Chapter 5

The news of Byron Hyde's Lazarus-like return sent shockwaves through the financial world. Hyde Industries stock, which had been bleeding value since his "death," went into a volatile frenzy.

Byron acted with startling speed. From his bed in the medical wing, he arranged an emergency virtual board meeting. Amelie was instructed to sit beside him, a silent participant.

On the large screen mounted to the wall, the faces of the board members stared back, a mixture of shock, confusion, and suspicion. Lachlan and Sterling were there, their expressions carefully neutral, but Amelie could see the avarice glittering in their eyes.

Byron, propped up in a custom wheelchair with a blanket over his legs, looked the part of the convalescing victim.

"Ladies and gentlemen," he began, his voice practiced and weak. "I apologize for the... confusion my condition has caused."

He let that sink in before delivering the payload. "Given that my physical recovery will be a long-term process, I will be temporarily stepping down from the day-to-day duties of CEO."

A murmur rippled through the virtual meeting.

Lachlan cleared his throat, his voice dripping with false sincerity. "Byron, your health is what's most important. The company is in good hands. You rest."

Byron's eyes, cold and sharp, flickered to his brother's face on the screen. "I'm glad you feel that way. I propose that during my leave of absence, my brothers, Lachlan Hyde and Sterling Hyde, will serve as co-acting CEOs."

The announcement was a masterstroke. It stunned everyone. Pitting two ambitious, distrustful brothers against each other was a guarantee of infighting. They would be too busy watching each other to unite against him.

Lachlan and Sterling exchanged a quick, calculating glance. They both understood the game, but the prize was too tempting to refuse. They accepted with feigned humility.

"Of course," Byron added, as if it were an afterthought, "all major strategic decisions and expenditures over a certain threshold will still require my final approval. My wife, Amelie, will be my proxy. She will convey my directives."

He had just made her the gatekeeper. The most powerful personal assistant in the world.

Amelie sat perfectly still, her face a neutral mask, but her heart was hammering against her ribs. She wasn't a pawn anymore. He had just made her his queen.

The board, seeing no better alternative, ratified the arrangement.

The moment the video call ended, Byron's facade of exhaustion vanished. He turned to Amelie, a glint of cold amusement in his eyes.

"When a lion is wounded, it lets the hyenas fight over the scraps," he said, his voice a low murmur. "When they have torn each other to pieces, the lion returns to a clean kill."

For the first time, Amelie felt the chilling precision of his mind. This wasn't just a man; it was a predator.

That afternoon, Eleanor came to visit. She swept into the room, bringing with her the scent of expensive perfume and old money. In her hands was a velvet box.

"A belated wedding gift, my dear," she said to Amelie, her smile warm and grandmotherly. She opened the box to reveal a stunning set of antique sapphire and diamond jewelry. "From now on, you are the lady of Hyde Manor. You must learn to look the part."

She fussed over Amelie, adjusting the necklace, her touch light and affectionate. But when she looked at Byron, Amelie saw it again-that fleeting, unreadable coldness in the depths of her eyes.

After she left, Byron gestured to the jewelry on the bedside table.

"A beautiful cage," he said with a humorless smile. "In this family, Amelie, the sweetest gifts are often coated with the most potent poison. Remember that."

He was teaching her. Schooling her in the brutal politics of his world.

He then had a thin file brought to him. He slid it across the table to her.

"Lachlan has been siphoning company funds into offshore accounts for years. This is a preliminary taste of the evidence."

Amelie stared at the damning numbers, her breath catching in her throat.

"He will come here tomorrow, to test the waters, to see how weak I truly am," Byron said, his eyes locking with hers. "He will meet with you. This is your first test."

Amelie looked from the file to his unyielding face. The game, she realized, had officially begun. And she was on the board.

Chapter 6

The next morning, just as Byron predicted, Lachlan Hyde arrived at the manor. He came under the guise of inquiring after his brother's health, but his arrogant posture screamed his true intent: to assess the new power dynamic.

As instructed, Amelie met him not in the medical wing, but in an adjacent sitting room. It was a formal, impersonal space, designed for uncomfortable conversations. Byron was in the next room, a tiny, undetectable listening device in Amelie's brooch transmitting everything.

Lachlan barely acknowledged her, his eyes sweeping past her as if she were part of the furniture. "How is he?" he asked, his tone dismissive.

Amelie's hands, hidden in the folds of her dress, clenched into fists. She kept her voice even and calm, just as they had rehearsed. "Byron is resting. He asked me to discuss a few matters with you in his stead."

Lachlan let out a short, derisive laugh. "You? A nursemaid?"

The insult stung, but Amelie didn't let it show. She simply slid the file Byron had given her onto the polished mahogany table between them.

Lachlan's eyes flickered down to the papers. He saw the columns of figures, the dates, the names of shell corporations registered in the Cayman Islands.

The color drained from his face. The smug arrogance vanished, replaced by a stark, primal panic.

"What is the meaning of this?" he hissed, his voice suddenly hoarse.

"The meaning," Amelie said, her voice a quiet counterpoint to his panic, "is that Byron is... disappointed. In Cal's disrespect. Both to him, and to me. He feels an appropriate punishment is in order. Otherwise, a more... complete version of this file might accidentally find its way to the SEC."

Lachlan's face went from white to a pasty gray. He stared at her, his mind reeling. Byron, crippled and confined to a bed, was still holding a knife to his throat. And worse, he was using this girl, this nobody, to wield it.

He searched her face for any sign of bluffing, of weakness. He found none. Her eyes were calm, her expression unyielding.

In the next room, Byron listened, a slow, satisfied smile touching his lips. She had more steel in her than he'd anticipated.

The silence stretched, thick with tension. Finally, Lachlan broke.

