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Chapter 3: The Encroaching Sharks

Author: Plum&Prose
last update publish date: 2026-06-07 00:52:30

Grace slammed the cap back onto her heavy black fountain pen, the sharp, metallic click echoing like a gunshot through the suffocating stillness of the vacant office. She couldn't do it. Not yet. Every single analytical instinct honed over her years as a senior business analyst screamed at her to halt. To sign her name blindly to a document that stripped away her legal autonomy, without verifying the underlying forensic data behind her father’s sudden ruin, went against everything she was.

She rose from her father's heavy obsidian desk, deliberately leaving the gold-embossed leather folder open to page thirty-two. There, the restrictive midnight clause of Section 12 seemed to glare back at her beneath the harsh LED desk lamp, a silent, mocking testament to the trap Elias Thorne had laid out.

She walked slowly toward the floor-to-ceiling windows, her heels clicking a rhythmic, tense beat against the hardwood border of the room before being muffled by the plush wool rug. Pressing her palms and forehead against the cool, vibrating glass, she looked out into the abyss.

Forty-two stories below, the streets of the financial district looked like a distorted, rain-slicked hive of panic. Even through the dense sheets of a torrential summer storm, she could see the bright, rhythmic flashing of hazard lights from the media vans lining the entire perimeter of Vance Global’s headquarters. Telephoto lenses glinted like gun barrels under the streetlights, all aimed directly at the revolving glass doors of the lobby. The paparazzi and financial journalists were a pack of starving wolves, waiting for the first definitive scent of blood—the official announcement of a legacy’s bankruptcy. They wanted the footage of Arthur Vance leaving in handcuffs; they wanted the tearful statement from his daughter.

"Grace? For the love of God, tell me you’ve signed it."

The double oak doors swung open with a violent shudder, and Arthur Vance stepped back into the suite. He looked entirely hollowed out, his posture slouched as if the very air pressure in the room were crushing his spine. He wasn't looking at his daughter’s face; his frantic, bloodshot eyes darted immediately to the desk, desperately searching for the closed, signed contract. When he saw it lying wide open, the pen cast aside carelessly on the mahogany wood, a low, choked sound escaped the back of his throat.

"I need a forensic audit of our offshore real estate portfolios before I put my name on that paper, Dad," Grace said.

She didn't turn around immediately, keeping her eyes fixed on the flashing red stock ticker on the wall, watching their market value bleed away in real-time. When she finally turned to face him, she crossed her arms tightly over her chest, creating a physical barrier between herself and his desperation.

"Elias Thorne didn't just happen to stumble upon our corporate vulnerability. He knew the exact, highly specific leverage points required to dismantle our credit facilities within a twenty-four-hour window. The laundering discrepancies I flagged in our system last week—they correlate perfectly with the exact debt facility he is suddenly offering to absorb. It’s too neat. It’s too calculated."

"There is no time for an audit, Grace! Not a single hour!" Arthur walked over to her, his steps uneven, his voice rising to a frantic, erratic pitch that made her ears ring.

He reached out and grabbed her by the shoulders. His hands were ice cold, his fingers digging uncomfortably into the structured fabric of her blazer.

"The regulatory boards have already initiated an emergency freeze on our secondary trading accounts. By 8:00 AM tomorrow morning, the short-sellers will drive our stock price into the fractions of pennies. We won't just be facing a standard corporate bankruptcy, Grace. We will be held criminally liable! Do you understand the weight of that word? Criminal."

"Criminally liable for what, Dad?" Grace pressed, her analytical mind zeroing in on his vocabulary, dissecting his micro-expressions like she would a corrupted spreadsheet. She didn't flinch away from his grip, forcing him to hold her gaze.

"If this were simply a matter of bad market timing or an aggressive short-ladder attack by a competitor, there are legal protections. There is Chapter 11 restructuring. What aren't you telling me about those offshore accounts? What did you do?"

