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Chapter 9

작가: Ernest
last update 게시일: 2026-06-28 23:05:23

I didn’t look at Julian when I made the call. I stepped a few feet away, phone to my ear, and let him stand there on the sidewalk listening to exactly how little of this was actually about him.

“This is Evelyn Carter,” I said when the journalist picked up. “You said you have documentation. I’d like to see it before I comment on anything.”

“I can send you the memo tonight,” she said. “But I need a statement in the next fifteen minutes if you want your perspective included before this runs.”

“Then here’s my statement,” I said. “On the record. I designed the restructuring strategy that saved Van Corporation after its previous chairman’s stroke. That work was real, it was mine, and for three years it went uncredited while I held no formal position at the company. I’m grateful the truth is finally part of the record.”

A pause on her end. “That’s it? Nothing about Holloway? Nothing about the fraud angle, the board, any of it?”

“That’s not my story to tell,” I said. “Mine is simple. I did the work. Now my name is on it. Print that.”

I hung up before she could ask anything else.

Julian was watching me when I turned around, something unreadable moving across his face. “That’s all you’re going to say?”

“That’s all I owe anyone,” I said. “What happens to your board, your fraud exposure, whatever Vivian’s trying to engineer — none of that is mine to manage. I spent five years managing things that weren’t mine to manage. I’m not doing it again.”

“She’s going to destroy the company, Evelyn. Tonight. Using your name as the trigger.”

“My name isn’t a trigger,” I said. “It’s a fact you sat on for three years because crediting me would have cost you something. That’s not my failure to fix. That’s yours to survive.”

Something in his expression cracked slightly — not anger, something closer to the particular helplessness of a man who’d spent his whole life solving problems by writing checks or giving orders, standing in front of a problem that responded to neither.

“I’m not asking you to save me,” he said quietly.

“Good,” I said. “Because I wasn’t going to.”

I turned and walked back toward my building. He didn’t follow, which was its own small, strange relief — the first time in this entire unraveling that he’d actually respected a boundary the moment I set it, rather than treating it as an opening negotiation.

The article ran at 6 AM.

Hidden Architect: The Woman Behind Van Corporation’s Recovery — And the CEO Who Never Told Her Investors Her Name.

My statement ran in full, calm and clean, exactly as I’d given it. The rest of the piece was considerably less kind to Julian — three years of uncredited strategic work, a private memo proving he’d known and concealed it, a hostile takeover now complicated by fresh fraud questions from shareholders who’d trusted his account of his own competence.

I read it once over coffee, standing at my window in the cold morning light, and felt something settle in my chest that wasn’t triumph exactly.

It was closer to completion.

My phone had eleven notifications by 7 AM. Richard, twice — call me immediately. Dana, three times. Patricia, surprisingly, with a single line: proud of you, Carter. Knew it the first week.

And buried among them, one from a number I’d blocked weeks ago, somehow getting through anyway.

Unknown: This is Vivian. We should talk. You have no idea what’s actually coming for both of you next.

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  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 19

    I stared at Julian’s text for a long time.Dana stirred on the couch behind me, pulling the blanket tighter without waking, and the city outside my window was doing that specific early-morning thing where the light was neither night nor day but something suspended between them, gray and provisional, waiting to decide what kind of day it intended to be.I typed back three words.Where and when.His reply came in under a minute, which meant he’d been sitting with his phone waiting, which meant he hadn’t slept either.My apartment. Seven tonight. I’ll be alone.I put the phone down and went to make coffee and tried to locate the version of myself who knew how to make a decision like this cleanly, without the old reflexes pulling in one direction and the new ones pulling in another.I couldn’t find her. So I made the coffee and sat with the uncertainty and decided that was allowed too.Catherine Holloway picked up on the second ring when I called her back at six.“I need twenty-four hours

