LOGINI had just one assignment. Go in. Find out the truth, document it, and leave. I wasn't meant to be emotionally attached, or stay more than a year. Neither was I supposed to care about his hidden charm personality he kept away from the public. I was not meant to fall in love with the man I came to destroy. In a room crowded with people, Adrian Tao pointed at me in front of everyone who had never bothered to know my name, and said “her,” and the plan I had been working on for three years cracked right down the middle. He thought he had chosen the safest choice. The calm secretary, the woman who isn't demanding, emotionally and materially. He has no idea who he's dealing with. And the longer I stay, the more terrified I am of what happens the day he finds out. Because I know secrets about his family that could bring down their empire. I know things about him that I was never meant to discover. And I know that when the truth is eventually revealed, he will stare at me the same way he did this morning over coffee, like I am truly the first thing that has ever happened to him in years. But by then, it won't matter anymore, everything will already be ruined. Some secrets keep you safe, some destroy you. And some you carry for a long time and they stop feeling like lies, you begin to feel they are the only true thing you have left.
View MoreChapter 1: The Announcement
The trick to going invisible in a room full of rich people was simple. You keep your shoulders low and move at an even pace, don't rush. My eyes were fixed on the tray, never on their faces, I offered a small smile if someone glanced over, just enough to seem safe, then faded back into the background before they thought twice. I had practiced this for three years, and I was very used to it. But invisibility was never the real goal. It was just the way I got there. The point was the story I’d been piecing together for three years. It lived in a locked file on the thirty-eighth floor of this building, attached with a name that didn’t exist in any public records, but linked to deals that had been quietly ruining lives for over a decade. One of those lives was my father's. I tried hard not to think about that too much because grief makes you sloppy, and I couldn’t afford any mistakes, not when I was this close. The ballroom felt too perfect, Crystal chandeliers hung overhead, pouring light across everything, their glow probably cost more than the entire apartment block where I grew up. About three hundred guests occupied the space in outfits worth a normal person’s yearly salary. Their laughter carried that easy tone of people who had never once had to worry about anything. I slipped between them like another piece of furniture. Yes, that was exactly the goal, being invisible is not about hiding completely. It is about becoming so ordinary, that people forget you could ever matter at all. I had poured coffee in board meetings where men casually discussed deals that could send them to prison, and none of them ever paused or lowered their voices around me. It's been three good years of building that version of myself. I had been careful, and quiet on this work. And tonight, I stood right on the edge of breaking through. Six months earlier, I had spotted a single name tucked away in a footnote of a quarterly report. A hidden subsidiary with no public address, or clear paper trail, yet it had shifted millions for over a decade. I had followed that thread ever since, and now only one locked door separated me from the story that could change everything I had ever written. Then Dominic Tao entered, without announcement yet the entire room adjusted. He was sixty-four, and he carried himself with the kind of power that needed no permission. I kept my expression blank and tracked his path across the marble floor. Adrian arrived ten minutes later. I noticed him the same way I noticed everything here, with sharp attention that never showed on my face. He came through the doors alone, without his assistants or guards. He paused the moment he entered through the entrance and adjusted his jacket. The media had painted a clear picture of Adrian Tao. As a reckless Playboy, a walking disaster in tailored suits. Charming on the surface, destructive underneath. I had read every article about him in the past three years, and the story had never changed. But after observing him at eleven of these events. I had seen something the reporters always missed. Four months earlier, at the Meridian dinner, I watched him chat with one of his father’s oldest financial advisors. He looked completely at ease, taking his time like he always did. But later I realized he had quietly guided the man through six different topics in those twenty minutes. Each one drifted a little closer to the company’s subsidiary structure. The advisor never caught any of that. I filed that away, I wasn't sure of what to do with it. He had never been bothered about people's opinions about him. I crossed to the far side of the ballroom and I kept him out of my thoughts. At nine o’clock, Dominic took the microphone. The crowd fell silent before he even spoke. He spoke of family legacy and securing the future of the Tao empire. His voice sounded warm, but beneath the warmth lay something sharper, something that hovered between request and warning. “My son is getting married,” he announced. The silence was shattered. The board members near the east wall exchanged startled glances, which told me this was news to them too. Whatever Dominic had shared with his inner circle before tonight, this was not part of it. I looked at Adrian. He stood a few steps from his father, perfectly still. Women adjusting their posture, families weighing chances, daughters of powerful men watching with hungry focus. Their expectations rested on a single name, and everyone waited. Adrian raised his eyes and swept them slowly across the room. He was not searching randomly, he knew exactly where he was going. Then he stopped and turned, his gaze locked directly on me. The realization hit like a wave. The crowd followed his eyes in one slow turn, and suddenly three hundred people remembered I existed. Camera flashes exploded across the room. “I’ve chosen,” Adrian said. His voice rang out clear and steady. “I chose her.” I held my tray perfectly without shaking. My feet remained rooted. I met his eyes. He was pointing at me. The plain assistant in flat shoes and unnecessary glasses, standing in the center of the most important room in Silverton City, holding drinks while the elite stared. I didn't smile or move backward, I didn't react in any way. My mind