Clara had spent two days going through everything Victor's legal team had compiled. She had a law degree she barely used and a mind that was wired for finding the one thing everyone else walked past. Victor recognized it within the first hour and by the end of the second day he had quietly offered her a position on the Shao legal team. Clara had accepted without checking with me first, which told me she had already decided this was where she needed to be.
"The lab has six people with access to submitted profiles," Clara continued, sliding a document across the table. "One of them made a call to a private number four days after your results were processed. That number traces back to a communications firm that Richard Cole has used as a buffer for sensitive calls for the past decade."
Victor nodded like this confirmed something he already suspected.
I looked at the document. "So Richard has known for almost two months."
"Which means everything he's done in the last two months has been a response to knowing you were coming," Clara said. "The asset movements. The press relationships he's been quietly tightening. All of it."
"What about Vivienne?" I asked.
Victor answered that one. "Vivienne Lau returned from London six days ago. She met with Richard Cole privately two days after her return. Our source inside the Cole building confirmed the meeting lasted just under two hours."
I sat with that for a moment. Vivienne had always been the ghost in my marriage, the name that changed Damien's face whenever it came up. I had spent three years resenting someone I had never directly confronted. Now she was sitting in private meetings with the man who had engineered my entire disappearance from my own life.
"She's not just a love interest anymore," Clara said, reading my expression. "She's an active player."
"What does she want from Richard?"
"The same thing she's always wanted," Victor said. "Damien. And Richard's support in securing that. What she's offering him in return we don't know yet. But a woman like Vivienne doesn't take meetings with men like Richard Cole without something valuable to trade."
I stood up and walked to the window. The city from thirty two floors looked clean and ordered from up here. Everything in its place. From street level it was chaos but distance had a way of making complicated things look simple.
I had been in this building for three days learning the architecture of my own stolen life. Victor had walked me through everything. My father's work. The companies he built. The vision he had for Shao Industries that Richard had spent years dismantling quietly from the outside after James died. The inheritance that had been sitting in legal suspension for over two decades waiting for a legitimate heir to surface.
Me.
The number attached to my inheritance was so large I had asked Victor to write it down because I didn't trust myself to hold it in the air. He wrote it down. I looked at it for a long time.
Then I folded the paper and put it in my pocket and didn't take it out again because I understood instinctively that the moment I started thinking about the money as real was the moment I would start making emotional decisions and I could not afford that.
What I could afford was clarity.
"I want to move faster," I said, turning back from the window. "Richard has had two months to prepare. Every day we spend building carefully is another day he spends building walls."
"Moving too fast gives him grounds to challenge the legitimacy process," Victor said. "The legal establishment of your identity has to be clean. One procedural error and he will use it to drag this through courts for years."
"I'm not talking about the legal process," I said. "I'm talking about everything around it. His reputation. His alliances. His public standing." I looked at Clara. "You said he's been tightening press relationships."
"Yes."
"Then we need someone inside that circle before he finishes closing it." I looked at Victor. "You said you have a source inside the Cole building. How deep does that go?"
Victor studied me for a moment with an expression I was starting to recognize. It was the look he got when I said something that reminded him of his brother. "Deep enough to be useful. Not deep enough for what you're suggesting."
"Then we find someone who is." I sat back down. "Richard Cole has spent twenty years believing I was neutralized. He put me in a marriage with his own son to keep me contained. He has never once had to take me seriously as an opponent because he never believed I would find out the truth."
"And now?" Victor said.
"Now I know everything he did and he only knows that I exist. That gap is the only advantage we have and it closes the longer we wait."
Clara was already writing something down. Victor leaned back in his chair and looked at me the way he had looked at me the first morning I walked into this office. Like he was recalculating something.
"Your father used to say that the best position in any fight was the one your opponent didn't know you were standing in," he said quietly.
"Then let's make sure Richard Cole keeps looking in the wrong direction."
My phone buzzed on the table. I looked at the screen.
It was a message from a number I hadn't saved but recognized immediately. I had memorized it three years ago without meaning to because it appeared on Damien's phone so often I eventually knew it by heart.
Vivienne Lau.
The message was four words.
"We need to talk."