  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 18

    I told the cab driver to pull over.Not because I had somewhere else to be — because I needed thirty seconds of stillness that wasn’t moving through traffic, wasn’t hurtling toward anything, wasn’t being carried forward by momentum I hadn’t chosen. I needed to sit completely still and decide who I was going to be in the next 13 minutes.“Dana,” I said. “Send me everything you have on Catherine Holloway. Right now.”“Already sending,” she said. “Evelyn — are you okay?”I thought about that question seriously, the way I’d been trying to think about all questions seriously lately instead of defaulting to the automatic fine I’d spent five years reflexively producing.“No,” I said. “But I’m not falling apart either. I’ll call you when I know more.”I hung up. Opened the files Dana had sent. Started reading.Catherine Holloway, sixty-one, was formerly a senior partner at a Manhattan corporate law firm before her retirement four years ago—Julian’s father’s younger sister. Apparently estrange

  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 17

    I walked back toward Julian’s car slowly, phone still in my hand, the alert still glowing on the screen between us like something neither of us had asked to be handed.“You saw it,” I said.“Just now,” he said. “Yes.”“Do you know who the second name is?”He looked at me for a long moment — that specific, measured look I’d spent five years learning to read, the one that meant he was choosing between what he knew and what he was ready to say.“No,” he said. “I don’t.”I believed him. That was the uncomfortable part. I looked at his face — genuinely confused, not performing confusion, not managing a reaction — and believed him completely, which meant whoever the second name was, it wasn’t someone Julian had been protecting.It was someone protecting themselves.“Get in the car,” I said. “Don’t go home yet.”He didn’t argue, which told me more about where he was than anything he’d said at the railing.Emotional Beat OneWe sat in the parking lot with the engine running and the heater on

  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 16

    I was out of my chair before Marcus finished the sentence.“Which side,” I said, already moving toward the elevator, coat in hand, Richard calling something after me I didn’t stop to hear. “Marcus. Which side of the bridge?”“The upper level parking area on the Jersey side,” he said. “His car pinged there four minutes ago. Evelyn, I’ve called 911 already but the dispatcher said—”“Keep trying his phone,” I said. “Don’t stop. I’m going.”I hung up and hit the lobby at a run.Emotional Beat OneThe cab ride took nineteen minutes and felt like a lifetime compressed into a series of traffic lights that had never seemed so deliberately, cruelly red.I sat in the back with my hands pressed flat against my thighs and tried to think clearly, tried to be the composed, strategic, self-possessed woman I’d spent the last month carefully constructing — and kept failing, because underneath all the construction was still the woman who’d sat beside Julian Holloway on a kitchen floor at 3am after his

  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 15

    I didn’t tell Richard about the conversation in the glass conference room. Not because I was hiding it, exactly — more because I didn’t yet know what to call it, and Richard had a way of needing things named before he could strategize around them.Three days passed. Quiet ones, mostly. I went to work, ran numbers, watched Van Corporation’s stock continue its slow, ugly slide on the screens lining our trading floor, and tried not to think too hard about a man in a glass room saying I want to learn how to be someone who doesn’t need you.I almost succeeded.On the fourth day, Patricia called me. My old supervisor at Mercer & Lane, a voice from a life that already felt like it belonged to someone else.“I saw the press conference,” she said, without preamble, the way she always did. “I wanted to say I’m proud of you. And I wanted to ask if you’d consider coming back to speak to my new hires sometime. About starting over. About what it actually takes.”“I’d like that,” I said, and meant i

  • The Cost of Almost   Chapter 14

    I didn’t respond to Julian’s text for six days.Not out of strategy this time — I want to be honest about that, even if only with myself. I didn’t respond because I genuinely didn’t know what true thing I could say back that wouldn’t either reopen a door I’d worked hard to close, or slam it shut in a way I might later regret.So I said nothing, and went to work, and let the silence between us become its own kind of answer.The board review moved fast once the fraud allegations became official. Richard kept me updated in the clipped, efficient way he updated everyone — facts only, no editorializing — and through him I learned, in pieces, what was actually happening to the company I’d once quietly kept alive.Two more senior staff members resigned. The interim chairman started attending meetings Julian wasn’t invited to, a humiliation so specific and so total that even Richard, usually unmoved by Van Corporation’s suffering, paused for a second before delivering that particular update.

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