Chapter 3

The elevator doors to the forty-second floor slid open with a soft chime that felt like a gavel striking a block. I stepped out, not into the sleek, humming hive of innovation I remembered, but into a funeral parlor. The open-plan office was silent. Cubicles were empty, personal items boxed up on desks, and the few employees remaining huddled in whispered clusters, their eyes darting to the floor as I passed.

My engagement ring was gone, leaving a pale band of skin on my finger, but the weight on my shoulders had doubled. I wasn’t here as the fiancé of the CEO anymore. I was the CEO of a sinking ship.

"Ms. Spencer?" A hesitant voice stopped me near the breakroom. It was Marcus Chen, our lead engineer. He was holding a cardboard box filled with coding manuals and a potted succulent.

"Leaving, Marcus?" I asked, keeping my voice level, though my stomach churned. If Marcus left, the backend architecture would collapse within a week.

He adjusted his glasses, looking everywhere but at me. "Respectfully, Blaire... the FBI raided the server room three hours ago. Our vendor payments bounced. The press is downstairs calling Stellar Tech a Ponzi scheme. I have a mortgage."

"Put the box down," I said. It wasn't a request.

He blinked. "Excuse me?"

"Give me ten minutes. Everyone to the conference room. Now."

Five minutes later, thirty terrified faces stared back at me. The air in the glass-walled room was stale, recycled, and thick with resentment. I didn't stand at the head of the table where Asher used to pontificate. I leaned against the window, the sprawling, gray skyline of Manhattan at my back.

"We have zero liquidity," I started. No preamble. No corporate fluff. "Asher drained the operating accounts. Our credit lines are frozen. By my estimation, we have enough cash to keep the lights on for six days."

A murmur of anger rippled through the room. Someone scoffed. "So we're fired. Just say it."

"No one is fired unless they want to walk," I said, my voice cutting through the noise. "I am liquefying my personal assets as we speak. My apartment. My car. My portfolio. I will cover payroll personally this month. But I need you to stay."

Marcus frowned, his arms crossed defensively. "Why should we? You were engaged to the guy who robbed us. How do we know you aren't just as bad?"

"Because I wrote the kernel," I said softly.

Silence. Absolute silence.

"The encryption protocol you've been patching for two years? That was me. The latency issue in the Asia-Pacific servers? I fixed that at 3:00 AM last Christmas while Asher was posting photos from Aspen. I built this boat. I’m not letting it sink."

Marcus looked at me, really looked at me, for the first time in years. Slowly, he set his box on the floor. "Okay," he said, the word heavy. "One month. But if the checks bounce, I’m taking the source code."

***

By noon, I was signing my life away in a cramped office on the Lower East Side. The real estate broker, a man with a comb-over and a cheap suit, slid the deed to my Tribeca penthouse across the desk. It was my sanctuary. The place I’d bought before Asher, the place I thought we’d raise a family.

"We can wire the funds to the corporate account by end of day," he said, tapping a calculator. "Though, given the market and the... urgency... you're taking a twenty percent hit."

"Do it," I said, the pen scratching loudly against the paper.

Next went the vintage Cartier watch my grandmother left me. Then the Tesla. By 2:00 PM, I was standing on the sidewalk with two suitcases and a rental agreement for a studio apartment in Queens that smelled faintly of boiled cabbage and mold. It was four hundred square feet of nothing.

I sat on the bare mattress, the springs groaning under my weight. My phone buzzed. A notification from the hospital: *Mother’s vitals stable. Resting.*

I closed my eyes, breathing in the scent of dust and desperation. It was the sweetest air I’d tasted in years. I owned nothing, but for the first time, I owned myself.

***

The real fight, however, wasn't with the bank accounts. It was with the vultures.

At 5:00 PM, I walked into the boardroom. The Board of Directors sat around the mahogany table like a tribunal of gargoyles. These were Asher’s cronies—men who played golf at noon and made decisions based on stock prices, not product quality.

