LOGIN
The furnaces were running, which was supposed to be comforting.
Heat rolled across the factory floor in slow waves. It carried that familiar mix…hot metal, mineral dust, and the sharp bite of fresh-cut glass. On most mornings, the smell meant we were alive.
This morning it felt like the building was holding its breath.
A forklift beeped as it reversed near Packing. Someone laughed too loudly near the racks, like they were trying to trick themselves into normalcy. I stepped around a pallet of finished tumblers and kept my eyes off the time clock.
“Morning, Yselle,” Henri called, lifting two fingers. His smile arrived late, like it had to climb stairs.
“Morning,” I said. “Try not to break anything today.”
Henri snorted. “Tell the glass that.”
I almost smiled. Almost.
My boots tapped across concrete toward the office. I felt the stares before I saw them—quick glances, then eyes dropping away. People didn’t want to look at me too long. Looking too long meant asking questions, and nobody wanted to ask the question that mattered.
Mireille Dufort was posted near the time clock like a guard. Arms folded. Short dark curls. A stare that had stopped more fights than security ever had.
She didn’t greet me.
“Payroll?” she asked.
I kept walking. “In ten.”
Mireille fell into step beside me. “You said ten yesterday.”
“I know.”
“And the day before.”
I stopped at the office door and looked at her. “If you want me to say ‘we’re fine,’ I can do that. But then you’ll call me a liar.”
She didn’t blink. “I’d call you worse.”
“Fair,” I said, and unlocked the door.
The office air was cooler and stale, like paper had been breathing in here overnight. The wall clock ticked too loud. The computers hummed like they were nervous.
Sophie was already at her desk, laptop open, and tea untouched. She looked up, eyes rimmed with tiredness.
“You’re early,” I said.
“You’re late,” she replied.
“By two minutes.”
“That’s two minutes you didn’t have,” she said and spun the screen toward me.
I read the notification once.
Then again, slower, like slowing down would soften it.
TRANSFER REJECTED. INSUFFICIENT FUNDS.
My tongue stuck to the roof of my mouth. “That’s… not possible.”
Sophie’s laugh was short and dry. “I had the same thought. It didn’t help.”
“Run it again,” I said.
“I did.”
“From the reserve account.”
Sophie’s hands stayed still on the keyboard. “We don’t have one.”
I stared at her. “We always…"
“We did,” she corrected, and reached into a folder without taking her eyes off mine. She slid one sheet across the desk.
A statement. A withdrawal. A neat signature at the bottom.
Hector Morel.
My father’s handwriting always looked calm, even when the world wasn’t.
I picked up the page. My fingers didn’t shake. That annoyed me. I wanted my body to react properly.
“When?” I asked.
“Yesterday,” Sophie said. “Late.”
“And he didn’t tell me.”
“He told me to process it.”
“For what?” My voice lifted without permission. I lowered it again. “What did he say?”
Sophie hesitated, then spoke like she was walking across thin ice. “He called it… short-term coverage.”
“Coverage for who?” I asked.
Sophie’s eyes flicked to the door. Not fear. Habit. “When I asked, he said I should be grateful to still have a job.”
My chest went tight. “He said that to you?”
Sophie shrugged, too small to reach. “He said it like he was doing me a favor.”
I set the statement down carefully, like slamming it would crack something we couldn’t afford to replace.
“Okay,” I said. “Okay. We should fix it.”
Sophie didn’t move. “With what?”
I opened my mouth, then closed it.
Outside, the factory noise seeped through the walls—glass clinking, a distant shout, the steady roar of heat. The building kept working, even if our accounts didn’t.
“Call the bank,” I said. “Put it on speaker.”
Sophie’s fingers flew. The speakerphone beeped. A recorded voice thanked us warmly for our patience. Warmth should be taxed.
While it rang, I stood and walked to the window that looked down onto the floor.
Henri’s shoulders were hunched. Mireille stood with her arms folded, staring toward the office like she could pull answers through glass. A few workers slowed when they passed beneath our window.
They knew. Of course they did. You can’t hide panic in a place where people hear everything.
The line clicked.
“Banque Saint-Clair,” a woman said. “How may I assist?”
Sophie gave account details. Verification questions. Answers. The woman’s voice tightened, still polite.
“Ms. Morel,” she said.
“That’s me,” I said, leaning toward the speaker. “I need payroll released today.”
A pause. The kind that meant the answer had already been decided.
“Your facility is under review,” she said. “There are restrictions on outgoing transfers.”
“Restrictions don’t pay wages,” I said.
“I understand…”
“Do you?” I asked. “Because my staff can’t feed ‘under review.’”
