Chapter 11 – THE BOARDROOM BETRAYAL
Sharon's heels clicked on the polished marble floor of Laurent Global's boardroom.
Every eye turned toward her. Cameras embedded in the ceiling silently captured every expression, every twitch. Every heartbeat was amplified in her ears.
James Barnett stood by the entrance, hands folded, expression neutral, unreadable.
The boardroom was tense. The air smelled faintly of expensive leather and lingering perfume from the morning's meeting.
Sharon adjusted her jacket - a soft navy tailored suit that mirrored Georgia's style - and forced her posture into absolute perfection.
This was the first true test: she wasn't just performing at galas or in front of cameras. She was now standing in front of Laurent Global's shareholders, tasked with leading a company worth billions, impersonating a woman whose mind she barely understood.
James leaned close, whispering into her earpiece:
"Smile. Stay visible. Do not hesitate. Every word counts."
Sharon inhaled, nodded subtly.
And then the chairman spoke.
"Ms. Laurent," he began, voice carefully measured, "we've had some concerns regarding the recent offshore activity. Transparency is... lacking. Can you address this?"
Sharon's stomach twisted.
Her first instinct: freeze.
Her second: panic.
But Georgia wouldn't panic.
She cleared her throat.
"Thank you for raising your concerns," Sharon said, voice steady. "Transparency is the cornerstone of Laurent Global's integrity. Every transaction complies with regulations. Any questions regarding offshore accounts have been addressed by the board and our auditors."
A faint murmur rose around the room.
The chairman nodded, neutral, but a man seated at the far end - a wealthy shareholder named Victor Staines - leaned forward.
"Ms. Laurent," he said, voice sharp. "Your assurances are... appreciated. But the auditors' reports conflict with your statements. Can you explain why your internal review flagged significant discrepancies?"
Sharon's pulse surged.
Discrepancies. She had seen the ledgers. The shell companies. The coded transfers. The murder cover-ups.
She had to bluff. She had no choice.
She smiled. Georgia's smile. Controlled. Perfect.
"Victor," she said, voice smooth. "Thank you for your diligence. My internal review is ongoing. As the board is aware, Laurent Global operates across multiple jurisdictions, and the scope of these audits is complex. It's our responsibility to ensure accuracy before releasing any further statements. Rest assured, corrective measures are in place, and transparency remains our priority."
A few board members exchanged looks. Some nodded. Some didn't.
Victor Staines' expression hardened.
"Corrective measures," he echoed. "Ms. Laurent, that sounds... evasive."
Sharon leaned slightly forward, chin raised, eyes unwavering.
"Not evasive," she said. "Deliberate. Calculated. Every decision must protect our shareholders and our employees. That's my responsibility as CEO. I assure you, all discrepancies will be resolved. Our focus is on growth, stability, and long-term vision. Laurent Global is resilient because of strategic foresight - and that is exactly what I intend to maintain."
Silence.
Victor's jaw tightened.
A clock ticked somewhere in the room, loud in Sharon's ears.
She realized she had held the room's attention for nearly ninety seconds.
Ninety seconds without faltering. Without revealing her ignorance.
James' whisper:
"Good. Keep calm. Observe reactions."
Victor Staines wasn't finished.
"Ms. Laurent," he said smoothly, leaning back. "Reports indicate a significant transfer of funds to a company called Offshore Holdings Corp. Can you tell us the purpose of this transfer?"
Sharon's fingers itched. She knew the truth. She had the Zurich ledgers memorized.
But she could not say it.
Instead, she nodded solemnly.
"Victor," she said evenly. "Laurent Global has multiple international partners. Each transfer is accounted for internally and approved at the highest level. While the details of each transaction are confidential due to corporate agreements, I can assure the board that every transfer complies with legal and ethical standards. Speculation does no one a service. I am committed to clarity, and the board will be informed as soon as all verifications are complete."
Victor's gaze narrowed.
"Ms. Laurent," he said, voice dropping an octave, "that is a carefully worded statement. But the auditors indicate irregularities. Are you suggesting the board should blindly trust your judgment?"
The words stung. And Sharon could feel James stiffen slightly.
She inhaled. Smiled. Georgia's smile.
"Victor," she said softly, "I am asking for your trust, not blind obedience. We operate in a high-stakes environment. Decisions are made with precision, not impulse. Trust is earned by results, and Laurent Global's performance speaks for itself."
Another murmur. Some satisfied. Some skeptical.
