The offices of Meridian Global occupied six floors of a black glass building in the financial district and were decorated in the particular style of places where enormous amounts of money are managed, which is to say expensively but without warmth, with art on the walls that had been chosen by a consultant rather than a person, and furniture that communicated authority without inviting comfort.
Marcus Vane's office was on the top floor. It was large. It had a view that people paid to describe. He stood at the window now, his phone pressed to his ear, listening. "The patent is clean," the voice on the phone said. "Cleaner than we hoped. The original attorney made one error in the claim specifications, a gap in claim six, but our contact at the patent office tells us that a supplementary amendment was filed this morning. First thing." Marcus said nothing. "The amendment closes the gap. If it's approved, and it will be, the patent is effectively bulletproof." "Who filed the amendment?" "Fisk and Associates." He turned from the window. "Joan Fisk," he said. "Yes." "When did Cross retain her?" "Based on the filing timestamp, she would have had to see the documentation by yesterday at the latest. Which means he had the documentation already organized. Which means he was prepared." A pause. "The retainer is being covered by Helion Capital." Marcus was very still for a moment. "Cross met with Reyes," he said. "That is our conclusion." He sat down in his chair. He turned a pen over in his fingers twice, a habit he was not aware of. "What do we have?" he said. "Legally? Less than we hoped. The prior art searches our team ran last night found two papers that touch adjacent territory, but nothing that directly anticipates Cross's central claims. The design is genuinely novel." Another pause. "There is one avenue that could create delay." "Tell me." "The technology was developed, at least in part, during a legal marriage. Depending on the state of the divorce proceeding and the exact nature of any community property or marital contribution arguments, there may be grounds for a claim that the patent is a marital asset, partially or in full." "Is that viable?" "Our attorney believes it has a twenty to thirty percent chance of creating enough procedural delay to disrupt any immediate commercialization. It would not succeed permanently. But it could slow things down by six to twelve months." Marcus set the pen down. Six to twelve months. In the energy storage sector, in the current climate, with three government green infrastructure bills pending in two countries and capital flooding into the space at a rate that had not been seen in thirty years, six to twelve months was not an inconvenience. Six to twelve months was a war. "Does Elena know about this avenue?" he said. "I've explained it to her attorney." "What is Elena's position?" A pause. "She has not given instruction one way or the other." Marcus nodded to himself. He understood Elena's hesitation. She was not a cruel person. She was a practical person, which was close to the same thing in business contexts but not in human ones, and she had not yet decided which context she was operating in when it came to her husband. Her ex-husband. He thought about Ethan Cross standing at the edge of the celebration last night. He had noticed him arrive. He had watched Elena's face do the small controlled rearrangement that it did when something unexpected appeared. He had watched the man move through the crowd and he had catalogued him the way he catalogued everyone, quickly and with the particular interest of a person who considers everyone either an asset or an obstacle. He had categorized Ethan Cross as neither. He had been wrong. "Instruct Elena's attorney to file the marital asset claim," he said. "Without Elena's direct instruction?" "Get her instruction. Today." He stood up again. "Tell her it is the only leverage we have and it needs to be filed within seventy-two hours to be credible. Tell her it's procedural. Tell her it's not permanent." He moved back to the window. "Tell her whatever she needs to hear." "Understood." "And get me a full profile on Cross. Everything. Where he grew up, who his friends are, what he owes, who he owes it to. If there are any outstanding financial obligations or any personal vulnerabilities that could be relevant, I want to know about them." He looked at the city. "If Sable Reyes has decided to back him, she has already done her due diligence and found nothing. But Sable looks for strengths. I look for different things." "By end of day," the voice said. He hung up. He stood at the window. He had been in this industry for twenty years. He had backed thirty-one companies from seed to exit. He had competed with Sable Reyes three times in his career and won once, lost once, and drawn once, which was in his estimation an even record against the best in the field. She had gotten to Cross first. That was a setback. Not a defeat. He thought about the technology. He had read the abstract three times and had his technical consultants explain the core claims in terms he could fully grasp. He understood enough to know that whoever controlled this patent controlled the next decade of the energy storage sector. Not a piece of it. The center of it. The energy management platform that Elena had built at SkyBridge was designed, whether she had known it or not, to function best with exactly this kind of storage system. Her software spoke to the hardware that Cross had designed the way two halves of the same language speak to each other. Together they were not just a product. They were an infrastructure. He thought about what it would mean to have both. He thought about what it would mean for Helion Capital to have both. He thought: I cannot allow that. He picked up his phone and called Elena. She answered on the third ring, which meant she had been looking at his name and deciding. "Marcus." "I need to see you this afternoon," he said. "There are decisions to make and I need you fully in this." A pause. "What decisions?" "The ones that protect everything you built," he said. "Come to the office at four." Another pause, shorter. "Fine," she said. "Four." He hung up. He looked at the city. Somewhere out there, in an apartment that probably cost a third of what his parking space cost, a mechanic was sitting at a workbench and thinking about what he was going to do next. Marcus Vane intended to be faster.Latest Chapter
The ghost in the numbers
"Someone is looking at you," Sable said.She slid a folder across the desk as Ethan sat down. Inside was a single printed page, dense with highlighted lines."What is this?" he said."A background investigation report. Someone commissioned it on you four days ago." She tapped the page. "Our security team intercepted a data request made through a private investigation firm that Meridian Global has used before. It covers everything. Your finances. Your employment history. Your family. Your mother."He went very still."My mother," he said."She is not in any danger," Sable said immediately. "This is information gathering, not a threat. But you need to know it is happening." She folded her hands on the desk. "They are looking for leverage. Something personal they can use to create pressure or distraction.""What did they find?" he said."You have no outstanding debts. No legal history. No addictions. No affairs. Your finances are modest but completely clean." She looked at him directly.