"Ms. Spencer," the Chairman, a bloated man named Sterling, didn't bother to stand. "We appreciate your... gesture with the payroll. But let's be realistic. You have no executive experience. The market has zero confidence in a jilted fiancée running a tech firm."

"We've already drafted a motion," another board member added, sliding a paper forward. "We're bringing in an interim CEO from Oracle. You’ll step down to a consultant role. It’s for the best."

My blood ran cold, then hot. They wanted to strip me for parts, just like Asher did.

I didn't sit. I walked to the head of the table and plugged my laptop into the projector.

"What is she doing?" Sterling muttered.

A wall of code flooded the screen. Dense, complex, and beautiful.

"This," I said, pointing to the screen, "is the proprietary algorithm for our neural network. It’s the valuation of this entire company. Without it, Stellar Tech is just a fancy office lease."

I looked Sterling in the eye. "Explain line 402 to me."

He blinked, his mouth opening and closing like a fish. "I... that’s technical minutiae."

"It's the failsafe," I snapped. "Anyone? Any of you? Explain how the data sharding works."

The room was dead silent. The only sound was the hum of the projector fan.

"I wrote every line of this," I said, my voice low and dangerous. "It is my intellectual property, tied to my personal patent, which Asher was too arrogant to transfer to the company. If you vote me out, I walk. And if I walk, I take the code. The platform goes dark in ten minutes. The stock price goes to zero in eleven."

Sterling’s face turned a pale shade of gray. He looked at the other board members. They were all studying their manicures or the grain of the wood table.

"So," I said, slamming my laptop shut. "Do we have a motion on the floor? Or do we have a meeting about how to save my company?"

Sterling cleared his throat, loosening his tie. "The motion is... withdrawn."

"Good," I said, taking the seat at the head of the table. "Now, let's talk about the Q3 projections."

Chapter 4

The reception chair in the lobby of Titan Logistics was designed to be uncomfortable—a subtle psychological warfare tactic I respected, even as my lower back screamed in protest. I had been sitting here for nine hours. The security guard, a burly man named Earl, had stopped making eye contact around hour four.

My flight had been a middle-seat nightmare in economy, knees pressed against the tray table, reviewing the disaster Asher had left behind. Titan was our biggest client, and Asher had blown them off three times to play golf.

At 6:30 PM, the elevator doors pinged. Frank Kowalski, the CEO of Titan, strode out, flanked by assistants. He stopped when he saw me, his face hardening into a scowl that matched the Chicago winter outside.

"Ms. Spencer," he grunted, buttoning his cashmere coat. "I told your secretary I wasn't interested. Stellar Tech is a liability."

I stood up, ignoring the pins and needles in my legs. I didn't offer a handshake; I offered my tablet. "You're right. We were. But the routing bug that caused your Q2 shipment delays? It wasn't a server load issue. It was a lazy syntax error in the dispatch algorithm."

He paused, his eyes flickering to the screen.

"I fixed it on the plane," I said, my voice steady despite the exhaustion dragging at my eyelids. "I also optimized the fuel consumption model. It’ll save you twelve percent annually starting tomorrow. If you sign the renewal."

Kowalski stared at me, then at the code glowing on the screen. He looked at the empty lobby, then back at me. "You waited all day to show me a patch?"

"I waited all day to show you that I’m not Asher," I corrected.

He let out a short, bark of a laugh. He took the stylus, signed the digital contract, and handed the tablet back. "Get some sleep, kid. You look like hell."

***

I landed back in New York at midnight, driving straight to the office to pick up my laptop. The parking garage was a cavern of concrete shadows and echoing drips. As I unlocked my battered rental car, a figure peeled itself from the darkness behind a concrete pillar.

I flinched, dropping my keys.

"Blaire."