Victor leaned back, but the tension remained.
And Sharon noticed something else: subtle nods between a few board members. A silent alliance forming against her.
The first cracks in her act.
James' voice in her ear:
"Observe, adapt, survive. They are testing your authority."
The boardroom doors opened abruptly. A secretary stepped in.
"Ms. Laurent, an urgent call from Zurich," she said.
Sharon's heart skipped.
James whispered:
"Go. Appear calm. Handle it. You can't ignore this."
Sharon nodded. She moved to the phone. Her hands steady, voice flawless.
"Sharon... I mean, Ms. Laurent," said the voice from Zurich, clipped and professional. "We have irregularities in the transfer logs. The auditors are requesting immediate clarification."
Sharon nodded into the phone.
"Yes. I understand. Please prepare a detailed report. I will review and respond promptly."
She hung up.
Victor Staines' eyes flicked toward her.
"You handle crises well," he said, voice neutral.
Sharon smiled. Perfect. Controlled. Georgia.
"Yes," she said. "It is my responsibility."
James' whisper:
"Well done. For now."
But Sharon knew better.
The boardroom had tested her. And while she survived today, she had no illusions.
Every question she dodged, every bluff she played, only delayed the inevitable.
Somewhere, in Zurich, someone had noticed her movements. Someone watching her, counting mistakes.
And someone had already decided that the next move wouldn't be a question.
It would be a threat.
Sharon's smile didn't falter, but inside, her blood ran cold.
She wasn't just impersonating Georgia Laurent.
She was pretending to survive.
And the boardroom was only the beginning.
Chapter 12 – THE PRIVATE PHONE
Sharon had just returned to her apartment after a tense day in the boardroom.
The Laurent identity weighed heavily on her shoulders. Every gesture, every word, every smile had been calculated. Every interaction had been a potential trap.
Her nerves screamed at her to rest, but the envelope with Georgia's bruised photos still sat on the coffee table, a reminder that survival wasn't guaranteed.
And then... the phone rang.
Not her phone. Not the one James had issued.
A small, black device tucked behind a stack of magazines on the sideboard.
She hadn't noticed it before.
Its vibration was soft, almost deliberate.
Her pulse spiked.
She hesitated, staring at it.
Then it rang again.
Soft, mechanical. Insistent.
She picked it up.
No display. No caller ID.
A distorted voice whispered through the receiver:
"They're going to kill you."
Sharon froze.
Her heart thundering in her chest, she gripped the phone tighter.
"Who is this?" she demanded.
Static.
Then the voice again:
"Listen carefully. Do not trust him. Do not trust the board. And do not... become predictable."
Sharon's blood ran cold.
"Who... who are you?" she stammered.
The voice chuckled softly, almost human, almost familiar:
"I am... someone who knows the game. And how it ends if you play by their rules."
Before she could respond, the line went dead.
Silence pressed down on her apartment.
She sat frozen, phone still in hand.
James had warned her to trust no one. To ask no questions.
But now, a voice had chosen to warn her.
And it sounded like Georgia.
Sharon didn't sleep that night.
She examined the black phone. No SIM. No identifiers.
It was hidden. Purpose-built. And it had chosen her.
She scrolled through the small device's storage. Nothing obvious.
Then, a single text file:
Do not follow the obvious path. They are watching. You are not safe in the penthouse. The ledger is only the beginning. Survival requires secrecy, mobility, and silence.
She shivered.
The file contained coordinates. A hotel in Zurich. The very city whose offshore financial activity she had begun to investigate.
And beneath the coordinates:
Do not travel alone. Trust no one claiming allegiance to Laurent Global. They may kill you before you arrive.
Sharon's fingers trembled.
James Barnett had insisted she maintain visibility. Be seen. Be perfect. Ask nothing.
But this... this was a direct contradiction.
The black phone had given her instructions to vanish. To hide. To move undetected.
Her mind raced.
Was it a trap?
Or was it Georgia herself?
Morning came, but Sharon barely noticed.
She packed a small bag: essentials, the ledger pages she had memorized, and the black phone tucked securely in her purse.
Her reflection in the mirror caught her attention.
She looked like Georgia Laurent. Hair, posture, expression flawless. Smile precise. Eyes calm.
But inside, she was terrified.
Every step outside felt like walking on a wire strung over a pit of vipers.
She hailed a cab. James would assume she was attending another Laurent Global event.
