LOGIN"Put it down," Priya said. "Stop looking at it. It's not going to change."
Lina was still holding the test.
"Lina." Priya took it out of her hand and set it on the bathroom counter face-down. "Look at me."
She looked.
"Tell me it's Freddie's," Priya said.
Lina said nothing.
"Oh God." Priya sat down on the edge of the tub. "Tell me you didn't."
"I don't know what I did." Lina pressed her hands flat on the counter. "I don't remember most of that night. I just woke up and he was—" She stopped. "I woke up and it was Marcos."
"Marcos." Priya repeated his name like it was something she had found on the bottom of her shoe. "Freddie's Marcos."
"The same."
Priya stood up. Sat back down. Stood up again. "Does he know?"
"No."
"Are you going to tell him?"
"I don't know."
"Are you going to tell Freddie?"
"Absolutely not."
"Lina."
"What do you want me to say, Priya? What is the right answer here? I left Freddie at the altar and then I possibly slept with his best friend and now I'm—" She turned around. Pressed her back to the counter. "I'm pregnant."
The word landed like a stone in water. It rippled.
Priya was quiet for a long time.
"What are you going to do?" she finally asked.
"I'm going to figure it out."
"That's not a plan."
"It's all I have right now."
She called Marcos that afternoon.
He answered on the second ring. "Lina." His voice was smooth. Warm. Completely unsurprised. "I wondered when you'd call."
"We need to talk."
"Agreed. Come to my office."
"I'm not coming to your office."
"Then come to my apartment."
"I'm not doing that either." She kept her voice flat. "I'll meet you at the coffee place on Forty-Second. One hour."
He paused. "You sound serious."
"One hour, Marcos."
She hung up before he could say anything else.
He was already there when she arrived. Sitting with two coffees, jacket pressed, looking like a magazine spread. That smile in place.
She sat across from him without taking her coat off.
"What happened that night?" she said.
He tilted his head. "You don't remember?"
"I remember some of it. I need you to fill in the gaps."
"You came down to the bar," he said easily. "We had drinks. We talked. You were upset about the wedding." A shrug. "One thing led to another."
"Did I—" She stopped. Started again. "Was it consensual?"
Something shifted in his face. Just for a second. Then the smile came back, softer now, almost gentle. "Lina. You kissed me first."
She stared at him.
She did not remember kissing him first.
"Why didn't you stop it?" she said. "He was your best friend."
"Was," Marcos said. "Past tense."
"What does that mean?"
He looked at his coffee. Then back at her. "It means things between Freddie and me are complicated. They have been for a long time." He leaned forward. "Are you going to tell me what this is really about?"
She reached into her bag. Put the pregnancy test on the table between them. Face up.
She watched him look at it.
His expression didn't change. Not the way a shocked person's face changes.
It just went very, very still.
"I see," he said.
That was all.
"That's it? That's your response?"
"What would you like me to say?"
"I don't know. Something human."
He sat back. Crossed his arms. Looked at her with those unreadable eyes. "I'll support whatever you decide. Financially. Logistically. Whatever you need."
"I don't want your money."
"Then what do you want?"
"The truth."
He picked up his coffee. Took a slow sip. "I told you the truth."
She stared at him for a long time. Something was wrong. She could feel it the way you feel a change in pressure before a storm.
She picked the test up and put it back in her bag.
"Stay away from me, Marcos."
"Lina—"
"I mean it."
She walked out.
Behind her, she heard him set his coffee cup down. Very carefully. Very quietly.
She didn't look back.
But on the street outside, her phone buzzed.
A text from him.
"Before you make any decisions. You should know that Freddie has been looking for you."
Her feet stopped moving.
Another text came.
"He's been asking questions. About that night. He knows something happened."
Lina's blood went cold.
Freddie knew.
Or suspected.
Either way, she was out of time.