Arthur’s grip suddenly loosened, his hands dropping to his sides as if the energy had been entirely drained from his body. He stumbled backward a step, his face transitioning from a mottled red to a translucent, sickly gray. He couldn't look her in the eye anymore. His gaze darted to the liquor cart, to the abstract oil paintings on the walls, to his own polished shoes—anywhere but at the daughter who had dedicated her life to maintaining his empire.

"I did what I had to do to keep the company afloat after your mother died ten years ago," he whispered brokenly, his voice sounding entirely hollow, stripped of the patriarchal authority he had carried for decades.

"The estate accounts... they weren't just standard diversified investments, Grace. I took shortcuts. I allowed certain capital flows from international buyers to bypass standard compliance checks to plug our capital holes. If the federal prosecutors look behind the curtain because of a messy, public bankruptcy, they won't just find bad math. They will find a paper trail of intentional fraud that points directly to a federal indictment for me."

A cold, heavy weight dropped straight into the pit of Grace’s stomach, making her feel physically ill. The irregular transactions she had found weren't a glitch in the software or an oversight by an external accountant. They were intentional acts of survival that had cross-contaminated their family name with white-collar crime. Her father, the man she had modeled her entire professional ethics after, had built a legal minefield beneath their feet.

And Elias Thorne didn't just have the map to that minefield—he was the one holding the detonator. He had timed his hostile takeover offer perfectly, knowing they had absolutely no other exit strategy.

Suddenly, the landline phone on the desk rang, its shrill, old-fashioned bell piercing the heavy atmosphere like a physical alarm.

Arthur scrambled for the receiver like a drowning man thrashing toward a life ring. "Vance here," he choked out, pressing the plastic to his ear. He listened for a fraction of a second, his eyes widening in pure, unadulterated terror as his breathing turned shallow.

"Keep them out of the executive lobby! Call building security and lock down the elevators!"

He slammed the receiver back onto the cradle so hard the plastic cracked, looking up at Grace with a face that was completely pale. "The press. A rogue faction of financial reporters just bypassed the basement security entrance. They have a leaked, unedited copy of our internal liquidation memo. They’re coming up the side elevators right now, Grace. They want a live statement on the fraud allegations."

Before Grace could even process his words, a muffled commotion erupted from the outer reception lobby just beyond the double oak doors. Shouted, overlapping questions, the high-pitched, metallic clicking of camera shutters, and the heavy, physical thuds of their skeleton security detail attempting to maintain a human wall bled through the thick wood. The sharks had officially breached the perimeter of the glass cage.

Grace’s pulse hammered violently against her ribs, her heart thumping so hard she could feel it in her throat. She was a business analyst—a woman who lived in the quiet, comforting world of spreadsheets, logic, and undeniable data trends. But raw logic was entirely useless in the face of a public execution. If she went out there and froze, the company would implode tonight, long before the morning markets could even open.

She turned her head slowly, looking back at the desk. The pristine white pages of the forty-page contract seemed to gleam with a predatory brightness beneath the desk lamp. It wasn't just a marriage document anymore; it was a shield. It was a multi-billion dollar piece of armor that could instantly silence the wolves outside the door, erase her father’s criminal exposure, and force the media to rewrite the narrative from a corporate collapse into a high-society romance merger.

But as her hand drifted back toward the cold metal of the fountain pen, she envisioned the glacial, calculating blueprint in Elias Thorne’s piercing blue eyes. He wanted total control over her life. He wanted her submission, packaged neatly behind a forbidden door and a midnight curfew.

She picked up the pen, her knuckles turning white as her fingers locked around the casing. She didn't press the nib to the signature line. Instead, she turned to her father, her voice dropping to a deadly, ice-cold, and entirely resolute whisper that surprised even herself.

"Open the doors, Dad."

Arthur gasped, his mouth hanging open slightly. "What? Grace, are you insane? The media will tear you apart on a live broadcast—"

"I said, open the doors," she repeated, her eyes flashing with a sudden, dangerous spark of survival instinct. "If Elias Thorne wants a public show of absolute devotion, he's going to have to watch me play the first move of his game. Let the wolves in."

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