Chapter 152 Priming The Massive Global Trap
The side door to my private lounge opened. Tristan stepped out.
He moved slow, his left arm bound in a dark sling against his chest. His face lacked color, the pale skin stark against the dark fabric of his shirt. The doctors had told him to stay in the hospital bed for another week, but he had refused. He walked toward my desk, his breathing shallow but his gray eyes sharp.
"He bought it," Tristan said. He lowered himself onto the leather sofa, gritting his teeth against the pain in his side.
"He bought it completely," I confirmed. I picked up the proxy document and threw it into the shredder. The machine whirred, eating the paper in seconds. "He thinks I’m a terrified mother ready to trade my legacy for a quiet life. He thinks tomorrow is going to be his coronation."
Tristan watched the shredded paper fall into the bin. "He underestimated your rage."
"He underestimated my mother," I corrected him. I walked to the window, looking out over the city. "He thought because she hid, she was weak. He thinks I am the same. But my mother didn't hide because she was afraid. She hid to give the shares time to mature. She hid to give me time to grow teeth."
Tristan was quiet for a moment. "You are walking into a room filled with every enemy you have ever made. Thomas, Harriet, Benedict, and a hundred shareholders who still think you are a mistake."
"I am," I said. I turned to look at him. "And I am going to lock the doors."
"The data is ready?" he asked.
"Diego finished the final compilation an hour ago," I said. "We have the offshore bank ledgers. We have the communication logs between Benedict and Thomas. We have the proof that the liquidity crisis was an orchestrated theft to hollow out the Johnston foundations."
I walked over to the sofa and sat beside him. He looked at me, the arrogance that used to define him stripped away by the reality of his own failures. In the hospital room, he had finally given me the truth. He had confessed to his arrogant belief that he could "fix it later." He had admitted that his silence didn't protect me, it only managed my misery.
He didn't ask for forgiveness. He knew he hadn't earned it.
"Are you sure you want to be there tomorrow?" I asked him. "When I expose Benedict, the collateral damage will hit the Johnston name. Your father’s legacy will be dragged through the mud. The stock will plummet."
"Let it burn," Tristan stated. His voice held no hesitation. "The legacy is a lie. I spent my entire life trying to protect a name that was built on theft and sabotage. I lost three years with my son and my wife for a company that was hollow on the inside. Burn it down, Minerva."
I studied his face. I saw the exhaustion, the physical pain of his wound, and the deep, enduring ache of a man who realized his entire worldview had been wrong.
"They will call you a failure, Tristan," I warned him. "The media will say you were outplayed by your own board."
"I was outplayed," he admitted. He reached out with his good hand, his fingers stopping an inch from mine. He didn't presume to touch me. "I thought I was the only one who could control the monsters. I was wrong. The only thing that matters tomorrow is that the world sees the truth. They need to see that you were never the villain in this story."
"I am not a hero, either," I said. "What I am going to do tomorrow is going to ruin lives. Innocent employees will lose their pensions. The market will crash."
"You are cutting out the rot," Tristan said. "It hurts, but it is the only way the host survives. I will stand behind you, Minerva. I don't care about the name. I just care about you."
The emotional weight of his words hung in the air. For three years, I had craved his protection. I had wanted him to fight for me. Now, he was offering himself as a shield, not to fight my battles, but to stand beside me while I fought my own.
It didn't erase the past. It didn't fix the hunger or the lonely nights in the industrial district. But it was a start.
My phone vibrated on the desk. A message from Diego.
The broadcast links are secured. Tomorrow at 9:00 AM, the boardroom feeds will transmit live to every major financial news network on the continent.
I looked at the screen. The trap was fully primed. Benedict and Thomas thought they were walking into a private room to quietly execute a corporate takeover. They thought they were going to bully a tired woman into surrendering her crown.
They didn't realize the entire world was going to be watching.
"Get some rest, Tristan." I said, standing up.