"What does he want?" he asked, the words tasting like ash in his mouth.

"Byron requires that Cal be sent to the family's mining operation in Alaska. For one year. To 'reflect'," Amelie relayed the sentence. "No internet. No parties. Just hard labor."

It was exile. A fate worse than death for a creature like Cal.

Lachlan's eyes closed in a pained grimace. He was a man trapped. He finally gave a short, sharp nod. "Fine."

He stood, his chair scraping harshly against the floor. He looked at Amelie, really looked at her for the first time. His eyes were filled with a venomous, newfound respect.

"You're good, Amelie Hyde," he said, the words a threat. "Very good."

He turned and left, a defeated man.

The moment the door closed, Amelie's composure crumbled. A shudder ran through her, and she sank into a chair, her palms slick with cold sweat.

The door to the inner room opened, and Byron wheeled himself out. His eyes held a look of genuine approval.

"You did well," he said. It was the first real praise he had ever given her.

"I was just reading your lines," she said, her voice still shaky.

"You gave the lines their power," he countered, his gaze intense. "You were born to sit in that chair."

Her heart skipped a beat. For the first time, she saw something in his eyes beyond calculation and desire. It was respect.

He took the file from the table, flicked open a silver lighter, and set a corner of the papers on fire. He dropped the burning file into the cold fireplace, where it quickly turned to black ash.

"That was just the warning shot," he said, his eyes on the flames. "The real ledger is safe with me."

It was a statement, but it was also an offering. A sliver of trust.

Amelie watched the last of the evidence burn. There was no turning back now. She had seen the absolute control he wielded from the shadows, and for a terrifying, exhilarating moment, she had tasted that power for herself.

Chapter 7

A few days later, Byron began teaching her how to use the manor's security system. "To protect yourself," he'd said, the excuse plausible enough.

He led her to a room hidden behind a bookshelf in his study. It was a high-tech command center, one wall covered entirely in a mosaic of screens displaying every corner of the estate.

"Every hallway, every room, every inch of the grounds is monitored," Byron explained, his voice a low murmur beside her. "Except for my bedroom. And now, yours."

A chill went through her. She had been living in a gilded panopticon.

He showed her how to access archived footage, how to flag events, how to read the tiered alert system. His fingers moved over the keyboard with an easy familiarity.

A morbid curiosity, an impulse she couldn't suppress, took hold of her. Her hands moved, almost of their own accord. She typed in the date of her first night. The location: Mausoleum.

Byron's hand, which had been gesturing to a screen, paused for a fraction of a second. But he didn't stop her.

The footage appeared. The empty, silent chamber. She fast-forwarded. The timestamp raced toward midnight. And then, precisely at the time she remembered the cold descending, the screen went black. A small message appeared in the corner: System Maintenance.

The feed resumed a few minutes after the assault would have ended.

Her heart sank like a stone into a cold, deep well. It was a lie. A clumsy, arrogant lie. Proof by omission.

It was him.

She lifted her head, her eyes locking with his. They were filled with a silent, burning accusation. He met her gaze, his expression unreadable, a mask of cold neutrality. He didn't confirm it. He didn't deny it.

The air between them grew thick, heavy with unspoken truths, when a shrill alarm suddenly blared through the room.

On the main screen, a red alert flashed. A cherry-red Ferrari had breached the second gate.

"Zara Vance," Byron said, his brow furrowing. The name was spoken like a curse.

Amelie's mind instantly supplied the data. Byron's former fiancée. Heiress to the Vance Global conglomerate.

Byron spoke into an intercom, his voice clipped. "Let her through. Intercept her at the main entrance." He turned to Amelie, a flicker of something dark in his eyes. "It appears your next challenge has arrived."

They met her in the grand living room. Zara Vance was a vision of fiery confidence, poured into a red dress, her makeup flawless, her aura radiating entitlement.

She swept past Amelie as if she were invisible and rushed to Byron's wheelchair.

"Byron! Darling!" Her voice was a theatrical cry of distress. "I heard what happened! I came as soon as I could. I can't believe it!"

She reached for him, but he shifted his wheelchair slightly, causing her hands to fall on the cold metal armrest. "Zara. We are no longer engaged."

Hurt flashed in her eyes before being replaced by a sharp, venomous glare directed at Amelie.

"So this is her?" Zara's voice dripped with disdain. "The replacement? A girl from a bankrupt family, brought in to ward off bad luck?"

The insult was designed to cut deep. Amelie opened her mouth to retort, but Byron spoke first, his voice calm and directed at Amelie.

"My wife. You handle this."

He was testing her again. Throwing her to the wolves to see if she could fight.

A surge of white-hot anger coursed through Amelie. The confirmation in the security room, the cold denial in his eyes, the humiliation of the past weeks-it all coalesced into a single point of burning rage. Zara Vance was simply the lightning rod.

Zara, misinterpreting Byron's delegation as disinterest, smirked at Amelie. "What are you going to say? Thank me for breaking the engagement so you could have your chance?"

Amelie took a step forward, her mind flashing back to the day her father's company collapsed. The despair on his face. The ruin Zara's family had wrought.

She stood directly in front of Zara Vance, in full view of Byron and the silent, watching staff.

She raised her hand.

And with all the pent-up fear, humiliation, and fury she possessed, she slapped Zara across the face. The sound cracked through the cavernous room like a gunshot.

Keep Reading
Support the author and inspire more amazing stories Moboreader
Unlock All Chapters
Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter
Minishorts Logo
Enjoy full short drama episodes, No waiting, watch now!
MiniShorts Youtube
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
About us
support@minishorts.com
©2026 MiniShorts All Rights Reserved. CHASINGTOP HK LIMITED