Marcus makes his move
The letter arrived at Joan Fisk's office at eight-fifteen in the morning and she called Ethan before eight-thirty."They filed," she said.He was at the new lab with Priya, going through the equipment list. He stepped outside into the corridor."The marital asset claim?" he said."That and something else." A pause, and Joan did not pause unless the thing she was about to say required it. "They have filed a separate action claiming that the conceptual basis for your patent was derived from proprietary research discussions held within SkyBridge Technologies during the period of your marriage."He was very still."They are saying Elena told me what to invent," he said."They are saying there is a possibility that intellectual cross-pollination occurred between your wife's professional environment and your patent work, given the overlapping technical domains." Joan's voice was flat and precise. "They do not have evidence. What they have is a legal filing that creates a public cloud over y
Dr Priya Achar
She was already waiting in Sable's conference room when Ethan arrived, and she was reading something on her tablet so intently that she did not look up for a full four seconds after he sat down.When she did look up, her expression was not the expression of someone meeting a stranger. It was the expression of someone who has studied a subject for a long time and is now, finally, looking at the primary source."You're younger than I expected," she said."You're exactly as I expected," he said.She set the tablet down. Dr. Priya Achar was thirty-eight, with sharp dark eyes behind round glasses and the kind of stillness that belongs to people who spend most of their hours thinking rather than talking. She had driven fourteen hours from her university research lab without stopping to fly because, she would later tell him, she needed the thinking time."I read your full patent application on the way here," she said. "Every word. Every claim. Every technical specification.""And?" he said.
What he left behind
Pete was locking up the garage when Ethan arrived.It was just after six. The evening light was orange and long, stretching the shadows of the buildings across the street into shapes that looked like something else. Pete looked up from the padlock, saw Ethan, and held the door open."Thought you'd be done with this place by now," Pete said."Not done," Ethan said. "Just saying something."They went inside. Pete switched on the overhead lights, the familiar fluorescent buzz filling the space. Ethan looked around at the garage the way you look at something you are about to stop seeing every day.He walked to his workstation. His tools were all in their places. He had always kept them that way, each tool in its specific position, not because anyone required it but because the kind of mind that works the way his did required a physical environment that matched its internal order. He looked at them."I'm going to need some time," he said. "I can't give you a specific date yet, but it will
The Roadmap
Sable was already at the table when he arrived, and she already had documents in front of her.She looked up as he sat down. "You look like you slept.""I did.""Good. I didn't." She pushed one of the documents toward him. "This is the preliminary structure of what I'm calling Cross Energy Systems. Working name, you can change it. The capitalization table is on page three."He looked at the document. Clean, direct, formatted for a person who reads quickly. He scanned to page three. The numbers were as agreed. He folded the document and put it in his jacket pocket.She raised an eyebrow. "You're not going to read it?""I read at the kind of speed that would waste your time," he said. "I'll read it tonight. If anything is wrong I'll call you." He pulled out his own folded papers. "I have something to show you."He laid out the technical roadmap.She looked at it. Her eyes moved across the page quickly, then returned to certain points and slowed."You built this last night," she said."Y
Meridian Moves
The offices of Meridian Global occupied six floors of a black glass building in the financial district and were decorated in the particular style of places where enormous amounts of money are managed, which is to say expensively but without warmth, with art on the walls that had been chosen by a consultant rather than a person, and furniture that communicated authority without inviting comfort.Marcus Vane's office was on the top floor. It was large. It had a view that people paid to describe. He stood at the window now, his phone pressed to his ear, listening."The patent is clean," the voice on the phone said. "Cleaner than we hoped. The original attorney made one error in the claim specifications, a gap in claim six, but our contact at the patent office tells us that a supplementary amendment was filed this morning. First thing."Marcus said nothing."The amendment closes the gap. If it's approved, and it will be, the patent is effectively bulletproof.""Who filed the amendment?""
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