I looked at the log.
Then I looked at it again.
"She accessed the Q3 files," I said.
"Yes."
"And the client portfolio."
"Yes."
"And the Harrington invoicing records." I leaned forward slowly. "Marcus. The Harrington invoicing records are not part of the standard executive data package."
"No," Marcus said. "They are not."
The office felt very still.
Aria had not just reviewed the files I sent her. She had gone deeper. Much deeper. She had followed a thread that most people in this building didn't even know existed, on her first day, in under four hours.
I thought about her face in the elevator last night. Calm. Unreadable. The small smile she had given me at the door.
You are going to need it.
She already knew.
I pressed two fingers to my temple and stared at the access log. "Does anyone else know she pulled these files?"
"Not yet. I caught it this morning during routine review." Marcus hesitated. "Ethan. If she keeps digging and finds the reserve account..."
"I know."
"The board cannot find out about that account before you have a chance to explain-"
"I know, Marcus."
He stopped talking.
I stood up and walked to the window. The city spread out below me, indifferent and enormous, doing what it always did regardless of what happened in this office. I had always found that steadying. Today it just felt like distance.
The Executive Operational Reserve account had existed for eight months. It had been set up without my knowledge, without my signature, and without my authorization. I had discovered it four months ago during a private audit and had spent every day since quietly trying to untangle it without triggering a board investigation that would destroy the company's stock value before I could prove what actually happened.
I knew who had created it.
I had known for four months.
I just hadn't been able to prove it yet.
"Where is she now?" I asked.
Marcus checked his phone. "In the marketing department. She called a team meeting at eight this morning. Apparently she restructured the entire Q4 campaign framework before lunch."
I turned from the window. "She what?"
"The team seems to like her." He said it carefully, watching my face. "Apparently she brought breakfast. And remembered everyone's name on the first meeting."
I said nothing.
Of course she did.
Aria had always understood something I had spent years resisting. That people were not just resources to be optimized. That remembering a name, or a preference, or a small detail about someone's life could buy you more loyalty than any salary. I had watched her do it when she was my assistant, moving through the office like sunlight, leaving people a little warmer than she found them.
I had told myself it was a strategy.
It had taken me a long time to admit it was just who she was.
"Set up a meeting with her," I said. "This afternoon."
Marcus raised an eyebrow. "A professional meeting or a-"
"A professional meeting, Marcus."
"Right." He stood and picked up his tablet. Then he paused. "She's not going to stop digging, you know. Whatever she came here for, she's committed to it. You can see it in the way she moves." He looked at me steadily. "You need to decide if you're going to fight her or tell her the truth."
I looked at him.
"The truth," I said quietly, "is complicated."
"It always is." He moved toward the door. "But Ethan. She deserves to know. Whatever happened between you two, she deserves to know."
He left before I could respond.
Which was probably intentional.
My mother called at eleven.
I let it ring three times before I answered. A small, petty act of resistance that accomplished nothing except making me feel marginally better.
"Ethan." Her voice was composed as always. Cool in the way that expensive things are cool. Marble floors. Steel sculptures. Things that look beautiful and give nothing back. "I heard you have a new VP."
"News travels fast."
"I have friends on the board." A pause. "I also heard who it is."
I said nothing.
"Ethan. I want you to listen to me very carefully." Her voice dropped slightly. Not softer. Just more precise. The way she got when she wanted to make sure a point lodged somewhere it couldn't be ignored. "That girl is dangerous. She is not here by accident and she is not here for the company. Whatever she told the board, whatever portfolio she presented, it was all designed to get her back into that building."
"I'm aware," I said.
"Then you know she needs to go."
"She was hired by the board. I cannot remove her without cause."
"Then find cause."
The words landed in the silence between us and sat there.
I thought about Aria in the elevator. The way she had looked at my reflection instead of me, like she was being careful about something. The tiredness she was hiding just as carefully as I was hiding mine. The coffee she had sent me that I had told myself meant nothing and that I had finished before it went cold.
"Mother," I said slowly. "What exactly did you do three years ago?"
The silence that followed was a fraction too long.
Just a fraction. Most people would have missed it. But I had been listening to my mother's silences my entire life and I knew every variation. The impatient ones and the dismissive ones and the rare, carefully controlled ones like this one that meant she was deciding how much to give me.
"I protected this family," she said. "The way I have always protected this family."
"That is not an answer."
"It is the only answer that matters."
"Elena." I never called her by her name. I felt her register it the way a person registers a sudden drop in temperature. "If you did something that hurt her. If what happened three years ago was not what I believed it was-"
"Don't." Her voice sharpened. Just slightly. Just enough. "Don't do this to yourself. She is back for revenge, Ethan. A woman like that, after three years, does not come back for reconciliation. She comes back to burn things down. Do not let sentiment make you foolish."
"Was it you?" I asked. "The woman in my apartment that night. The call Aria received. Was that you?"
Silence.
"Mother."
"Get rid of her," she said. "Before she finds what she is looking for."
She ended the call.
I stood in the middle of my office holding my phone and feeling something settle over me like the moment after a verdict is read. Cold. Final. Clarifying.
I had suspected for months. I had told myself I needed proof before I acted on suspicion. I had been careful and measured and strategic the way my father raised me to be.
But my mother had just confirmed it in the only way she knew how.
By refusing to deny it.
I cancelled two afternoon meetings and kept the one with Aria.
She arrived at 3 PM exactly. Not a minute early, not a minute late. She was wearing dark navy today, her hair pulled back, a leather notebook under her arm. She sat across from me and crossed her ankles and looked at me with those steady brown eyes that had always seen more than I was comfortable with.
"Mr. Kane," she said.
"Miss Sinclair." I folded my hands on the desk. "How are you settling in?"
"Very well, thank you."
"Good." I held her gaze. "I owe you an apology for yesterday. My behavior when you arrived was unprofessional."
Something shifted in her expression. Small. Quickly contained.
"Apology accepted," she said carefully.
"I also want you to know," I continued, keeping my voice even, "that you will have my full cooperation as VP of Marketing. Whatever files you need. Whatever access. No delays."
She studied me for a moment with the focused attention of someone trying to identify a sound they almost recognize.
"That is a significant change from yesterday," she said.
"Yes."
"Why?"
I looked at her across the desk. At the woman who had rebuilt herself from the ground up while I had been standing still without realizing it. At the woman I had failed in ways I was only now beginning to fully understand.
"Because," I said quietly, "I think we may want the same thing."
The room was very still.
Aria looked at me for a long time. Her expression gave away nothing. But her hands, I noticed, had stilled on the leather notebook in her lap.
"That," she said finally, "would be very inconvenient."
She stood, smoothed her jacket, and walked to the door.
"Send me the Harrington account files, Mr. Kane," she said without turning around. "All of them. Including the ones you've been keeping off the main server."
She left.
I leaned back in my chair and stared at the ceiling.
Inconvenient, she had said.
She had no idea.
END OF CHAPTER 4