Part Six: The Silence
The elevator ride took ninety seconds.
Laura spent them counting her heartbeats.
One hundred and twelve.
Too fast.
She stepped out into the penthouse foyer. The same marble floors she had run across as a child. The same floor-to-ceiling windows that had made her feel like she was standing on top of the world.
But something was different.
The air was wrong.
Too still. Too cold.
His head of security, a man named Jack who had been with Ethan for twenty years, met her at the door.
His face was pale.
“He won’t let anyone in,” Jack said, his voice low. “He’s been in there for three days. He’s not eating. He’s not sleeping. He just sits in the dark and stares at the wall.”
Laura removed her gloves.
“What happened?”
Jack hesitated.
“He got a letter. That’s all I know. He read it, and then he just… stopped.”
Laura walked toward the massive oak doors of Ethan’s private study.
She didn’t knock.
She opened them.
The room was pitch black except for the faint glow of the city skyline bleeding through the curtains.
And there he was.
Ethan Young sat in his leather chair behind the desk. His charcoal blue suit was wrinkled. His tie was loosened. His face was gaunt in a way that made Laura’s surgical instincts scream.
He looked old.
He looked broken.
And he didn’t look up when she entered.
“Ethan.”
Silence.
She walked closer.
“Ethan, look at me.”
His head lifted slowly. His eyes found hers in the darkness.
They were red-rimmed. Hollow.
“Little bird,” he said, his voice a rasp. “You shouldn’t have come.”
Laura stopped three feet from his desk.
“Jack said you got a letter.”
Ethan’s hand moved to his desk drawer. He pulled out a single sheet of paper and slid it across the mahogany surface.
Laura picked it up.
The handwriting was neat. Precise. Feminine.
I know what you did. I know whose daughter she really is. And I’m going to tell her—unless you pay what you owe.
One billion dollars. Transferred by midnight Friday.
Or Laura finds out that the man who raised her is the reason her father is dead.
The paper trembled in Laura’s hands.
She read the words again.
And again.
Her father had died when she was six. A car accident, her mother had said. A tragic loss that had shaped the rest of their lives.
But this letter said something else.
This letter said Ethan knew the truth.
This letter said Ethan was the truth.
Laura looked up from the paper.
Her voice was barely a whisper.
“What did you do?”