Chapter 85 Fault Lines And Fallout ( Demilia’s POV)
There’s this fragile illusion you get in moments like this, the idea that when the truth finally comes out, people will pull together. But honestly? Truth doesn’t always heal. Sometimes it just splits things wide open.
The morning after Dr. Halden Crowe’s confession, it felt like the whole world got louder. Phones rang nonstop. News alerts popped up everywhere. Analysts argued on every channel. Activists rushed to organize. The government? All stiff posturing. And inside our own group, the pressure started to crack things that used to feel solid.
The headlines were brutal.
GLOBAL ARCHITECT ADMITS ROLE IN CONTAINMENT NETWORK
BILLIONAIRE FOUNDATION IMPLICATED IN PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTROL SYSTEM
ETHAN BLACKWELL FACES QUESTIONS OVER AURELIUS INITIATIVE
Ethan just stared at the screen. His jaw clenched, shoulders tight.
“They’re making this my scandal,” he said, his voice low.
Adrian shook his head. “No, they’re making it your responsibility. That’s worse.”
“They need a villain people recognize,” Liora said, finishing Adrian’s thought. “And you fit too well.”
I watched Ethan while Liora spoke. He wasn’t angry. He didn’t even look defensive. He looked… betrayed. Betrayed by the very systems he’d spent years trying to fix.
“They’re boiling down everything about global architecture to one man’s ambition,” Adrian said. “It’s lazy. And on purpose.”
Ethan muttered, “Let them talk. As long as it keeps the focus off you—”
“No,” I cut in, sharper than I meant. He turned to look at me.
“This was never about sacrificing you,” I told him. “And it’s not going to turn into that.”
He hesitated. “Demilia”
“They already tried to sacrifice me,” I said, softer now. “We’re not repeating that pattern.”
Silence dropped over us. Not the comfortable kind, nobody was agreeing. Not really.
By midday, the pressure just kept mounting. Donors started pulling out of the Aurelius Initiative. Board members called emergency meetings. Media analysts clamored for Ethan’s resignation, all in the name of “transparency.”
“They’re coming for your credibility now,” Adrian warned him.
“They want a trophy,” Liora added. “If they take you down, they weaken everything we’ve built.”
Ethan rubbed his face, looking exhausted. “Maybe I should step back,” he said quietly. “Just for now, until things calm down.”
His words felt like a crack running through everything holding us up.
I turned to him. “You think stepping down will make them stop?”
He looked conflicted. “I think it’ll keep them from using me to take the heat off you.”
“They’ll always find someone to use as a distraction,” I said. “If it’s not you, it’ll be someone else. Maybe me again.”
Liora nodded. “If you step down, you don’t end the story, they just get the ending they want.”
Adrian chimed in, “You lose your voice. Your silence becomes an admission of guilt.”
Ethan glanced between us, his eyes full of turmoil.
“I never wanted to fight for power,” he said. “I just wanted to fix what was broken.”
I met his gaze. “And now you see what broken systems do to people who try to fix them.”
He looked down, his voice barely above a whisper. “I don’t want this to destroy you.”
“It won’t,” I said. “But running away from it yeah, that will.”
For a second, the room held its breath. We stood on the edge either we’d break apart, or we’d hang on.
Then Liora’s tablet buzzed.
She glanced at the screen and froze.
“We’ve got a problem,” she said.
Adrian looked up. “What kind?”
“The kind that reeks of betrayal.”
She spun the laptop around. The headline glared at us:
LEAKED EMAILS SUGGEST BLACKWELL TEAM MANIPULATED EVIDENCE
INSIDER CLAIMS DOCUMENTS WERE ALTERED TO FRAME CONTAINMENT NETWORK
My stomach flipped.
“That’s impossible,” Ethan snapped. “We never touched any of that.”
Liora didn’t blink. “Exactly. Which means someone’s working hard to make it look like we did.”
Adrian’s voice sharpened. “Who?”
Liora hesitated, then just said it.
“Marcus Vale.”
Nobody spoke. The air felt heavy.
Ethan broke the silence, tight and low. “Are you sure?”
“I traced the metadata,” Liora said. “The leak came from a channel linked to him.”
My head spun. Marcus Vale. The whistleblower. The guy who always claimed he was just trying to do the right thing.
Adrian’s voice was flat. “You think he set us up?”
Liora nodded. “He’s saving his own skin.”
Ethan let out a bitter laugh. “And throw us under the bus.”
Anger surged through me. “He used my story,” I said, barely above a whisper. “Now he’s twisting it to save himself.”
It didn’t take long for the story to spread. The headlines shifted, not all the way, but just enough to shake public trust. Commentators started picking apart the evidence. Opponents called it a fabrication. The noise got louder.
“They’re muddying everything,” Adrian said. His jaw was clenched. “Confusion works in their favor.”
“Doubt’s their shield,” Liora added.
Ethan started pacing. “We need to hit back.”
I nodded. “But not by playing defense.”
