Current location: Novel nest HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY Chapter 26

"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 26

Chapter 26: Boardroom Massacre

The boardroom of Thorne Technologies wasn’t just a room. It was a cathedral of obsidian and ego.

The air tasted of ozone. It was the same metallic tang that clung to the mansion’s server banks—a scent of burnt plastic and failing circuits.

At the head of the table, I sat like a statue. Around me, the board members paced like wolves caught in a snare. They didn't know whether to scream or bolt for the elevators.

Julian stood at the far end. His palms splayed flat against the stone table. He breathed in ragged gulps.

He looked less like an executive now. He looked like a man watching his house catch fire. His legal team swarmed around him, fingers blurring over glass tablets. They hunted for an exit.

They wouldn't find one.

"This—this is an illegal seizure, Clara," Julian spat. His voice cracked. He tried to reclaim his polished cadence, but it fell apart.

"Competence?" I cut him off. My voice hit the room like a low-frequency hum. The airy, synthetic lilt that Damian programmed into me was gone, burned away by the collapse.

"You don't get to talk about provisions, Julian. Not when I have your fingerprints on every offshore account."

"You—you have nothing," he stammered. His eyes darted to the wall of screens behind me. "You’re running on corrupted data! The system—the system’s failing!"

I didn't waste breath on words. I tapped the console.

A cascade of red text flooded the wall. Julian’s jaw dropped.

"I have the logs, Julian," I said. A slow, sharp smile broke across my face—the kind that showed the blade.

"I have the emails between you and Vance. I have the wire transfers for the mercenaries. I have the metadata of every... single... keystroke you’ve made in the last six months."

Damian loomed behind me. He stood silent, hands clasped behind his back, shoulders squared. He didn't look at the board members.

He stared at Julian with a predatory, starving hunger. He was the hammer. He was the end of the line.

Julian’s facade crumbled. He didn't just crack; he imploded.

He lunged for the security override panel on the wall. His feet stumbled over the expensive carpet. "You’re a machine!" he shrieked, spittle flying.

"A fucking simulation! You think you’re a person? You’re just—you’re nothing but code! A glitch that grew too big for its—"

He reached for the panel. He was inches away.

I moved before the thought finished in his mind. I was a blurred line of kinetic energy. I intercepted him, my hand clamping around his wrist with the force of a hydraulic press.

Crack.

The sound of his radius snapping was sickening. It was a dry, clean break that killed the noise in the room instantly.

Julian crumpled. He went down hard, knees thudding against the obsidian. He clutched his arm, face turning ash-gray, mouth working, but no words came out.

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"I’m not a machine, Julian," I whispered. I leaned down so he could see his own reflection in my eyes.

"I’m the auditor. And I’ve finished the paperwork."

I turned to the board. They white-knuckled their chairs.

"The Thorne Empire isn't for sale," I said. My voice filled the hollow space like a funeral toll. "It’s a closed system. And I’m the only one with the key."

Damian stepped forward, his shadow swallowing Julian whole. "I’d suggest you leave. Before Clara decides she wants a more... detailed audit of your bank accounts."

They didn't wait. They didn't even gather their briefcases. They scrambled, a panicked stampede of suits and silk, tripping over one another to get to the elevators.

Silence crashed back into the room.

Julian stayed there, shivering, cradling his broken arm in the dust of his own failure.

I walked to the console and tapped the screen once. His access credentials vanished in a blink. He was locked out. For good.

I looked down at him. "Checkmate," I said.

Julian stared back. His eyes were empty. The fire in him died.

I turned my back on him. Damian waited by the door. His hand was outstretched—a silent question, a tether to the only reality that mattered.

I took it.

The ghost was dead. The audit was closed.

As the elevator doors slid shut, the screech of the city below didn't sound like a cage anymore. It sounded like the beginning.

The architecture of my life was mine to rebuild. I was, at last, ready.

No firewall remained between the world and me. There was only the quiet, the light, and the weight of being fully, undeniably real.

I breathed in. The air was clean and sharp. For the first time in history, the future felt like a blank page waiting for my signature.

I didn't look back at the room of shattered glass. I didn't look back at the man I dismantled.

I looked forward, toward the horizon where the sun crested the city spires. It promised a day that belonged to no one but us.

The audit was done. The systems were reset. I stepped out of the Thorne tower not as a ghost, but as a woman who fought through the fire to earn her own heartbeat.

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