posture flawless—too flawless for someone being accused of breaching a restricted system.Across from her, three members of internal audit reviewed the data projected on the screen.No one sm