They all looked at me.
“We don’t get dragged into arguing over the evidence. We show how deep the rot goes.”
Adrian frowned. “How?”
“We expose Vale,” I said.
We called for an emergency meeting with him. He took his time, but finally, his face appeared on the screen. He looked tired, like he hadn’t slept in days, but he still tried to act calm.
“Mrs. Blackwell,” he said.
I didn’t waste time. “You leaked false claims about us.”
He sighed, almost like he wanted sympathy. “You left me no choice.”
Ethan shot back, “Don’t insult us.”
Vale turned to him, voice strained. “You don’t know what I’m dealing with.”
I cut in, cold. “Neither did I when your system put a target on my back.”
He stared at his hands. “They were going to ruin me. Legally. Financially. Everywhere.”
“So you chose to ruin us?” Liora’s words were sharp.
He barely looked up. “I chose to survive.”
The truth stung more than any lie.
I stared at him. “You’ve become what you claimed to hate.”
He looked away, shame all over his face.
“But it’s not too late,” I said.
He glanced up, wary.
“You can still set the record straight. Publicly. Completely.”
He hesitated. “And if I don’t?”
Adrian didn’t flinch. “Then you’ll go down as the man who tried and failed to rewrite history.”
Something shifted in Vale’s eyes. Fear, maybe. Or just exhaustion.
“I want protection,” he said, voice barely above a whisper.
Ethan nodded. “Legal protection. Nothing more.”
Vale exhaled. “I’ll fix it.”
That night, he put out a public retraction. No hedging. No vagueness.
MARCUS VALE ADMITS TO MISLEADING LEAK — APOLOGIZES FOR DISTORTING TRUTH
He didn’t stop there. He dumped more documents. More names. More mess. The whole network started to unravel in public.
“They didn’t realize how scared he was,” Liora said, her voice low.
“Or how little he cared about loyalty,” Adrian muttered.
But the damage lingered. The crack in trust didn’t heal.
Once trust breaks, it never really comes back.
That night, the exhaustion wasn’t physical—it was the kind that sits deep in your chest, heavy with anger, resolve, sadness, and something like hope.
I sat alone, hand resting on my stomach. I whispered to my daughter, “Some people will betray you. Even when you believe they can change.”
She shifted inside me.
“But we’re not going to turn into them,” I promised her.
Later, Ethan came in and sat on the floor beside me.
“I hate seeing you hurt,” he said, voice soft.
I leaned against the wall. “It hurts both of us.”
He hesitated. “Do you ever wish you’d stayed out of all this?”
I thought about what it would have meant to keep quiet. To disappear.
“No,” I said. “I regret all the years I thought I couldn’t fight back.”
He gave me a tired, crooked smile. “You’re terrifyingly brave.”
I smirked. “Your marriage is terrifying.”
The next morning, the next punch landed.
Aurelius Initiative’s board released a statement:
BOARD REQUESTS TEMPORARY STEP-DOWN OF ETHAN BLACKWELL PENDING REVIEW
“They’re pressuring you again,” Adrian said.
“They want distance,” Liora added.
Ethan looked at the message.
Then at me.
“This time,” he said quietly, “I won’t run.”
A surge of pride warmed my chest.
“Good,” I said. “Because we’re not hiding anymore.”
We scheduled a joint press conference.
Not to defend.
To confront.
The room was filled with reporters, cameras, and microphones.
Ethan stood beside me.
I stepped forward.
“They tried to silence me,” I said calmly. “They tried to label me unstable. They tried to control my story.”
Flashes erupted.
“They tried to turn my husband into a scapegoat,” I continued. “They tried to fracture our alliance.”
I looked directly into the cameras.
“It won’t work.”
Murmurs rippled.
“This is bigger than individuals,” I said. “This is about a system that profits from fear, manages truth, and punishes dissent.”
Ethan spoke next.
“My foundation was misused,” he admitted. “And I take responsibility for ensuring that never happens again.”
He met the cameras head-on.
“But I will not step aside while the real architects hide behind institutions.”
Applause erupted from journalists, from advocates, from people who had been waiting to hear someone speak without fear.
Afterward, as we left the stage, Liora whispered, “That was a turning point.”
“Yes,” Adrian agreed. “They failed to break you.”
Ethan looked at me. “They won’t.”
Later, alone again, I stared at the skyline.
The city looked the same.
But it felt different.
Not quieter.
Not safer.
But more honest.
“They tried to divide us,” I whispered.
“They tried to twist the truth into doubt.”
I rested my hand over my stomach.
“But the truth is stubborn,” I said softly. “And so am I.”
Yet I knew something important:
If betrayal could come from Marcus Vale
It could come from anywhere.
Even closer than we imagined.
And as the movement grew stronger publicly, I felt it:
Another fracture forming.
Another loyalty preparing to break.
Because the next twist wouldn’t just test our credibility.
It would test our inner circle.
And someone we trusted was about to choose themselves over the truth.