The silent master

​The glass tower of Vance High-Tech didn't feel like a fortress anymore; it felt like a gallows. As the black sedan pulled into the underground garage, the flashes of paparazzi cameras bounced off the tinted windows like strobe lights.

​Inside the private elevator, the silence was suffocating. Elias stood in the corner, his suit pristine, his face a mask of marble. But his hands were shoved deep into his pockets to hide the fact that they wouldn't stop shaking.

​When the doors opened to the executive floor, Miller was waiting, looking like he'd aged ten years overnight. Behind him, the frosted glass doors of the boardroom were closed, but the shadows of the twelve directors were visible-a jury waiting for their defendant.

​"Elias," Miller hissed, stepping forward. "We can still spin this. I've drafted a statement saying Thorne was a deep-cover internal investigator and the 'intimacy' was a lapse in his professional conduct-a honey-trap you fell for. We fire him, we sue him for breach of contract, and we save your chair."

​Jax felt the air leave his lungs. He looked at Elias, waiting for the rejection.

​Elias didn't look at Miller. He looked at the boardroom doors. "Give us the room, Miller. Five minutes."

​"Elias, the board is-"

​"Five minutes!" Elias snapped, the voice of the CEO ringing out with a desperate, sharp edge.

​Miller retreated. The floor cleared. Jax and Elias were alone in the vast, open-plan foyer, the city of San Francisco sprawling out behind them through the floor-to-ceiling glass.

​Elias turned to Jax. The marble mask cracked, revealing a raw, bleeding vulnerability. "You have to go, Jaxson. Use the service elevator. I've already authorized a wire transfer to a private account in the Caymans. It's enough to clear the debt and give you a new life. Anywhere in the world."

​Jax felt a flare of white-hot anger. He stepped into Elias's space, ignoring the three-foot rule, the one-foot rule, and the logic of the world. "You're doing it again. You're trying to buy my exit."

​"I'm trying to save the only thing I love!" Elias screamed, his voice echoing off the glass. He slammed his fists against Jax's chest, a weak, frantic assault. "Don't you get it? If you stay, they'll tear you apart. They'll call you a whore. They'll say I groomed you with debt. They'll make your name a punchline."

​Jax caught Elias's wrists, pinning them against his own chest, forcing the smaller man to feel the steady, thudding beat of his heart.

​"Let them," Jax rasped, his voice dropping to a dangerous, gravelly low. "Let them say whatever they want. I've been a king and I've been a prisoner, Elias. Neither of them felt as good as being yours."

​"You're being a fool," Elias sobbed, his strength finally failing as he slumped against Jax's chest. "It's forty-two million dollars, Jax. It's my legacy. It's everything."

​"It's paper, Elias. It's just code," Jax whispered, his large hand cupping the back of Elias's head, pulling him into the crook of his neck. "You told me I was your firewall. You told me I was your gatekeeper. Are you really going to fire the only man who actually sees you because you're afraid of what Sterling thinks?"

​Elias pulled back, his eyes red-rimmed but searching. "If I walk in there and tell them the truth-that I love you, that the contract was a mistake born of my own fear-they will take everything. I'll be a pariah."

​Jax reached into his pocket and pulled out his own phone. He hit a button, and a series of files appeared on the screen-the recordings he'd made of Sterling's bribe attempt at the resort.

​"You aren't going in there to tell them the truth about us," Jax said with a grim, lethal smile. "You're going in there to show them the truth about them. We aren't the ones on trial today, Elias. Sterling is."

​Elias looked at the files, then up at Jax. The "Ghost" started to fade, and the Architect-the man who built fortresses-started to take his place. He reached out, his fingers brushing the lapel of Jax's suit, straightening it with a sudden, sharp precision.

​"You're staying?" Elias asked, his voice no longer trembling.

​"I'm your shadow, Mr. Vance," Jax replied, his eyes dark with an absolute, unwavering devotion. "I don't go where the light is. I go where you go."

​Elias took a deep breath, squared his shoulders, and reached for the handles of the boardroom doors. He paused, looking back at Jax one last time.

​"Then let's go show them why they should have left the lion in his cage."

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