Chapter 123 The Guardian’s Final Key
"Miss Hayes?" Eduardo stood in the doorway. He watched my face. He recognized the shift in my posture.
"Keep Elias here," I instructed. My voice felt rough. "Double the exterior guards. Do not let anyone near the cabin. I need to return to the capital."
"Tristan Johnston is searching for you," Eduardo warned.
"Let him search," I replied. "I have an appointment."
I left the cabin. Marcus drove the black sedan through the winding mountain roads. The dense, snow-covered pine trees gave way to the gray concrete of the highway. We headed south, back into the heart of the beast.
I stared out the tinted window. I dialed a secure number.
Arthur Vance answered on the first ring.
"I have the key," I stated. I skipped the pleasantries. "I need the rest of the story. Meet me at the Aegis headquarters in two hours."
"Not the headquarters," Arthur countered. "The Johnston intelligence teams are watching your corporate towers. Meet me at the Sterling Archival Depository. It is a private facility in the financial district. Harriet does not monitor it."
Two hours later, Marcus parked the sedan in a damp underground garage beneath a towering structure of gray stone.
I stepped out of the car. The underground air felt chilled and damp.
Arthur stood near a set of reinforced steel doors. He wore his usual crisp gray suit. He held a leather briefcase. He looked older today.
"Show me," Arthur requested.
I opened my hand. The antique brass key rested in my palm. The intricate crest of the Johnston founder caught the dim overhead light.
Arthur let out a slow breath. "I spent twenty years wondering if that key still existed. Harriet tore the city apart looking for it in 1996."
"Tell me about my mother," I demanded. We walked toward the steel doors. "The letter said she worked for Alexander Johnston. I remember her working in a commercial bakery. I remember her hands covered in chemical burns from scrubbing industrial ovens."
Arthur swiped a security card.
"Before the bakeries, Natalia Serrano was a legal prodigy," Arthur explained. His footsteps echoed on the tile floor. "She graduated at the top of her class. Alexander Johnston hired her as a junior consultant. He recognized her brilliance immediately."
"Were they involved?" I asked. The question tasted bitter.
"Never," Arthur answered with absolute certainty. "Their relationship was strictly legal. It was a partnership built on trust. Alexander lived in a world of vipers. The old money families constantly engaged in intense, brutal feuds. Brothers sabotaged brothers. Cousins stole from cousins. Harriet Montgomery operated in the shadows, consolidating power through bribes and blackmail."
We walked down a second corridor. The air grew colder.
"Alexander discovered Harriet’s corruption," Arthur continued. "He found the dummy accounts. He saw how she intended to twist the conglomerate into a weapon. He knew she would ruin the Johnston legacy."
"Why did he not fire her?" I pushed. "He was the founder."
"She controlled the board," Arthur said. "She held blackmail material on half the voting members. Alexander lacked the power to remove her. So, he executed a different strategy. He created a shadow trust."
Arthur stopped walking. We stood in front of a massive wall of vault doors.
"He siphoned a massive block of premium, voting-class equity out of the main Johnston holdings," Arthur explained. The gravity in his tone hung heavy in the cold air. "He hid the shares behind a labyrinth of legal shells. He intended to keep that power away from Harriet until the conglomerate needed saving."
I looked at the brass key in my hand. "And he gave the key to my mother."
"He appointed Natalia as the sole legal guardian of the shadow trust," Arthur confirmed. "He trusted her moral compass. He knew she cared nothing for the petty politics of the capital elites."
A sharp, jagged pain tore through my chest. The missing pieces of my childhood fell into place, forming a picture of unbearable cruelty.
"Harriet found out," I whispered.
"Alexander died sudden," Arthur said. He looked away, staring at the blank metal doors. "A heart attack. Two days later, Harriet discovered the missing block of equity. She realized Natalia held the legal proxy. Harriet demanded the transfer documents."
"My mother refused," I stated. A fierce, bleeding pride swelled in my heart.
"She refused," Arthur nodded. "So Harriet destroyed her. She stripped Natalia of her legal license using fabricated ethics charges. She blacklisted her from every corporate firm in the country. She drove her into the industrial district. She forced her into poverty."
Tears burned the backs of my eyes. I refused to let them fall.
"Harriet thought poverty would break her," Arthur finished. "She thought hunger would force Natalia to surrender the key and the shares. But your mother never broke. She hid the key. She filed a lawsuit in 1996 to claim the shares legally, but Thomas Whitmore bribed the judge to seal the case."
"Where is the box?" I asked.
Arthur gestured to the far end of the corridor. "Vault 404."
I walked past the rows of metal doors. I reached the end of the aisle. A small, square door sat at eye level. The brass number plate read 404.
I raised my hand. I slid the antique key into the lock.
The metal mechanism clicked loud in the silent room. The tumblers fell into place. I turned the key and pulled the heavy door open.
Inside the dark cavity sat a thick, black leather folder.
I reached inside. My fingers brushed the cold leather. I pulled the folder out. It felt heavy. It contained the weight of three billion dollars and thirty years of suffering.
A single, sealed white envelope sat on top of the legal papers.
The name Natalia Serrano was written on the front in Alexander Johnston’s elegant script.
"Open it," Arthur urged. He stood a respectful distance away. "Alexander appointed your mother as the guardian. But the shares were never meant for her. She was holding them for a specific beneficiary. The true heir to the shadow trust."
I picked up the white envelope. My hands shook.
I broke the wax seal. I pulled out a single sheet of heavy paper.
I unfolded the letter. The ink was faded, but the words remained sharp and legible.
My eyes scanned down the page. I moved past the legal justifications. I looked for the name. I needed to know who my mother died to protect. Who held the right to claim the stolen power.
I reached the final paragraph.
The shadow trust, inclusive of all voting rights and capital assets, shall remain dormant and under the legal protection of Natalia Serrano.
I held my breath. I read the last sentence.
Upon the designated date, the full weight of the Johnston equity shall transfer absolute to the hidden beneficiary...
I stared at the name written in black ink. The ground seemed to vanish from beneath my feet. The walls of the underground vault spun in a slow circle.
The beneficiary was not a secret Johnston relative. The beneficiary was not a corporate board member.
I looked at the letters. I read the name again.