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SECOND LIFE: CEO's shadow
img img SECOND LIFE: CEO's shadow img Chapter 6 The warning
6 Chapters
Chapter 7 The mistress appears img
Chapter 8 The sabotage img
Chapter 9 The invitation img
Chapter 10 First victory img
Chapter 11 The contract img
Chapter 12 The ice king melts img
Chapter 13 Moving in img
Chapter 14 Public reveal img
Chapter 15 The blue folder img
Chapter 16 The silent killer img
Chapter 17 The scary protector img
Chapter 18 Vane emerald img
Chapter 19 The trap img
Chapter 20 The mirror img
Chapter 21 The gala of shadows img
Chapter 22 Damage control img
Chapter 23 The wildcard img
Chapter 24 The secret study img
Chapter 25 The intruder img
Chapter 26 The fallout img
Chapter 27 The counter strike img
Chapter 28 The counter-leak img
Chapter 29 Breaking point img
Chapter 30 The verdict img
Chapter 31 Tension rising img
Chapter 32 Close call img
Chapter 33 Corporate pressure img
Chapter 34 The silent partner img
Chapter 35 The future img
Chapter 36 Shared secret img
Chapter 37 Marcus escalates img
Chapter 38 Hidden threats img
Chapter 39 Public pressure mounts img
Chapter 40 Near death img
Chapter 41 Aftermath and resolve img
Chapter 42 Escalation img
Chapter 43 Small victory img
Chapter 44 Suspicion img
Chapter 45 Attempted assasination img
Chapter 46 Betrayal revealed img
Chapter 47 Tension in the boardroom img
Chapter 48 Fracture img
Chapter 49 The fall of Marcus img
Chapter 50 The price of truth img
Chapter 51 The net img
Chapter 52 The glitch img
Chapter 53 The leverage img
Chapter 54 The concrete box img
Chapter 55 The probability model img
Chapter 56 The glass room img
Chapter 57 The crack in door img
Chapter 58 The breaking point img
Chapter 59 The feeding frenzy img
Chapter 60 The blue print of us img
Chapter 61 Epilogue : the long Architecture img
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Chapter 6 The warning

The interior of Alistair's car smelled like expensive leather. It was silent, the kind of silence that feels heavy in your ears. Outside, the city lights blurred into long streaks of neon, but inside the blacked-out windows, it felt like we were in another dimension.

Alistair sat in the corner of the seat, his long legs crossed. He didn't look at me. He was staring out the window, his jaw set in a hard line. He looked like he was thinking about a thousand things at once, and none of them were good.

"You have eight minutes left," he said. He didn't check his watch. He just knew.

My heart was doing a frantic dance in my chest, but I kept my hands folded neatly in my lap. "In three months, Marcus Reed is going to announce a partnership with the South-Side Port Authority. He told you he's building tech for them, right?"

Alistair's eyes flicked to mine. They were cold and sharp, like the edge of a knife. "How do you know what he told me?"

"Because I was the one who wrote the proposal in my first-" I caught myself just in time. I couldn't tell him the truth yet. He'd think I was insane. "I mean, I saw the files on his desk. But Marcus is lying to you, Alistair. He isn't building tech. He's using that partnership as a front to smuggle high-end emeralds out of the country without paying the Vane estate taxes. And he's going to frame Thorne Industries as the primary investor when the feds show up."

Alistair didn't move, but the air in the car seemed to get colder. "That's a very specific accusation. If you're wrong, or if you're trying to use me to settle a lover's spat, you'll regret the day you ever learned my name."

"I'm not wrong," I said, leaning forward. I let the anger I felt for Marcus show in my eyes. "He's been planning this for a year. He needs my inheritance to pay the bribe for the port director. That's why he's so desperate for me to sign those papers."

Alistair finally turned his whole body toward me. He reached out, his large hand grabbing my chin. He didn't hurt me, but his grip was firm, forcing me to look directly into his dark gaze.

"You're a Vane," he whispered. "You've been protected your whole life. Why are you suddenly turning on the man you were supposed to marry? What did he do to make you this desperate?"

I felt a lump in my throat. I couldn't tell him that Marcus had pushed me off a roof. I couldn't tell him that I had felt my life end in the dark.

"He showed me who he really is," I said, my voice trembling just a little. "And I realized that if I don't kill his ambition now, he'll kill me later. Literally or figuratively, it doesn't matter. I want him gone, Alistair. And you're the only person who can help me do it without getting my hands dirty."

Alistair searched my face for a long time. I didn't look away. I didn't blink. I let him see every bit of the jagged, broken parts of my soul.

Slowly, he let go of my chin. He leaned back and let out a short, sharp breath.

"The Midnight Emerald I bought tonight," he said, his voice low. "People say it's cursed. They say whoever owns it finds ruin. Do you believe in curses, Clara?"

"I think people make their own ruin," I said. "Marcus made his when he decided I was an easy target."

Alistair looked at me, and for the first time, I saw a tiny glint of something that wasn't coldness. It was respect. "I'll look into the port deal. If I find even a grain of truth in what you said, I'll give you the protection you want. But understand this: if you work with me, you belong to the Thorne circle. That means no more Marcus. No more games. You do what I say, when I say it."

"Deal," I said immediately.

The car pulled up to the curb in front of my apartment. Alistair didn't get out to open the door for me. He just sat there, a shadow in the corner of the seat.

"One more thing," he said as I reached for the door handle. "That emerald stone... the one I overpaid for because of you? It's sitting on the seat next to you."

I looked down. The small velvet box was sitting right there.

"Consider it a warning," Alistair said. "It's beautiful, but it's heavy. If you aren't strong enough to carry it, it will crush you. Just like this world will."

I picked up the box. It felt like it weighed a hundred pounds. "I'm stronger than I look, Alistair."

"We'll see," he replied.

I got out of the car and watched the black sedan disappear into the night. I stood on the sidewalk, clutching the "cursed" emerald to my chest. I had done it. I had made a deal with the devil.

But as I walked into the lobby of my building, I saw a familiar figure sitting on the velvet sofa, waiting for me.

It was Marcus. And he looked like he was about to explode.

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