Chapter 135 Tristan Steps into the Fire
I looked at the phone screen in Thomas Whitmore’s hand. Tristan was on his knees, his head bowed, a streak of blood matting his hair. Behind him, the pile of fuel-soaked pallets stood like a funeral pyre. My son was under that blue blanket. I could almost hear his small, terrified whimpers through the silence of the digital feed.
"You have five minutes, Minerva," Thomas said. He placed the phone in the center of the mahogany table so everyone could see the man with the lighter. "Sign the transfer documents, or the North District warehouse becomes a crematorium."
Harriet Montgomery sat perfectly still. She didn't look at the screen. She didn't look at her grandson. She looked only at me, her eyes filled with a hunger. She was willing to let her own blood burn if it meant the shares returned to her control.
"The federal marshals are in the lobby," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "The media is outside. You cannot get away with this."
"The marshals are here to investigate you for industrial espionage, remember?" Thomas countered. He leaned back, his face a mask of predatory calm. "And the media? They will see a tragic industrial accident at a failing Aegis warehouse. A desperate CEO’s husband caught in the crossfire of his own wife’s fraud. It’s a clean narrative."
I reached for the silver pen sitting in front of Harriet. My hand was shaking so violently the pen clattered against the wood.
The man on the screen raised the lighter.
"Wait!" I gasped.
I pulled the transfer document toward me. The ink looked like blood. I was about to sign away the only weapon I had. I was about to let them win.
Suddenly, the doors to the boardroom didn't just open; they were thrown back with a force that sent them rebounding off the walls.
Tristan Johnston stepped into the room.
The board members shrieked. Thomas Whitmore lurched out of his chair, his eyes bulging. Harriet’s composure shattered, her mouth falling open in a gasp.
Tristan was a mess. His shirt was torn, his knuckles were split and raw, and his face was covered in soot and blood. But he was standing. And in his arms, wrapped tightly in a blue blanket, was Elias.
My heart stopped.
I lunged out of my chair, knocking the silver pen to the floor. I ran toward them, my heels slipping on the polished wood. Tristan met me halfway. He collapsed into a chair, his strength finally failing, but he held our son out to me.
I snatched Elias into my arms. He was warm. He was breathing. He clutched his blue stuffed wolf so hard the stitching was coming apart. He buried his face in my neck, sobbing a quiet, exhausted sound that broke me into a million pieces.
"How?" Thomas Whitmore choked out, pointing a trembling finger at the wall monitor.
We all looked back at the screen. The man with the lighter was still there. He was still standing over the bound figure on the knees.
The "bound figure" moved. He looked up at the camera and smiled. It was Diego Morales. He reached behind his back, pulled a hidden blade, and sliced through his zip-ties in one motion. From the shadows of the crates, Marcus and a team of men in tactical gear emerged. They didn't wear Johnston or Whitmore colors. They wore the crest of Mendoza Shipping.
"Javier Mendoza sends his regards," Tristan rasped. "He didn't like your threats against his lines. He decided to back the winning horse."
"It was a loop," I realized, looking at the screen. "You looped the security feed."
"I designed the system, Thomas," Tristan said. He stood up, leaning heavily against the table, but his gaze was a blade aimed at Harriet. "I told you I knew the dead zones. I knew how to feed the monitor a recording while I took the basement entrance. You were so busy gloating you didn't notice the time-stamp on your own feed was lagging by six minutes."
Tristan turned to the board.
"Thomas Whitmore just attempted to murder the heir to this company," Tristan announced, his voice booming through the room. "And Harriet Montgomery sat there and watched. She was ready to let her grandson and her great-grandson die for a voting block."
A murmur of horror rippled through the directors. Even the most loyal Traditionalists looked away from Harriet.
Tristan reached into his pocket and pulled out a digital drive. He slammed it onto the table.
"On this drive are the unedited logs from the Whitmore servers," Tristan said. "They prove that the peptide formulations were stolen from Aegis by Whitmore's hackers. They prove the industrial espionage was a frame-up. And they prove Harriet Montgomery used Johnston funds to pay the contractors who targeted Minerva Serrano three years ago."
He looked at me.
"The alliance is dead," Tristan declared.
I walked back to the head of the table. I held Elias with my left arm, his weight a grounding force against my heart. With my right hand, I picked up the leather folder of bearer shares.
"Harriet," I said.
The matriarch looked at me. Her face was old. Truly old. The power had drained out of her, leaving nothing but the bitterness of a woman who had outlived her own soul.
"Alexander Johnston left these to me because he knew you were a cancer," I said. I looked at the board members, one by one. "He knew you would destroy this legacy. I am here to fulfill his final request."
I looked at the federal marshals who were finally entering the room, led by Javier Mendoza himself.
"Arrest them," I commanded.
"On what grounds?" Thomas Whitmore shouted, though his voice lacked conviction.
"Kidnapping. Attempted murder. Corporate fraud. Take your pick," I replied.
As the marshals moved in, the boardroom descended into a different kind of chaos. Thomas was shouting for his lawyers. Harriet was being led away in silence, her head held high even as the handcuffs clicked shut.
I ignored them all.
I looked at Tristan. He was bleeding, he was exhausted, and he had just destroyed the empire he was born to lead.
He looked at me, a silent question in his eyes.
I looked at my son, who had finally stopped crying and was staring at Tristan with wide, curious gray eyes.
I felt the weight of the Johnston crown settling over my head. It didn't feel like victory. It felt like a burden.
"Minerva," Tristan whispered, reaching out a hand.
I didn't take it. I turned toward the window, looking out at the city that now belonged to me.
"We have a lot to talk about, Tristan," I said. "But not tonight."