It was Annalise. But the crimson dress and smug grin were gone. She wore oversized sweatpants and a hoodie, her face scrubbed raw and pale without makeup. The ankle monitor on her leg blinked a steady, accusing red.

"You shouldn't be here," I said, my hand tightening around the pepper spray in my pocket.

"I needed you to know," she rushed out, stepping forward, her hands trembling. "It wasn't for clothes or jewelry. It was my dad. He has end-stage renal failure. The dialysis bills... we were drowning. Asher said nobody would notice the money."

She looked small. Pathetic. A far cry from the woman who had crushed my mother’s pills under a red stiletto.

"My mother has cancer, Annalise," I said, my voice cold enough to freeze the damp air between us. "And you watched Asher divert her blood transfusion. You laughed."

"I was scared! He threatened to fire me!"

"Fear explains cowardice," I stepped closer, forcing her to retreat until her back hit the pillar. "It doesn't excuse sadism. Tragedy is not a license for cruelty. You made your choice."

I got into the car and locked the doors. As I reversed, I saw her slump against the concrete, sobbing into her hands. I didn't stop. But as I merged onto the street, I pulled a sticky note from my purse and wrote down a name I'd seen on her bail paperwork: *Hector Vargas*.

***

The office was supposed to be empty, but the fourth floor was ablaze with light. I walked in to find Marcus Chen pacing, sweat shining on his forehead. The engineering team was huddled around a single monitor, their faces illuminated by the harsh blue glow of a terminal window.

"What broke?" I asked, dropping my bag.

"It’s not a bug," Marcus said, his voice tight. "It’s a bomb. A logic bomb. One of Asher's frat-boy hires left a script dormant in the kernel. It triggered when we purged his admin credentials. It’s eating the customer database. We have," he checked his watch, "four hours before it wipes the backups."

Panic, sharp and metallic, tasted the back of my throat. If we lost the data, the Titan contract I just saved was worthless.

"Order pizza," I commanded, kicking off my heels and pulling a chair up next to Marcus. "And get me a Red Bull."

"You're coding?" a junior dev asked, skeptical.

"I'm rewriting the encryption key to quarantine the script," I said, my fingers already flying across the mechanical keyboard. The rhythmic clack-clack-clack was the only sound in the room. "If we can't stop it, we'll cage it."

For the next three hours, titles didn't matter. I wasn't the CEO; I was just another engineer in the trenches. We passed lukewarm pepperoni slices over monitors and shouted hex codes across the room. The air grew thick with body heat and tension.

At 3:42 AM, I hit *Enter* on the final patch. The red warning bar on the screen flashed once, then turned a beautiful, solid green.

Cheering erupted. Marcus slumped back in his chair, grinning at me. "Nice save, boss."

It was the first time he’d called me that without a sneer.

***

The victory high lasted exactly six hours.

I was in Dr. Mitchell’s office, the morning sun glaring off the diplomas on the wall. My mother sat beside me, looking frailer than ever. The dark circles under her eyes were like bruises.

"The standard chemotherapy has stopped working," Dr. Mitchell said gently, sliding a terrifying chart across the desk. "The markers are spiking. We need to switch tactics immediately. There’s a new immunotherapy protocol—CAR T-cell therapy. It’s aggressive, but it’s her best shot."

"Do it," I said instantly.

Dr. Mitchell hesitated. "Insurance denied the pre-authorization. They consider it experimental for her stage. The out-of-pocket cost is... significant. Two hundred thousand for the first round."

The number hit me like a physical blow. I had drained my savings for payroll. The Titan deposit wouldn't clear for thirty days. The only liquid cash left in the company accounts was earmarked for the server migration required to keep the platform live.

If I paid for the treatment, the company would default on its server lease next week. We would go dark. Everything I fought for—the code, the team, the redemption—would vanish.

I looked at my mother. She was watching a bird outside the window, humming softly, trying to be brave for me.

I turned back to the doctor. "Send the bill to me personally. Start the treatment today."

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