Gerald was still at his desk when Raymond arrived.He hadn't moved much since Clara left.Had sat with the folder and his thoughts and the particular heaviness of someone who had just receivedinformation that changed the shape of everything they thought they understood.Raymond knocked once and came in without waiting.He looked at Gerald's face the moment he walked in.Then he looked at the folder on the desk.He sat down slowly."You've already seen it," he said.Gerald looked at him carefully. "You knew."It wasn't a question.Raymond was quiet for a moment. "I found out six months ago," he said. "She came to me first."Gerald sat back. "Six months.""Yes.""You've known about Edward's daughter for six months and said nothing to this board.""I needed time to understand what it meant."Raymond folded his hands in his lap."Gerald this isn't something you drop into a board meeting and expect people to process cleanly.""It's not your decision to make it alone, Raymond.""I know that
Freddie wasn't expecting the knock.He had been at his kitchen table for most of the morning. Notepad. Cold coffee. The same circling thoughts that kept finding new angles and hitting the same walls. He had called Daniel twice already and gotten the same answer both times, still working on it, give me a little more time.So when the knock came at eleven forty three he wasn't expecting it to be Daniel.But it was.Daniel Reeves stood in his doorway in his coat with a folder tucked under his arm and an expression on his face that Freddie had only seen twice in eleven years of working together. The expression of a man who had found something he wished he hadn't."You'd better let me in," Daniel said.Freddie stepped back.Daniel sat at the kitchen table.Didn't take his coat off. Didn't accept the coffee Freddie offered. Just put the folder on the table between them and kept both hands flat on top of it for a moment like he was deciding one last time how to do this."The keycard records
Gerald Osei was not a man who was easily surprised.Sixty two years of living had taught him that most things that looked surprising were actually just things you hadn't been paying close enough attention to. He had built a career on paying attention. On reading rooms and reading people and knowing when something was coming before it arrived.So when the woman walked into his office at two fifteen without an appointment and sat down without being invited he didn't panic.He just watched her.She was in her mid thirties. Well dressed but not flashy. She sat across from him with the ease of someone who had rehearsed this moment so many times it no longer felt like a performance.She crossed her legs. Looked at him directly."You don't know me," she said."No," Gerald said slowly. "I don't believe I do.""My name is Clara." A pause. Just long enough to matter. "My father was Edward Caldwell."Gerald went completely still.She let that sit.Didn't rush past it, or fill the silence with an
Karthy didn't rush.She never did. Rushing was for people who hadn't planned properly. Who left things to the last minute and then scrambled to catch up.She had been planning this particular move for three weeks.She arrived at the Caldwell building at nine fifteen.Not through the main entrance. She knew better than that. The main entrance had cameras and a security desk and people who would remember a face. She came through the side entrance on the lower floor. The one that cycled through on a forty minute rotation and had a blind spot in the coverage that she had identified on her very first visit eight weeks ago.She was in the elevator before anyone had time to notice her.Twenty eighth floor.The board members' private offices.She had appointments with two of them. Not under her real name. Under the name of a corporate consultant whose credentials she had built carefully over the past month. Clean. Professional. Verifiable enough to get through a basic check without raising fl
FREDDIEHis phone buzzed at six forty-eight.Daniel. One message."Call me. Now. Before you see anything else."He opened his news app.And just like that his whole morning changed.His office. His chair. His face. Right there on the screen for the whole world to see, with a headline that didn't even need to try hard.He called Lina first.Four rings. Voicemail.He called Daniel."How bad," he said the second it connected."Bad enough. Two major outlets already. Social media is running with it fast." Daniel's voice was tight. "Someone chose this morning on purpose, Freddie. This didn't just leak.""I know." Freddie sat down. Opened his notepad. "The photograph came from inside my office. Someone was standing in that doorway with a camera. I need every keycard record for that floor that night.""Give me an hour.""And find out who sent it to the press.""Working on it."He hung up.Wrote one word on a fresh page.Underlined it.Then he started writing and didn't stop.He wrote everythi
Lina woke up slowly.The kind of slow that happened when your body was done sleeping but your mind hadn't caught up yet. That grey space between rest and reality, where everything felt distant and soft for just a few seconds before the weight of everything came back.It always came back.She lay still for a moment. Priya's blanket is still around her. The apartment quiet. Morning light pushing through the curtains in thin pale lines.She reached for her phone.Not for any particular reason. Just the automatic morning habit of it. Check the time. Check messages. The ordinary small ritual of waking up that her hands did before her brain fully switched on.The time was seven fourteen.She had three messages from Priya. She smiled slightly at that. Typical.She was about to put the phone down when something caught her eye.A notification.Not a message. A news alert. The kind that pushed through from one of the financial news apps she had downloaded months ago when she started working alo
"What is it you have?" Freddie said.The corridor outside the boardroom was so quiet. Only him and the phone pressed to his ear and the low sound of the building around him.Brett didn't answer straight away.That half second again. That same strange pause that had been there when he picked up. Fre
Freddie woke up first.That wasn't unusual. He always woke up before everything else. Before his alarm. Before the city. Before the day had fully decided what it was going to be.What was unusual was the weight beside him.The warmth of it.For a moment he didn't move. Didn't grab his phone. Didn't
The board meeting was scheduled for around nine in the morning.No agenda sent. No warning. Just a single message from Gerald Osei that came through at seven forty two while Freddie was still at his desk from the night before.*We need to meet. All of us. Nine o'clock. Twenty eighth floor.*That wa
Marcos had always believed that the most powerful moment in any game was not the winning.It was the moment just before.This is the moment everything looks perfect to some and the other person didn't know it yet. When you could see exactly how it was all going to fall and they were still standing







