Chapter 102
Author: Daniel Quill
last update2026-03-22 18:08:56

The first call came three minutes after delivery.

It did not ring long.

Vincent watched the screen, let it vibrate once more, then answered.

“Yes.”

A voice on the other end—controlled, but not calm.

“You sent this.”

Not a question.

“I delivered information,” Vincent said.

A pause. Paper shifting. Breathing, slightly elevated.

“You think this changes anything?”

Vincent’s expression did not move.

“I don’t think,” he said. “I know you’ve already checked the first page against your own records.”

Si
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    Kai did not put the call on speaker.He stepped away from the table, away from Lila and Okonkwo, to the window at the far end of the boardroom where the city spread out below in its usual indifference.“How did you get this number,” he said.“We’ve had it for some time,” Agent Reyes said. Her voice was measured, the voice of someone who had learned to deliver information in a register that did not telegraph its weight before the recipient was ready to receive it. “I understand the board session just concluded. I’d like to meet today if possible.”“Meet where,” Kai said.“Somewhere that isn’t your office building,” she said. “We’ve been watching the building since Tuesday and I’d rather continue that without announcing it to anyone who might still be in the lobby.”Kai looked at the window.Watching the building since Tuesday.Tuesday was the day after Okonkwo’s first call. The day Kai had gone to the fourteenth floor with no name on the outside and come back carrying the shape of what

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    The board chair was a woman named Constance Mbeki who had held the position for six years and who ran sessions the way a surgeon ran a theater, with economy, precision, and a low tolerance for anything that extended the time without extending the value.She opened at ten-oh-two.“We have a full agenda,” she said. “I’d like to move through it efficiently. Before we begin I want to acknowledge that several members have reached out to me this morning regarding the document distributed last night. We will address that under new business. First, the quarterly financial review.”Kai looked at Lila.She gave the smallest shake of her head.Not yet.The quarterly review took eleven minutes. The facilities update took six. A vote on a vendor contract passed eight to four without significant discussion.Vance sat at his end of the table and said nothing.That was the thing Kai had not anticipated.He had expected Vance to move early, to use the agenda as a lever, to find some procedural mechani

  • Chapter 175

    Vance was standing when Kai walked into the executive lounge.Not pacing. Standing. The deliberate stillness of a man who had decided that motion would cost him something.Renshaw was not there.Kai noted the absence without showing that he had noted it.The lounge was empty except for Vance, a tray of untouched coffee on the low table between two chairs, and the particular quality of a room that had been recently vacated by someone who had left quickly.“Where’s Peter,” Kai said.“He needed a moment,” Vance said. “He’ll be up for the session.”Kai looked at him.Vance was composed but it was the composition of effort rather than ease, the kind that was visible precisely because it was so thoroughly maintained. Eleven years of watching this man across tables had given Kai the ability to read the difference, and the difference this morning was significant.Something had already gone wrong for Vance.He did not yet know how wrong.“You wanted to see me,” Kai said.“I did.” Vance moved t

  • Chapter 174

    Nobody moved for three seconds.Then Lila stood.“James,” she said, her voice completely level. “Go to reception. Tell them Mr. Vance and Mr. Renshaw are welcome to wait in the executive lounge. Offer them coffee. Do not bring them up here.”“And if they ask for Kai or you directly,” James said.“Tell them we’re in a prior commitment that ends at nine-forty-five,” she said. “Smile when you say it.”James left.Lila looked at Hartmann and Ashford.“How much of what you know does Vance know that you know,” she said.Hartmann and Ashford exchanged a look.It was the look of two people measuring, in real time, how much of a shared history they were willing to expose in front of witnesses.Ashford spoke first.“He knows I left because I was uncomfortable,” he said. “He doesn’t know I kept records.”“You kept records,” Kai said.“I kept records,” Ashford said, without apology.“Of what specifically,” Lila said.Ashford reached into his jacket and produced a folded envelope. He set it on the

  • Chapter 173

    She was in the small meeting room at the end of the corridor when he got back.The one without glass walls.The one she chose when she did not want to be visible.Kai came in and closed the door and looked at her.She was standing, not sitting, one hand resting on the back of a chair, the other at her side. Her jacket was still buttoned. Her face was arranged in the particular way it arranged itself when she had been handed something and was deciding what to do with it before she allowed herself to feel it.Ashford waited in the corridor.Kai had told him two minutes.“Tell me the name,” Lila said.“Renshaw,” Kai said.Something moved through her expression, brief and controlled, there and gone before it could be identified.Peter Renshaw had been on the board for nine years. He was sixty-one, precise, the kind of man who arrived to every meeting having already decided what he thought and used the meeting to confirm it. Four years ago he and Lila had served together on an acquisition

  • Chapter 172

    The board session was scheduled for ten.At eight-seventeen, Kai’s phone rang with a number he did not recognize.He almost let it go.“Hartley,” he said.A pause. Then a voice he had not heard in two years, careful and low, the voice of a man who had learned to speak as though someone was always listening.“It’s Derek Ashford.”Kai went very still.Derek Ashford had resigned from the board fourteen months ago, quietly, with a letter that cited personal reasons and a handshake that had felt like something other than farewell. Kai had not pursued it. Some departures were information in themselves, and the information in Ashford’s had been that the room was becoming something he did not want his name attached to.“Derek,” Kai said.“I know what you’re doing today,” Ashford said. “I know about the summary.”Kai did not ask how. The answer to that question would arrive or it wouldn’t, and asking it now would cost him something he was not ready to spend.“All right,” Kai said.“There’s some

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