Chapter 13: The Implosion Of A Titan
The silence that had settled over the boardroom after Owen Hayes revealed his true identity was short-lived. It was the heavy, pressurized silence of a bomb-shelter right before a tectonic shift.
And then, tectonic plates moved. The boardroom exploded into a cacophony of shouting, accusations, and raw, naked panic.
“This is absurd!” shouted Marcus Thorne, the head of the audit committee, a man who had rubber-stamped Cain’s requests for a decade. He was standing now, his face a terrifying shade of puce, pointing a shaking finger at Owen, then at Clare. “You cannot possibly expect us to believe that an hourly contractor—a man who destroyed a fifty-million-dollar contract on live video—is actually a federal agent who has been working right under our noses!“
Clare did not look at Thorne. She did not raise her voice. She stood by the projection console, her hand now resting on the tarnished badge Owen had placed on the table, as if anchoring herself to the only piece of truth in the room.
“Believe what you want, Marcus,” Clare said smoothly. She turned her gaze to the far end of the table, making eye contact with every board member who had previously allied themselves with Cain. “The evidence is not a matter of belief. The data, the recording, the badge—it’s all there. The original investigation into the 2013 Atlantic Recapitalization was unconstitutionally terminated. And today, I am reopening it.“
Gregory Cain began to speak again. He tried for the tone of a wronged, protective patriarch, a tone he had spent eleven years perfecting.
“This is an unmitigated disaster, Clare,” Cain said, his voice rising, attempting to dominate the noise. “You are completely out of your depth. Even if this audio is real—which I assure you it is a pathetic forgery—it was recorded twelve years ago. It is ancient history! We have a stock that is tanking today. We have a lawsuit that will bury us today. We need to sign that Meridian contract immediately and salvage our future, not dig around in graves.“
He looked at Thorne, and the other board members near him, pleading with his eyes for a motion, for support.
Thorne hesitated. He looked at Cain, then looked back at Owen, who was sitting quietly in the observer row, looking as if he were simply waiting for the ink on a document to dry.
Thorne knew which way the wind was blowing. A moment later, he proved why he had survived in this game for forty years. Thorne looked between them, then back at Cain.
“Salvage our future by doubling down on a structure designed to steal opertional control, Gregory?” Thorne demanded, his voice suddenly sharp, pivoting his alliances in real-time. “You heard the recording. You built this architecture in 2013. You forged Richard’s signature. This Meridian deal is just the final loop in a twelve-year-old noose.“
“Don’t talk about a loop when you authorized the initial investigation shutdown, Marcus!” Cain roared, abandoning all pretense of civilization.
Thorne didn’t blink. “I authorized the shutdown based on your recommendation and fraudulent data, Gregory. Data you just admitted on tape that you generated with forged credentials.“
Thorne sat back down and slammed his hand on the mahogany table. “The Meridian deal is dead. We need to focus on what the hell to do about the fact that our company was operationalized by a criminal network for a decade.“
The chaos resumed. But this time, it wasn’t board members against Clare. It was a vicious, every-man-for-himself frenzy of self-preservation among the very people who had protected Cain.
Clare stood perfectly still. She didn’t manage the chaos. She just watched them. Watched the faces she had trusted and feared for years turn on each other, tearing down the very empire of lies that had sustained them. They were like cornered rats, eating their own young to survive.
The question on Clare’s mind, addressed to you now, wasn’t whether she would win this boardroom fight, but who would be left standing with her. What would you do with a board full of allies who had betrayed your father for eleven years?