The black phone buzzed again, this time with a short text:
Do not stop. They are closer than you think. Trust the shadows.
Sharon's pulse spiked.
The cab moved through the streets. Cameras, pedestrians, and luxury vehicles blurred past.
She realized the truth: she had a choice.
Follow James' orders, maintain visibility, and stay alive-at least temporarily-or follow the unknown instructions of the black phone, potentially putting herself in far greater danger... but also closer to uncovering the real truth.
Her hand tightened around the device.
The distorted voice had spoken.
"They're going to kill you."
And Sharon knew, with absolute certainty, that the first warning had just begun.
Chapter 13 – The Real Georgia Speaks
Sharon's hotel room in Zurich was quiet, almost eerily so.
The curtains were drawn, blocking the city lights. The hum of distant traffic was the only sound.
She sat on the edge of the bed, the black phone from the penthouse resting on her lap. The distorted voice had guided her here, but she had no idea whether to trust it.
Another vibration. Another call.
She hesitated. Then opened the message.
It was a voice memo. Length: 1 minute, 42 seconds.
Her hand shook as she pressed play.
A faint click.
Then a voice. Smooth. Measured. Recognizable.
"Sharon..."
Her breath caught.
The voice was unmistakable. Georgia Laurent.
"I don't know who you are exactly. Or what you've seen. But if you're hearing this... you are already in danger. They know you exist. They know you are acting as me. And they will... react. Violently."
Sharon's pulse surged.
Georgia continued, calm, controlled:
"You have no choice now. They want my life, my identity, my control. And by proxy... they want yours. Do not trust anyone in Laurent Global. Not James. Not the board. Not the staff you've met. Trust only yourself. And the shadows you are guided by."
Sharon gripped the phone tighter.
The voice paused.
"You will receive instructions. Follow them, carefully. One wrong step, one slip... and they will kill you. But if you survive... you may just save me. Or yourself. Perhaps both. But first, survive."
The memo ended.
Silence pressed in, heavier than before.
Sharon's stomach twisted.
James' warnings. The boardroom betrayal. The bruises in Georgia's photos.
Everything pointed to one terrifying truth: someone powerful was orchestrating deaths, and she was caught in the middle.
Sharon stared at the voicemail again, replaying the message in her mind.
Georgia Laurent - real, alive, and fighting - had reached out.
Her stomach churned.
If Georgia knew her existence, she could either be an ally... or a target.
Sharon realized something chilling: the line between impersonator and target was almost nonexistent.
Every move she made from this point forward would determine whether she survived.
She tried to think clearly.
The black phone, the encrypted messages, the voice memo - all pointed toward one conclusion: she had to move.
But where? Zurich? Safe?
The offshore accounts, the shell companies, the hidden financial network - she could follow them.
Or she could disappear.
Her fingers traced the edge of the phone.
Her reflection in the darkened window stared back. Georgia's face. Her face. A mask.
She whispered softly to herself:
"I'm not her... but I have to be her."
The black phone buzzed again.
A text appeared:
Check the locker at the hotel basement. Envelope inside. Instructions. Time is critical.
Sharon hesitated.
Every instinct screamed: trap.
But every warning she had received screamed louder: move. Act. Survive.
She grabbed her coat. Her bag. The black phone clutched tightly.
The corridor of the hotel stretched before her, dimly lit, shadows pooling at the edges. Every creak of the floorboard, every hum of the air vent felt like it could be the sound of someone watching.
At the basement locker, she found an envelope. Thick. Cream-colored. Unmarked.
She opened it carefully. Inside:
• Flight itinerary. A private jet to an undisclosed location.
• Access codes for Laurent Global offshore accounts.
• A small USB drive labeled "Do Not Open Until Arrival."
And a single line, typed in Georgia's unmistakable handwriting:
They will try to kill you before you can reach me. Trust no one. Follow the shadows.
Sharon exhaled slowly.
The message was clear.
She was no longer just impersonating Georgia Laurent.
She was a target. A pawn. A survivor.
And the real Georgia Laurent had just made the stakes terrifyingly clear:
If she failed, both their lives were forfeit.
A distant sound - footsteps, heavy and deliberate - echoed in the basement corridor.
Sharon froze.
Her hand tightened around the envelope.
And then, almost silently, a shadow moved from the corner of the room toward her.
She swallowed.
Her pulse thundered.
Because survival would now require deception, instinct, and absolute courage.
And someone here... wanted her dead.