The receptionist looked up as she entered, her smile automatic, her eyes scanning for recognition.
"Do you have an appointment?"
"Alexandra Blanchard. I'm here to see Arthur Marr."
The name registered. She saw it in the micro-expression, the dilation of pupil, the slight parting of lips. Blanchard. The woman whose suicide attempt had been in yesterday's tabloids, whose husband's stock had skyrocketed while her lover's had imploded.
"I'm afraid Mr. Marr is in meetings all day. If you'd like to leave your card-"
"Tell him I'm here about Cary Castro. And the Apex Technology financing." Alexandra removed her sunglasses. Let the receptionist see her eyes, the exhaustion in them, the desperation she didn't have to fake. "Tell him I know about the short position. And I'm prepared to discuss it with the SEC if he doesn't have fifteen minutes for his niece's oldest friend."
The receptionist's hand hovered over the phone. Alexandra could see her calculating-scandal, publicity, the risk of turning away a woman who might do anything.
"One moment."
The wait was seven minutes by the antique clock on the wall. Alexandra spent it studying the firm's credentials, the photographs of Arthur Marr with politicians and celebrities, the subtle display of power that decorated every surface.
Arthur Marr emerged from a corner office, a man in his sixties with the preserved look of the very wealthy, the tan that came from St. Barts rather than the sun, the smile that reached everywhere except his eyes.
"Alexandra. What a surprise." He extended a hand that felt like polished wood. "I was just saying to Lilith that we should have you over for dinner. It's been too long."
"Has it?" She followed him into the office, noting the security camera in the corner, the position of the desk that allowed him to face the door while visitors had their backs to it. "I feel like I've seen quite a lot of your family lately. Indirectly."
Marr's smile didn't waver. He gestured to a chair and settled behind his desk, steepling his fingers in a pose of patient attention.
"How can I help you, my dear? I understand you've had a difficult few days. The pressures of marriage, the temptations of-" He waved a hand, inclusive, dismissive. "-youth. Believe me, I understand. My own first marriage was something of a learning experience."
Alexandra didn't sit. She walked to the window instead, looking down at the street below, the ant-like movement of people who didn't know they were being watched from above.
"I'm not here to discuss my marriage, Mr. Marr. I'm here to discuss your client. The one who financed Cary Castro's short position against Blanchard Group. The one who fed him confidential information about Apex Technology's patent vulnerabilities."
Marr's silence was its own answer. She heard him shift in his chair, the creak of leather, the subtle change in breathing.
"I don't know what you're-"
"Save it." She turned. The light from the window was behind her now, throwing her face into shadow, making her voice seem to come from everywhere at once. "I have documentation. Emails. Wire transfer records. The kind of evidence that doesn't just implicate your client-it implicates you. Facilitating insider trading. Conspiracy to commit securities fraud. Enough to disbar you. Enough to put you in prison."
She let the words settle. Watched his face cycle through denial, anger, calculation, and finally the cold pragmatism of a man who had built his fortune on knowing when to fold.
"What do you want?"
"Names." She stepped closer, close enough to see the pores of his skin, the slight tremor in his hands. "Who hired you? Who wanted Blanchard taken down? Who's been feeding information to Cary, to Lilith, to everyone who's tried to hurt my husband?"
Marr's eyes flicked to the security camera, then back to her. "I can't-"
"You can." She leaned forward, both hands on his desk, invading his space, his power, his carefully constructed authority. "Because the alternative is me walking out of here and calling the U.S. Attorney's office. And I promise you, Mr. Marr, I have enough evidence to make sure you never see daylight again."
She didn't, not really. Queen had found fragments, connections, suspicious patterns. But nothing that would survive discovery, that would hold up in court, that would do more than inconvenience a man with Marr's resources and relationships.
But he didn't know that. And she had learned, in her previous life and this one, that the appearance of certainty was often more powerful than certainty itself.