Sophie made a small sound…half warning, half agreement.
The banker’s tone softened by a hair. “Your accounts show delinquency notices, Ms. Morel.”
I froze. “Notices?”
“Yes. Multiple. Over several weeks.”
My stomach dropped. It wasn’t a stumble. It was a fall.
“Email them,” I said. “All of them.”
“Of course,” the woman replied, relief creeping in like she was glad the conversation was ending.
The line clicked off.
Sophie stared at her screen as if she could re-read it into better news. “I didn’t know about notices.”
“I didn’t either,” I said.
The clock ticked. The computer hummed. The factory kept breathing.
Then the door opened without knocking.
Luc wandered in as if the office were his bedroom. My little brother’s smile showed up first, bright and careless.
Then he caught my face and stopped.
“Oh,” he said. “Okay. So it’s that kind of day.”
“Luc,” I said.
He held up both hands. “I’m not here to start trouble.”
“Then why are you here?”
He glanced at Sophie, then back to me. “Dad told me to check on you.”
Sophie’s eyebrows lifted. “How thoughtful.”
Luc grimaced at her. “Don’t. I didn’t ask to be the messenger.”
I turned to him. “Where is he?”
Luc’s voice dropped. “In his office.”
“Of course.”
He stepped closer, lowering his voice like we were conspirators. “Before you go in there… breathe.”
I stared at him. “What happened?”
Luc swallowed. His throat bobbed. “He’s calm.”
That was what he said when he meant dangerous.
Sophie stood abruptly. “I’ll… go check the emails.”
She didn’t wait for permission. She grabbed her mug and left like she wanted distance between herself and the name Hector Morel.
Luc watched her go, then turned back to me. “He says he’s handling it.”
“What is ‘it’?” I asked.
Luc shrugged, helpless. “Something bigger than payroll. He said you’d understand.”
I didn’t answer, because if I opened my mouth, I’d say something sharp enough to cut my own tongue.
I grabbed the folder with the withdrawal statement and walked out, Luc trailing behind me.
The corridor to my father’s office felt narrower than it used to. Same carpet. Same framed photos of factory openings and smiling politicians. Different air.
Hector’s door was shut.
That alone was a message.
I knocked once. Not polite.
“Come in,” my father called, warm as a Sunday.
I opened the door.
Hector Morel stood behind his desk in a crisp shirt, sleeves buttoned, and posture perfect. Silver at the temples. Calm smile. He looked like a man hosting a meeting, not a man who’d emptied a reserve account and let payroll bounce.
“Yselle,” he said. “You look tired.”
I didn’t sit.
“Payroll rejected,” I said.
His smile didn’t change. “Did it?”
“Yes.”
“And you moved our reserve,” I added, sliding the statement onto his desk. “Without telling me.”
He glanced down at the page like it was a menu item he didn’t order. Then he looked back up. “I moved funds.”
“Where?” I asked.
His smile softened, fatherly. “To cover a larger problem.”
“And wages aren’t a large problem?” My voice stayed level, but it took effort.
He came around the desk slowly, stopping close enough that I could smell his cologne—clean, expensive, familiar.
“You’re upset,” he said.
“I’m informed,” I corrected.
His eyes cooled for a second. The warmth returned to his voice anyway. “You don’t have the full picture.”
“Then give it to me,” I said.
He didn’t.
Instead, he turned his head slightly toward the door, like he was listening for something.
A knock cut through the room...sharp and professional.
I turned.
A man in a dark coat stood in the doorway, holding a sealed envelope and a leather briefcase. Neutral face. Practiced posture. The kind of person paid to deliver bad news with clean hands.
“Mr. Hector Morel,” he said. Then his gaze moved to me. “Ms. Yselle Morel.”
My father’s calm smile widened as if this were an expected guest.
The man lifted the envelope slightly. “Final notice,” he said. “Effective immediately.”
My father didn’t reach for it right away.
He looked at me instead, still smiling.
Like he was about to call this a solution.
