Elara stood in the study long after the call ended, the antique phone cradled in her hands like a lifeline. Outside, sunlight filtered through the towering oaks of the Voss estate, scattering gold across the manicured lawns. Everything looked exactly the same as the day she had lost it all.
Her fingers curled around the edge of her mother's mahogany desk. It was in this very room, in the timeline that no longer existed, that Damien had guided her shaking hand to sign the papers that stripped her of her birthright. Everything her parents had spent their lives building had been handed over with a single stroke of a pen.
Not today.
She knelt, pressing her fingers against the hidden seam beneath the bottom panel of the desk. She felt the slight catch, the secret mechanism her father had shown her when she was ten. It was still locked. Still untouched.
With a flick of the key she had retrieved from her old diary, she twisted the latch.
Click.
Inside lay the Voss family journals, sealed letters, and the most dangerous document in the house: her father's emergency succession file. Her hand trembled as she pulled it out. Years ago, her father had offered this to her as a rite of passage. She had laughed it off, too blinded by "love" to understand the weight of his legacy.
The file glowed with embossed gold lettering: VOSS LEGACY: STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL.
She didn't open it yet. The air in the room felt too thin, too crowded with the ghosts of her mistakes.
Instead, she crossed to the fireplace. She pressed firmly on the lion's tooth carved into the marble mantle. A faint, mechanical hiss answered her. A wall panel shivered and clicked open, revealing a recessed safe.
She punched in the combination—her parents' anniversary. A bitter smile touched her lips. Damien had been too arrogant to think she had secrets of her own; he truly believed she was an open book he had already finished reading.
Inside: bundles of cash. Gold bars. Emergency IDs. A row of black flash drives. And the photos.
They were the real treasures. More precious than the gold or the offshore accounts. She found a photo of herself in the garden as a child, clutching Nanny Agnes's hand. Another of her mother brushing her hair. And then, a candid shot of Damien as a teenager. He was smiling, but even then, he was standing just a step behind her—his eyes fixed not on the camera, but on the back of her head.
He had been measuring the crown before it was even hers.
She slid the flash drives into her pocket and sealed the safe just as heavy, familiar footsteps echoed in the hallway.
The study door rattled.
"Elara?" Damien's voice was smooth, like silk over a blade. "Are you in there?"
She took a breath, smoothed her hair, and unlocked the door.
"Yes?"
Damien leaned against the frame, his posture relaxed, yet his eyes were busy scanning the room. "You disappeared. Is everything alright? You haven't touched your tea."
She forced a soft, vacant smile. "I just needed a moment to think. It was a big surprise, Damien."
He stepped into her space, brushing his fingers against her arm. The touch made her skin itch with the urge to scream. "I hope I didn't pressure you with the proposal. I just thought… after everything we've been through…"
Elara tilted her head, her gaze clinical. "What exactly have we been through, Damien? Remind me."
He blinked, the rhythm of his manipulation faltering. "You know. Us. The years. The plans we've made for the company."
"Of course," Elara replied, her voice dropping an octave. "I just want to be absolutely sure we're on the same page before I commit my entire life—and my fortune—to someone."
His eyes narrowed. A flicker of suspicion crossed his handsome face. "You're different today, Elara."
"Am I?"
"There's something in your tone. Something... sharp."
Then he walked to her, using a finger to brush her hair away. "This is not you,baby." His voice was the soft tone he usually used to sway her, like a charmer playing a tune.
She scoffed,then laughed lightly, a hollow, melodic sound, and brushed past him into the hallway. "Maybe I'm finally just growing up, Damien. You did say I had flaws to work on, didn't you?"
Later that afternoon, the back entrance of the estate creaked open.
Agnes was exactly as Elara remembered: a sharp bun, steel-gray eyes, and a spine made of iron. Six months ago, under Damien's subtle "advice," Elara had dismissed her, believing the lie that the old woman was becoming "senile" and "controlling."
When Elara flung her arms around her, the older woman froze in shock before melting, holding Elara with a fierce, protective strength.
"I thought I'd lost you to them," Agnes whispered into her hair.
Elara pulled back, her eyes burning with unshed tears. "You didn't. Not again. I'm so sorry, Agnes. I was so blind."
Agnes frowned, her sharp mind catching the word again, but she didn't push. Behind her, Mr. Hanover approached, his leather briefcase looking like a weapon in the sunlight. "Ms. Voss. I've been waiting for this call since your parent's funeral."
"Let's go to the study," Elara said, her voice turning cold and professional. "We have a lot of work to undo."
The hours that followed were a blur of rustling paper and ink. They reactivated legal safeguards Damien thought were dead. They reversed silent authorizations Elara had signed in a daze of grief months prior. With every signature, Elara felt the noose around her neck begin to loosen.
By nightfall, Hanover left with a folder full of reinstated directives that would effectively lock Damien out of the VossTech inner circle.
Elara stood once more in front of her mirror. The "naive flower" was gone. In her place was a woman who had seen the end of the world and decided to crawl back from the ashes.
It's my turn to write the script, Damien, she thought, watching the darkness gather outside.
You'd never know how your perfectly orchestrated plan started to fall apart.
But as she stared into the glass, a chill crept over her. She felt a sensation she hadn't felt all day.
The nagging feeling that she might be forgetting something…or someone.
