Signed For An Heir

She heard Rowan's voice before she reached the door.

The board session was at fourteen, and she had come from the lift on the same floor and was still twenty feet from room four when she caught the sound of it through the slightly open door, low, controlled, carrying the particular register of a man who was not arguing because the matter was already settled.

She stopped. Listened.

"... motion is noted and rejected." Clear. Final.

"Rowan, you can't simply dismiss three legal precedents..." The Head of Legal. "The framework for conflict of interest is..."

"Applicable when the person in question has decision-making power. My wife has none. She has observer status. Non-voting. No operational authority, no access to proprietary commercial negotiations, no influence over any outcome this board has produced in four months. The conflict-of-interest argument requires demonstrable influence. I'll hear it the day someone can demonstrate it." A pause. Not a hesitant pause, a deliberate one, the pause of a man who had said the necessary thing and was now choosing the next one. "Gideon. This memo was circulated to the full board before it came to my desk. I'd like to understand who authorized that sequence."

Silence.

"The standard procedure for concerns about board-adjacent personnel is that they come to the CEO first," Rowan continued. "They went around me. I'm noting that for the record. We'll address the procedural issue in Thursday's governance review."

More sounds of the meeting closing down. Chairs. Brief conversations beginning.

Elara moved back toward the window bank and was looking at her phone with the expression of someone waiting for a message when the door opened fully and the board filed out.

The CFO. Two of the non-executives. The Head of Legal, who glanced at her with an unreadable expression and moved on. Two more.

Gideon was fifth out the door. He saw her and did not look surprised, which told her he knew she would be on this floor. He crossed her with the easy, unhurried movement of a man in complete command of his external presentation.

"Mrs. Vale. I hope the morning has been straightforward for you."

"Entirely," she said. "Yours?"

"Complicated." A small smile. Not warm. "These things happen in governance."

"They do," she agreed. "And then they get resolved. That's what governance is for."

Something moved behind his eyes. Very brief. Very controlled. "Enjoy your afternoon."

"You too, Mr. Hart."

He walked to the lift. She watched the doors close on him and thought about the archive. About the document she had photographed in the final four minutes, the one she was still not ready to name, even inside her own head, because naming it made it real and real meant acting on it, and she wasn't ready for that yet.

But it was real. She had photographed it. It was in Maya's hands.

"He processed the procedural breach before you got here."

She turned. Rowan had come out of room four without her hearing him. He was looking toward the lift Gideon had just gone into.

"I heard most of it," she said.

"Then you know it cost me."

"Two or three votes, depending on how they read the override."

"Three, probably. Hargreaves and Yuen, definitely. Possibly Morris," he said evenly. No self-pity. "I made the call."

She looked at him. At the profile of a man who had just spent three board votes on her, who had done it without asking for credit and was now standing in a corridor talking about it as though it were simply a decision that had been made and didn't require emotional processing.

"Did you find what you needed?" he asked.

"Most of it," She hesitated. "There's one thing I need more time with before I can bring it to you. A few more days."

"Take them." He turned, and they began walking back toward the lifts. "Whatever it is, I'd rather wait for you to be ready than have half of it."

She thought about the document. About what it meant if she was reading it correctly. About what it was going to mean for him when she finally said it out loud.

"Thank you," she said. "For the room today. For overriding the memo."

"You don't have to thank me."

"I want to."

He looked at her sideways as they walked. "Then you're welcome."

They reached the lift. The doors opened. They got in. Neither of them pressed a button for a moment.

"Rowan," she said.

"Mm."

"Soon," she said. "I'll have the full picture soon."

He pressed the button for forty. "I'll be here," he said simply.

The doors closed. She looked at her reflection in the polished metal and thought about what it was going to cost.

The lift was taking a long time.

She stood in it with him and thought about the three votes. About the public nature of what he had done, the room full of witnesses, the formal record, the override that would show up in the governance minutes and be referenced at every future board discussion about her presence in the building.

He had made that permanent. For her.

She thought about the kind of man who did that without framing it as a favor. Who said I made the call and moved on, like there was no cost worth discussing.

She thought about what she was carrying and how much longer she could carry it.

Not much longer, she decided.

The doors opened.

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