had already raced ahead to what this truly meant for me, for my job. The thirty-eighth floor, the sealed records I never had access to, the hidden subsidiary, and every locked system and restricted access that three years of patient work had almost unlocked. I stood there under the flashing lights and buzzing voices, and a single clear thought cut through the chaos: This could work, not the marriage, not even the man walking toward me. But, the access. Adrian moved closer and the crowd parted ways for him without a word. He stopped just inches away, close enough for me to see that his expression had not softened. He examined me the way people look at a choice they have already made. But my thoughts raced three steps ahead: I measured which doors this moment could open, what risks it carried, and how fast I could seize what I needed before he realized none of this was ever about him. I felt certain I could keep it that way. That certainty was the first real mistake I ever made. The second mistake came later that night. I slipped away from the crowd and took the elevator up to the 38th floor out of the old habit, simply to check, and confirm what I already knew. The door was already open, left open deliberately perhaps, as if someone knew I would come. I stood in the hallway for a long time. My heart raced but it never showed on my face. Then again, I thought about everything this could mean. Then I walked in.I woke at four in the morning without an alarm.The piece had gone live at midnight. I knew this because I watched it happen. I sat at the dining table with Adrian's hand around mine. The small green confirmation appeared on the screen. Four minutes later, the first social share came. Then the slow accumulation of attention meant the story was finding its readers. I had gone to bed at one, not because I was tired, but because Adrian had said gently that nothing would change in the next six hours and that I should rest.I had not rested.I lay awake until three, then I got up.The apartment was dark and quiet. I made coffee without turning on the overhead light. The small kitchen lamp was enough. I sat at the table with my laptop and opened the piece the way a reader would open it. The headline was clean.Fifteen Years of Fraud: How Tao Industries Foundation Was Built on a LieBelow it was my byline. It showed my real name. This was the first time in three years I used it on a big sto
Daniel came to the apartment on Thursday afternoon.That was new. He had never visited the apartment before, he never needed to. For the entire eighteen months of this investigation, he only existed in the careful, separate world of editorial calls and conference-room meetings.But the final edit required something more than a phone call. Adrian offered the dining table without being asked. Daniel accepted, he understood exactly what this last meeting meant. He set up his laptop across from mine.“Let us get this right,” he said.We went through the piece line by line.The cost of getting it wrong. Even slightly, it could undo the credibility of everything around it.We started with the opening.“The first two sentences need to do three things,” Daniel said. “Name the scale of the fraud. Establish the timeline. Signal that this is documented rather than alleged, right now it does two of those things well.”I read it again.He was right. The second sentence was not strong enough. It u
He began work on the framework the next Monday.Not the legal documents. Not the official rules. Those things were already moving ahead under Nathaniel’s careful control and the legal team’s skill. They followed their own timeline now and did not need Adrian’s attention every hour. This was something else.This was the real shape of what came next. The company was without Dominic at its center for the first time. No more Hargreave secret plans under the board decisions. No more fifteen years of hidden plans deciding what could happen.It was a blank new start.He sat at the dining table with a legal pad. This was his old habit. He had a preference for paper over the computer screen when he needed slow thinking. He made coffee for himself without asking me. Then he made another one when he noticed I was there.“Will you stay?” he asked. “While I work through this.”.“Yes,” I said.I sat across the table with my laptop. I was working on something else. A piece for Daniel. I was not col
He did not come out of the study room for two hours. I did not go in either.The study door was open. It has been open for weeks now. The small unspoken signal that had returned between us. But it did not mean access. It means: I am not shutting you out but I need to be alone with this.I stayed in the kitchen and made tea, but I did not drink it. I sat at the table with my laptop closed. The work was completed, and there was nothing left I had to do that day. The apartment was very still. He sat there in his study room, with thirty-six years of his life falling apart right now.I waited.He came out at six. Slightly looking different He stood in the kitchen doorway.“Is there any of that tea left?” he asked.“I will make more,” I said.He sat down at the table while I filled the kettle. Neither of us spoke. A few minutes later, I put a fresh cup in front of him. At the right distance. I noticed I was being careful. That careful habit had not died. I sat down across from him.He wra
It all began on a Sunday evening. This time, it started in the sitting room at seven o’clock. The city outside the big windows grew dark. We both sat very still, we had left behind all the professional ways of speaking. Now we were just two people in a room together.He returned to the estate.He d
Adrian POVI ordered more coffee at noon. This time I drank it, the warm liquid felt good after hours of sitting still. Three pages of notes now covered the small hotel notepad. My handwriting grew tighter as the morning stretched on, the way it always did when I dug deep into complex problems. I h
Adrian’s POVI ordered coffee at nine that morning but left the cup untouched. The room at the Meridian Grand felt plain on purpose. Neutral colors, simple furniture, and nothing personal anywhere. It gave me exactly what I needed. Four walls with no history attached, no reminders of the apartment
He had taken a room at the Meridian Grand. Nathaniel told me at eleven that morning without me even asking. He did not give the room number or the floor, just the hotel name. It was a small kindness from a man I did not expect it from. He knew I needed to know Adrian was somewhere safe and not wand
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews