Home / Urban / THE SILENT HEIR / Caelum Western
Caelum Western
Author: O.G. DIAGBE
last update2026-05-26 01:37:14

He was in the elevator before the phone screen went dark.

Mira picked up on the first ring.

“Nora’s not answering the card number,” she said. “I tried twice.”

“The research wing extension.”

“Rings out.”

The elevator reached the lobby. Adrian walked through it without adjusting his pace.

“Pull the hospital’s internal staff directory,” he said. “Find anyone physically present in the research wing right now. Building access logs.”

“One moment.”

He pushed through the main doors into the afternoon. His car was at the curb where he had left it two hours ago when the day had a different shape.

“Junior lab technician,” Mira said. “Logged in forty minutes ago.”

“Send her to Nora’s office. Now.”

“I’ll need a—”

“Tell her Dr. Shen needs a signature witnessed on a grant form. Tell her anything.”

A pause. Not hesitation. Mira processing the fastest route.

“Done,” she said.

Adrian ended the call and pulled into traffic heading west.

The drive was twelve minutes.

He did not fill them.

The research wing had the same institutional quiet as before. Same hum from equipment running overnight that never fully stopped. Same corridor with the same fluorescent measure of light that made everything slightly less real than it was.

The man outside Nora’s door was not part of that.

He was standing with his weight on his back foot and his eyes on Adrian before Adrian had covered half the corridor. Not staff posture. Not visitor posture. The specific stillness of someone occupying a position they had been assigned.

Adrian kept walking at the same pace.

“Wing’s closed,” the man said. “System access review.”

“I have an appointment with Dr. Shen.”

“She’s unavailable.”

Adrian looked at the door. Then at the man.

“Who do you work for,” he said.

The man did not answer that.

Adrian stepped around him and opened the door.

Nora was at her desk.

The posture was the same one she had been in when he came through this door the first time — head level, hands visible, the composure of someone who had decided that whatever was happening, she would meet it sitting down. A second man stood near the window. He was holding her phone with the ease of someone who had been holding it long enough that it no longer felt like something he had taken.

No one spoke.

Adrian looked at Nora.

“Get your coat,” he said.

She reached for it from the chair back without a word. The man near the window did not move.

“This is a regulatory compliance audit,” he said. His voice had the flat, practiced quality of a prepared statement. “Research materials review following the administrator access change. Dr. Shen is required to remain available until the audit is complete.”

Adrian looked at him.

“Badge,” he said. “And the case reference number.”

The man produced an ID wallet and held it open. Adrian looked at it without touching it. The name was one he had seen in the regulatory division directory two days ago. The badge format matched the division’s current issue. When the man read the case reference number it followed the correct structure, correct prefix, correct digit sequence, and correct suffix.

All of it correct.

That was the problem with it. Regulatory compliance audits did not send two men to a junior researcher’s office at this hour positioned the way these two had been positioned. Correct credentials were available to people who could afford to obtain them. The network above Dorian had eleven years and sufficient reach into hospital administrative systems to revoke access through an untraceable holding company. Correct credentials were not a significant obstacle.

Adrian looked at the man near the window.

“I’ll need that returned,” he said.

A beat. Two beats.

The phone came out of the jacket.

Adrian crossed to the desk and took it and set it in front of Nora and placed his hand briefly on the back of her chair. Not a gesture she had asked for. Just a placed weight. Something between her and the room.

He looked at the man near the window.

“You’ve completed your audit,” Adrian said. “Thank you for your time.”

He did not move. He did not change the quality of the room. He simply stood between Nora’s desk and the window and held the space with the specific stillness that did not announce itself as anything and did not need to.

The man near the window looked at the man by the door.

The man by the door looked at Adrian.

Then they left.

The door closed.

The room was very quiet.

Nora looked at him with the expression of someone running a rapid recalculation, not relief but the precise reassessment of someone who had been operating under one set of probabilities and was now updating them.

“They were here when I arrived this morning,” she said. “Before the access revocation came through.”

Adrian went still.

Before.

Mira’s message had read the access revocation as the opening move. The system flag that told him someone above Dorian had seen what happened in the boardroom and had moved against Nora in response. But if these men were already here before the system registered the revocation, then the revocation was not the first action.

It was the notification that the first action had already been taken.

He looked at Nora.

“Is there anything in this office,” he said, “that they could have copied.”

Nora did not answer immediately.

She looked at her desk. At the organized density of three years of work in insufficient space. At the specific drawer on the left side that she had not opened since he came through the door.

She did not answer.

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