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Wrecked by my enemy
Wrecked by my enemy
Author: Caroline

Chapter 1: The Perfect Son

Author: Caroline
last update publish date: 2026-04-29 18:09:38

"To my son," Victor Hawthorne said, raising his glass, "and the future that finally makes this family complete."

The applause started immediately. Three hundred people in a room that cost more per square foot than most people earned in a year, all of them clapping for a toast that wasn't a toast at all. Elias Hawthorne knew the difference. He had been learning the difference his whole life.

He smiled and lifted his champagne. He looked at Sophia beside him, her hand warm and steady on his arm, her diamond catching the light. She was beautiful and brilliant. She was exactly what his father had ordered.

"You look perfect tonight," she said quietly, leaning close.

"Thank you," he said, and he meant none of it.

The problem with being good at performance was that it left you alone inside it. Elias had been inside this particular performance for twenty eight years. The dutiful son, polished heir. The boy who knew how to sit straight, speak precisely and never let anything real show on his face. He was excellent at it. He had been excellent at it since the age of seven when his father had grabbed his chin in the back of a town car and said, quietly and without heat: *Men in this family don't let people see them feel things. Do you understand me?*

He had understood and had never stopped understanding.

Across the room, Victor was working the crowd.  His father moved through people the way a scalpel moved through tissue, clean and deliberate, leaving something behind that would take a while to notice. A laugh here. A hand on a shoulder there. The particular smile he reserved for senators, old money and anyone who controlled something he needed. Elias watched him and felt the same thing he always felt, which was a tightness behind his sternum that he had no name for.

He had a name for it, actually. He just never used it.

The $2.3 billion port deal had closed at 4:47 that afternoon. Elias had been the one to build it, three months of eighteen hour days and a negotiation strategy that his team had called borderline brilliant. His father had taken the podium at the announcement and said "Hawthorne Group delivers." Six words. No names. Elias had stood at the back of the room and felt the tightness again, deeper this time, and then he had gone back to work.

He was thinking about this when his father appeared at his elbow.

"Good turnout," Victor said.

"Yes."

"Sophia looks well."

"She does."

"You should smile more. You look like you're at a board meeting."

Elias smiled.

Victor studied him for a moment with the same flat assessment he brought to quarterly reports. Then, low enough that only Elias could hear: "Come with me."

He didn't phrase it as a request. He never did.

The rooftop terrace was empty except for the wind and the city below, all of it lit up and small from this height. Victor stood at the railing and didn't turn around when Elias joined him. This was another thing Elias had learned over twenty eight years: the conversations that happened without eye contact were the ones that cost the most.

"Do you know what your problem is?" Victor said.

"You've told me several times."

"Your problem is that you think I don't see you." He turned then, and the look on his face was not cruel. That was the worst part. It was patient. It was the face of a man who believed he was doing something necessary. "I see everything, Elias. I have always seen everything."

The wind moved between them.

"Sophia is your last chance," Victor said. "I have been patient and I have been generous. I have given you time to sort yourself out and you have not done it. So I am telling you now, clearly, so there is no confusion later: fix this. Fix yourself. Or I will fix you the way I fixed your uncle."

The words landed the way precisely. Elias felt his body go very still the way it had learned to go still as a child, every muscle locking down to keep anything from showing on the surface.

He said, "I understand."

Victor looked at him a moment longer. Then he nodded and went back inside. Elias was alone on the rooftop with the wind, the city and the tightness in his chest that had become something else, something larger, something he couldn't keep calling nameless.

His uncle had disappeared when Elias was three. He existed in exactly two photographs and one sentence his mother had said once, while looking out a window: *Edmund was not what your father needed him to be.* Elias had not asked what that meant. He had always known what it meant.

He stood at the railing for a long time.

Then he took out his phone.

He had heard about The Veil once in a gathering like this. It was ultra-exclusive, anonymous and members only in a way that required money, references and a kind of desperation that most people wouldn't put on a form. He had looked it up once, eight months ago, and then deleted his browser history and told himself he was being insane.

He pulled up the site now.

His hands were steady. That surprised him. He had expected them to shake.

The blindfold protocol was listed under a dropdown titled *Full Anonymity Options*. No light, No names or conversation required. The f*e was obscene. The confirmation process was three clicks.

He typed in his card number and clicked confirm.

The confirmation email arrived in under a minute. One line of body text: *Blindfold protocol confirmed. No names. No mercy.*

Elias stared at it.

The door behind him opened and a member of the event staff leaned out, professionally blank. "Mr. Hawthorne, your guests are asking for you."

"I'll be right there," he said.

He looked at himself in the dark glass of his phone screen. The reflection looked like him, the tuxedo, the jaw and the eyes that were his mother's, the only soft thing Victor had never managed to fully remove. He looked like the heir and the future of a dynasty. He looked like everything he had been built to look like.

"Tonight," he said quietly to the reflection, "I stop pretending."

He pocketed his phone and went back inside.

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