Paper scatters differently when everyone in the room knows at least one sheet can ruin a bloodline.The briefcase hit the stone hard enough for the latch to split. Pages burst across the pantry floor in a messy white fan—typed statements, old copies, notary forms, insurance extracts, one church transfer slip, and the counter-file Hector had come there to protect.Gabriel kicked the case away first.I got to the counter file second.Hector got a hand on my sleeve.I shook him off.He came again.Gabriel blocked him this time with a shoulder hard enough to send him into the shelving.Glass jars rattled.One cracked.Brine smell opened sharply into the cold room.Luc moved to Yselle’s side instead of his father’s.That mattered more than the shove.Hector saw it.Of course he did.And because men like him do not believe in losing rooms cleanly, he said the filthiest thing availa
The morning split three ways at once.That was the trouble with truth once it finally came out of hiding. It never walked into one room politely and waited to be understood. It moved through bodies, phones, roads, old grudges, bank records, chapel locks, and frightened men who had spent years being useful to the wrong person.Claire stood in the rose house with one hand on the table and the other pressed briefly against her ribs as if the effort of standing inside her own history had become physical. Yselle had already folded the witness page and tucked it inside her coat. I had Julien on one line, Gabriel on another, and the whole day trying to split under us.“Hector moved before dawn,” I said. “Sabine’s line is still inside the house, Luc is gone, and if Benoît runs, this becomes another week where the dead stay expensive and the living do the apologizing.”Claire looked at Yselle, not me. “Then stop letting me
For half a second, dawn stopped being dawn.The rose house, the packet, Adrien’s unentered name, Claire sitting upright and alive across from us, the witness page…everything narrowed into one brutal line:Luc gone.Yselle’s head snapped toward me at once.“What do you mean gone?”Gabriel’s voice came back in my ear, steady because panic in men like him is always a private act.“Bed unused after zero-four-thirty. Window latched from inside. Guest door opened once at zero-five-oh-seven on internal service override. No visual after that.”Service override.Not random. Not Luc climbing stupidly into the dark.Chosen access.House knowledge.Again.Claire closed her eyes once.“Sabine,” she said.Yselle turned. “You know that?”“I know the difference between frightened improvisation and a clean pull.”
The rose house looked smaller in winter.Not delicate. Exposed.Glass panels frosted at the lower corners. Stone base holding old cold. The summer vines stripped down to thorn and memory against the frame. It sat at the edge of the lower garden where the terrace path gave up pretending it belonged to company and became something quieter.Yselle walked beside me, not behind, not ahead, coat buttoned high and gloves on. Her breath rose pale in the dawn air.She saw the light before I said anything.“So we’re not first.”“No.”“Do you find that irritating?”“Yes.”“Good.”The path had been cleared recently. That was the first thing I noticed on approach. Fresh shovel lines. Too neat for wind. Too early for ordinary staff rounds.I put one hand out lightly across her path before the last three steps.She looked down at it.Then at me.
Renaud’s POVI did not sleep.That was not unusual. Sleep and I had never been loyal to each other. But that night there was no even pretense of rest, no shallow drift, and no clean break between one thought and the next. The house had changed after Claire’s note, and old houses resent change the way men like Hector resent exposure. They settle differently. They listen harder. They remember too much.I stood in the war room with my jacket off, tie discarded somewhere sensible, and looked again at the card Colette had brought.If she wants the whole truth about the father line, bring her to the rose house at dawn. Alone if she is still angry. With Renaud if she is finally wise.Claire always had a talent for insult folded into instruction.
The house sounded different after the truth.Not cleaner. Not lighter.Just honest in the ugliest places.Pipes clicked in the walls. Floorboards gave under old weight. Somewhere in the far service wing, a door shut with the careful firmness of staff who had learned, finally, that the family they served could no longer pretend to be ordinary.Snow rested along the terrace rails outside the library windows. The river beyond the trees had gone black-blue under the evening, cold and watchful. It no longer felt like an enemy. It felt like a witness that had seen too much and chosen silence only because no one had asked it correctly.I stood by the fire in the library with a glass of water I had not touched and watched the reflection of the room in the dark window.No war maps anymore.No pinned photos. No string. No furious handwriting. No names circled like targets.The war room door behind the shelves stood open no
We did not leave through the main lobby.That would have been theatrical, and nothing about that morning needed more theater. Gabriel took us down the service lift, through lower legal access, past storage rooms full of obsolete displays and folding chairs, and out into the loading lane wh
The boardroom did not breathe properly after Sabine left.It pretended to.Chairs adjusted. Papers moved. Someone near the far end asked for water in a voice too careful to be ordinary. The acting chair said something procedural about reconvening structure and preserving order, as i
If Hector cracked like glass under heat, Sabine moved like a knife being withdrawn before the blood reached the cloth.She had been watching him unravel with the stillness of a woman already revising her future in real time. Not saving him. Not even trying. Measuring exactly which pieces o
Hector chose his moment well.Of course he did.The room had already been cut open by the packet, by the birth amendment, by Sabine’s retrieval trail, by the note in my sleeve and the dead weight of all the names none of us had yet said fully aloud. The board had gone from governanc