Marr's composure cracked. She saw it in the sweat that appeared at his hairline, in the way his fingers drummed against the desk, seeking purchase.
"There's a fund." He said finally. "Offshore. Structured through three shell companies in Cyprus. They approached me six months ago, looking for access to information about Blanchard's acquisition pipeline. I didn't ask why. I didn't want to know."
"Who runs it?"
"I don't know. I've never met them. Communications through encrypted email, payments through cryptocurrency." He laughed, bitter. "I thought I was being careful. I thought I was protecting myself."
Alexandra straightened. The information was useless-another ghost, another mirror. But the pattern was becoming clear. Someone with immense resources. Someone with patience and reach and a specific interest in destroying Blanchard Group.
"And Lilith?"
Marr's face closed. "My niece knows nothing about this. She's-she's been manipulated, the same as you. The same as everyone."
"Has she?" Alexandra picked up her sunglasses from where she'd set them on his desk. "Or is she the one who suggested Cary to your mysterious clients? Who made sure I was vulnerable, available, stupid enough to be used?"
She didn't wait for an answer. She turned toward the door, then paused, looking back at the man who had helped orchestrate her destruction, who had profited from her pain, who would have watched her burn without lifting a finger.
"One more thing, Mr. Marr. The fund. The one you don't know anything about. What's it called?"
Marr's mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
"Aurelian." He whispered. "They call themselves Aurelian Capital."
Alexandra felt the floor tilt beneath her feet. The name echoed in her mind, a ghost she had chased through the dark corners of the market for years. A phantom entity, a financial leviathan that moved without leaving footprints. Holt's secret was Sterling Holdings, she knew that. This was something else. Something older, bigger, and far more malevolent.
"This isn't Holt's company," she thought, her mind racing. "This is an enemy. One that knows his mother's name and is using it as a weapon." The realization was a shard of ice in her gut. Someone was not just attacking Holt, they were mocking him, wearing the skin of his most private legacy.
"Thank you." She said, her voice distant, automatic. "You've been very helpful."
She made it to the elevator before her legs gave out. Leaned against the mirrored wall and watched her reflection multiply, the same image she'd seen in the hotel elevator with Cary, the same infinite regression of a woman trying to outrun her own shadow.
Aurelian Capital. The name was a message, a taunt, a declaration of war against everything Holt had built in secret.
And she had just walked into the middle of it, armed with nothing but borrowed threats and a laptop full of secrets that might not be enough.
The elevator opened onto the lobby. Alexandra walked through it without seeing, her mind racing through implications, connections, the thousand ways this could end.
She needed to warn Holt. But how? What could she say that wouldn't reveal her own hidden empire, her own secret identity, the network of information that had no legitimate explanation?
She needed to investigate. To use Queen's resources to trace this shadow Aurelian, to find its operators, to understand why they were using Holt's own name against him.
She needed-
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number.
Mrs. Blanchard. We should talk. The rooftop garden at the Whitmore. One hour. Come alone.
Alexandra stopped in the middle of the sidewalk, pedestrians flowing around her like water around stone. The Whitmore. The same hotel where she had found Cary last night. The same building, the same elevator, the same pattern of someone knowing her movements before she made them.
She could ignore it. Go home, lock the doors, surround herself with the security Holt's name and money could buy.
Or she could go. Learn what game was being played, who was moving pieces she hadn't seen on a board she was only beginning to understand.
Alexandra looked up at the sky, gray with approaching rain, and made her choice.
She would go. But she wouldn't go alone.
Her fingers moved across her phone, activating protocols Queen had built for exactly this situation. Location sharing with a dead drop. Encrypted recording to cloud storage. A timer that would alert her emergency contacts if she didn't check in within ninety minutes.
She was done being the pawn. Done being the victim, the fool, the woman who walked into traps because she didn't know they were there.
Whoever was waiting at the Whitmore, whatever they wanted, they were about to learn that Alexandra Blanchard had teeth.