The flame from Julian Vane's lighter danced in the dark, a tiny, flickering spark that threatened to ignite the gasoline doaked archives of the Sterling family's darkest secrets. Aria felt the heat rising, her heart hammering against her ribs.
"Vane, don't be a fool!" Aria shouted, her voice echoing off the steel server racks. "If you drop that lighter, you're not just burning files. You're burning your only leverage with the Thorne Group. My father will have you erased before the smoke clears the lobby!"
Julian Vane sneered, his face contorted in the orange glow. "Your father is already erasing me, Aria! He squeezed my margins until I was forced to deal with Sterling. This Black Box is the only thing keeping the creditors from tearing me apart. If I can't use it to bargain, no one gets to see the rot inside!"
Ethan Knight shifted his weight, his eyes locked on Vane's hand. He was a coiled spring, ready to move, but the gasoline was too close to their feet. One wrong move and the 19th floor would become a crematorium.
"You think the rot is in those files, Julian?" Ethan's voice was a low, steady rumble. "The rot is you. You're standing in a gold mine, and all you can think to do is burn it down because you're afraid of a woman."
"I'm not afraid of her!" Vane screamed.
"Then put the lighter down," Aria said, stepping forward into the light. She didn't look like a victim. She looked like a judge. "I've already mirrored the servers, Julian. The moment we stepped onto this floor, my portable rig began a cloud upload. Burning this room won't save you. It will only add Arson and Attempted Murder to your bankruptcy filing."
Vane's hand trembled. The lie worked. Aria hadn't actually finished the upload, the EMP had slowed her connection but Vane didn't know that. He saw the cold, unshakable confidence of a Thorne, and he blinked.
In that split second of hesitation, Ethan moved.
He was a blur of shadows. He tackled Vane, his forearm pinning the man's wrist against the cold floor while his other hand clamped shut over the lighter. Aria lunged forward, grabbing the fire extinguisher she had dropped and dousing the gasoline puddles in a thick layer of white foam before a single spark could fly.
The Creditors' Meeting
Four hours later, the sun began to peek over the city skyline. Aria stood in the boardroom of the Grand Continental, her charcoal turtleneck dusted with white chemical powder, but her spirit was iron.
Across the table sat the Board of Creditors, ten men and women who held the debt of the hotel. They had been summoned in the middle of the night, and they looked exhausted and terrified. On the table sat Aria's tablet, displaying a single document: The Vane-sterling Collusion Ledger.
"This document," Aria began, her voice ringing with authority, "proves that your lead representative, Julian Vane, was intentionally devaluing this hotel to facilitate a private sale to an offshore shell company. He was stealing from you, the creditors, to line his own pockets."
The board members began to whisper frantically.
"Therefore," Aria continued, "I am making a one time offer. I will settle the hotel's outstanding debt at forty cents on the dollar. In exchange, the Thorne Knight partnership takes full ownership, effective immediately. If you refuse, I will release this ledger to the SEC. You will spend the next ten years in litigation, and you won't see a single penny."
The head of the board, an elderly woman who had seen a thousand corporate wars, looked at Aria. She didn't see a housewife. She saw the future of the industry.
"The offer is accepted, Miss Thorne," the woman said, her voice filled with a begrudging respect. "The Grand Continental is yours."
The Victory and the New Threat
Aria walked out of the boardroom and into the lobby, where Ethan was waiting by the grand fountain. The morning light streamed through the stained-glass ceiling, catching the gold leaf she was determined to restore.
"We did it," Aria whispered, leaning her head against Ethan's shoulder. "Thirty days? We did it in forty eight hours."
Ethan wrapped his arm around her, his kiss lingering on the top of her head. "I told you. Never bet against a Knight and his Queen."
But the moment of peace was shattered. Aria's phone buzzed. It was a video call.
She answered it, expecting her father's begrudging congratulations. Instead, the screen showed a dark, grainy room.
A man sat in a chair, his face obscured by shadows. But Aria recognized the silhouette. It was Mark Woods. But he wasn't the broken, pathetic man from the gala. He was dressed in a sharp, military style tactical vest, and he was smiling, a jagged, insane grin.
"Did you enjoy your little hotel win, Aria?" Mark's voice was distorted by a scrambler. "You thought I was gone. You thought I was just a ghost. But you forgot one thing about ghosts, my love... they can follow you anywhere."
The camera panned to the side. Aria gasped, her blood turning to ice.
On the screen was her father, Samuel Thorne. He was tied to a chair, a blindfold over his eyes. Behind him stood Victor Sterling, holding a silenced pistol to Samuel's head.
"The London Directive is canceled, Aria," Mark laughed. "New plan. You have twenty four hours to transfer the entire Thorne Group's liquid assets to an account I've provided. If the balance doesn't hit ten billion by tomorrow noon, I start sending you pieces of your father."
The screen went black.
Aria's tablet slipped from her hand, clattering against the marble floor. The hotel she had just won felt like a tomb.
Ethan gripped her shoulders, his eyes turning into flint. "Aria, look at me. We are not losing him. And we are not giving Mark a single cent."
"He has my father, Ethan," Aria whispered, her voice trembling. "He's gone mad. He's not playing for money anymore... he's playing for blood."
Ethan pulled her close, his voice a lethal promise. "Then we give him a war. He wants to see the Thorne power? We'll show him what happens when he touches the one thing you actually care about."





