Chapter 8: What He's Hiding
Elara barely slept.
Julian's words looped in her mind like a haunting melody: Help me find them... secrets... the queen decides.
But it wasn't just what he said, it was what Damien didn't.
He hadn't asked why she went out.
He'd just assumed she had something to hide.
And maybe now, she did.
The next morning, Damien was gone again.
But this time, Elara didn't sit around waiting.
She'd been in the penthouse for nearly three weeks, yet half the rooms remained locked, especially the study. It wasn't the public one he showed guests, but a private, key card, sealed chamber tucked behind a hallway bookshelf.
She'd seen him disappear into it at odd hours. Once, she'd heard him arguing on the phone in a voice she didn't recognize, clipped, low, almost desperate.
Now she stood before the door, card in hand.
Damien wasn't careless. But he was arrogant.
Two nights ago, she'd watched him toss his suit jacket on the couch, card peeking from the inner pocket.
She swiped it.
The lock clicked.
Inside was a world of shadows.
Unlike the gleaming minimalism of the rest of the penthouse, this room was cluttered with folders, photographs, and chalkboard walls filled with timelines and arrows.
One wall was entirely covered in red-thread maps, company logos, and news clippings.
At the center: the Vance Corporation.
Her heart clenched.
Elara stepped closer and read the scrawled header above the board:
"WHO SABOTAGED VANCE?"
Below, her father's face. Circled. Underlined. Crossed out.
Not him.
Then: a web of others. Politicians. Business rivals. And, disturbingly, her mother's name.
A yellow sticky note sat beneath it:
"Celeste was in talks with Darien Cross six months before collapse. Find link."
Elara felt the floor tilt beneath her.
Her mother?
Damien had been investigating the fall of her family.
Not to bury them but to exonerate them.
She turned to a locked drawer and hesitated. If she was caught...
She opened it anyway.
Inside: an envelope labeled "Project Penumbra – Confidential" and a flash drive.
She slid it into the laptop on the desk.
Files opened.
Surveillance photos.
Financial transfers.
A contract signed by Darien Cross, Julian's father.
And one audio file.
She clicked play.
> "...we push the stock down, leak the numbers, then buy it all back through the shell corp. Elara won't see it coming, she's just the daughter."
She stopped the recording. Her fingers shook.
Julian's family had orchestrated her downfall. The same man who'd offered her a way out... had helped destroy her family.
That night, Damien came home late.
Elara was waiting.
He froze when he saw her sitting at the fireplace, the flash drive on the table.
"You broke into my study," he said.
She met his gaze. "You were looking for the truth."
"I always am."
"You should've told me."
"You weren't ready."
"No," she said. "You weren't sure if you could trust me."
A long pause.
He sat across from her, resting his hands on his knees.
"I've made enemies, Elara. You've seen what they're capable of."
"Julian was one of them."
"Yes."
"And you let me walk right into his trap.
"I wanted to see what you'd do."
That stung.
"You think I'm just a pawn."
He shook his head. "No. I think you're the only one left who can win."
She stood slowly, stepping closer.
"For once, Damien," she said softly, "tell me something real. No games. No power plays. Just truth."
His eyes flicked to hers, stormy, unreadable.
Then he said, low and honest, "You scare me. Because you might be the only person who sees through me and doesn't walk away."
Her breath caught.
Neither of them moved.
The fire crackled.
The war between them... paused.
Just long enough to feel like something else.