Chapter 113 Protection Looks Just Like Betrayal
I stared at the digitized contract glowing on the screen of my tablet. The harsh white light illuminated the dark interior of the car. Marcus drove through the winding streets of the capital, navigating the morning traffic, but the city outside the tinted windows felt a million miles away.
My eyes traced the sharp, black strokes of the signature on the final page.
Tristan Johnston. He signed his name on a document that traded his future for a corporate bailout. He bound himself to Thomas Whitmore and the Whitmore heiress. He accepted a massive loan to save his family from ruin.
A ache ripped through my chest. The pain was different this time. It lacked the hot, blinding fury of betrayal. This pain was cold. It felt like a rusted blade turning slow between my ribs.
I opened my eyes and looked at the contract again. The text outlined a fifty-billion-dollar margin call. It outlined the complete insolvency of the Johnston Group. Thomas Whitmore demanded a marital alliance as collateral. If Tristan refused, his grandmother faced federal prison for market manipulation. A hundred thousand employees faced immediate termination. The empire faced extinction.
He carried the weight of a dying dynasty on his shoulders. He made a sacrificial deal.
"Pull over, Marcus," I instructed. My voice sounded thin and strained.
Marcus glanced in the rearview mirror. "We are ten blocks away from the south district, Miss Hayes. We are close to the motel."
"Pull over," I repeated.
Marcus steered the heavy sedan to the curb. We stopped near the entrance of a large, stone cathedral. The towering spires cast long, dark shadows across the pavement.
"Wait here," I said.
I stepped out of the car. The freezing winter wind hit my face. I needed to breathe. I needed an outside perspective. I needed a man who understood the mechanics of old money and the ruthless math of the legacy families.
I pulled my secure phone from my coat pocket and dialed a number.
Arthur Vance answered on the third ring. "Miss Hayes."
"I need ten minutes," I told the family trust lawyer. "I am standing outside the Saint Jude Cathedral in the commercial sector."
"I am three blocks away," Arthur replied. "Give me five minutes."
I walked up the wide stone steps and pushed through the heavy wooden doors. The interior of the cathedral was vast and quiet. Stained glass windows filtered the morning sunlight into fractured beams of red and gold. The air smelled of old dust and melting wax.
I sat on a wooden pew near the back. I waited in the silence.
The heavy doors opened. Arthur Vance stepped inside. He wore a crisp gray suit. He carried his battered leather briefcase. He walked down the center aisle, his dress shoes clicking against the stone floor.
He slid into the pew next to me. He kept a respectful distance.
I handed him the digital tablet. The Whitmore contract filled the screen.
Arthur looked at the document. He let out a long, weary sigh. He did not look surprised. He looked like a man staring at a ghost.
"You found the poison pill," Arthur noted. He handed the tablet back.
"Did you know about this?" I asked.
"I drafted the initial restructuring options," Arthur admitted. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. He stared at the altar at the far end of the church. "Four years ago, Harriet authorized a massive expansion into the Asian tech sector. She bypassed the board. She used leveraged capital. When the foreign regulatory markets shifted, the entire investment collapsed in three days."
Arthur turned his head. His blue eyes met mine.
"The Johnston Group was dead in the water, Minerva," Arthur explained. The gravity in his voice painted a grim picture. "The banks initiated a massive margin call. Harriet hid the losses using fraudulent ledgers. If the truth came out, she faced a decade in a federal penitentiary. The stock price would plummet to pennies. The entire supply chain would fracture."
"So Thomas Whitmore threw a lifeline," I said.
"He threw an anchor," Arthur corrected. "Thomas hates Harriet. He saw an opportunity to conquer his greatest rival without a hostile takeover. He injected billions in clean capital. But he demanded absolute control over the Johnston bloodline. He demanded Tristan marry Celeste."
I looked down at my hands. My fingers were trembling. I laced them together in my lap.
"Tristan signed the contract," I whispered. The words tasted like ash.
"He held no other option," Arthur stated. He defended the CEO. "He tried to find alternative funding. He flew to Europe. He pitched to independent sovereign wealth funds. But the timeline was too tight. The banks gave them forty-eight hours before initiating the asset seizures."