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Chapter 7

Author: Ernest
last update publish date: 2026-06-27 16:25:28

The board’s vote went public on a Thursday morning, and by Thursday afternoon Julian’s name was trending for reasons that had nothing to do with anything he’d built.

Van Corporation CEO sidelined amid hostile takeover pressure ran across three different finance outlets before noon. I read each headline once, standing at my office window, and felt none of the satisfaction I’d expected to feel.

I felt focused. That was different. Better, probably.

Richard called the team in at four. “Interim chairman starts Monday,” he said. “Julian retains his title but loses board authority over major decisions. This is the opening we’ve been building toward.”

I sat through the briefing taking notes, contributing where it mattered, and tried not to think about the fact that somewhere across the river, a man I’d loved for five years was watching his entire professional identity dismantle in real time — partly because of choices he’d made, and partly because of me.

Both things were true. I’d stopped trying to resolve that tension. I just carried it now, the way you carry anything heavy enough to be permanent.

Marcus called again that evening. I almost didn’t answer.

“I need to tell you something,” he said, “and I need you to actually listen, not just brace for whatever you think I’m about to say.”

“Go ahead.”

“There’s something in the documents,” he said. “The ones your team’s been using. Something nobody’s flagged yet because they’re focused on the financial weaknesses, not the personnel history.” A pause, careful. “There’s a name in the original recovery strategy files from three years ago. Buried in a footnote, an internal memo nobody thought mattered at the time.”

“What name?”

“Yours,” Marcus said. “Credited. In writing. As the architect of the entire restructuring strategy that saved the company after his grandfather’s stroke.”

I went very still.

“That’s not possible,” I said. “Everything I did for him was informal. Nothing was ever documented under my name.”

“Someone documented it anyway,” Marcus said. “I don’t know who. But it’s in there, Evelyn, and once the financial journalists doing the takeover coverage start digging past the headlines—” he stopped. “They’re going to find it. They’re going to find you. Not as Hale Capital’s strategist. As the woman who actually saved Van Corporation once already, for free, while everyone in that company called her nobody.”

My hand tightened around the phone.

“When,” I said. “How soon?”

“I don’t know,” Marcus said. “Could be days. Could be tomorrow morning.”

I hung up and stood very still in my apartment, the city lights blurring slightly through the window, trying to understand what it would mean for the entire engineered, careful narrative I’d built — quiet revenge, clean strategy, no sentiment — to collapse the moment the world discovered I hadn’t just dismantled Julian Holloway’s company.

I’d built it. Once. Completely. And then watched him hand the credit, the company, and the ring to someone else.

My phone buzzed in my hand before I could process any of it further.

Not Marcus.

Not Dana.

Not Julian.

A New York Times financial reporter, a name I didn’t recognize, a message that made my stomach drop straight through the floor.

“Ms. Carter — I’m running a piece on Van Corporation’s history tomorrow morning, and I have documentation suggesting you played a far larger role in this company than anyone’s previously reported. I’d like to give you the chance to comment before it runs. Call me tonight.”

I read it twice.

Then I looked up — and through my apartment window, parked across the street in the cold blue light of a streetlamp, I saw a car I recognized immediately.

Julian’s car.

He was just sitting there. Watching my building.

He knew. Somehow, already, he knew exactly what tomorrow’s headline was going to say.

My phone buzzed one final time.

Julian: We need to talk tonight. Before this goes any further. There’s something about that memo you don’t know — and once you hear it, you’re not going to want this story to run any more than I do.

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