CASSIAN
The boardroom was a tomb of high-gloss mahogany and the sll of stale espresso and expensive ambition. It was the kind of space that cost more to rent by the hour than the dian annual inco of the city below, and everyone inside was acutely, smugly aware of it.
I sat at the head of the table, technically present. My eyes moved at the prescribed intervals, tracking the speakers. I nodded when a nod was the required currency for moving the conversation forward. To any observer, I was the image of the engaged principal stakeholder, the Wolfe scion doing the heavy lifting of "prestige" and "synergy."
In reality, I was an hour deep into a performance I had perfected by the age of twelve.
The n across from were discussing the importance of being seen with the right nas, status architecture, they called it.
It was the elaborate theater of people who had everything performing for people who also had everything, all so that everyone could watch a digital number on a screen go up.
I found it tedious in the specific way a man who understands true power finds a costu party. This wasn’t power; this was the glitter power wore to dinner to keep the peasants from looking too closely at the gears.
I checked my watch. Efficiency was the only thing in the room I actually cared about.
Efficiency, and the door at the end of the hall.
My phone vibrated against the polished wood. I didn’t excuse myself; I simply picked it up. The room adjusted around the silence I created. It always does. People like these don’t interrupt a Wolfe, they wait for the vacuum to fill.
"What?" I asked.
"There is a dinner tonight," my father’s voice ca through, direct as a gunshot. Charles didn’t do pleasantries.
But there was a cadence to his words that was... off. Not urgent... Charles didn’t panic... but more controlled than usual. In our family, hyper-control was often the only warning you got before a landslide.
"The Governor’s office is hosting at the tropolitan Club," he continued. "Our attendance is expected. Preston and Seraphina are already confird. We are presenting as a family tonight, Cassian. Do not be late."
He didn’t say why. He didn’t ntion the occasion or the guest of honor. He gave the skeleton of the event and withheld the at.
"Fine," I replied. "What ti?"
He gave the details and hung up. I didn’t push. My father operated on a strict need-to-know basis, and I had long ago learned that if he withheld a detail, it was either a test or a trap. Either way, I would find out when it mattered. I trusted his managent of the board, but I never mistook that trust for warmth.
I set the phone back on the table. The eting resud.
I glanced at the clock on the wall. The investors were mid-soliloquy about "heritage branding." This was going to run long. My plan to collect Noah from the office was dead.
I pulled up my ssages. I didn’t explain. I didn’t ask if he had plans or if he’d eaten. I simply sent the address.
et there. I’ll be an hour behind. Don’t wander.
I didn’t consider that sending Noah into an unknown venue alone was anything other than a logistical pivot. It was a dinner. Noah handled dinners. He was my assistant; he was paid to navigate rooms full of people who thought they were better than him. He’d be fine.
I closed the phone and returned my attention to the n in the room, unaware that "fine" was currently being dismantled forty blocks away.
The eting wrapped thirty minutes later with a flurry of handshakes and satisfied smiles. I was moving before the last hand was dropped.
The city moved past the tinted windows of my car in a blur of gray and gold. I ran through the evening’s calculations: duration, exits, which politicians would try to corner for campaign contributions, and exactly how much of my ti I was willing to sacrifice to the family brand. Standard dinner mathematics.
Then, the itch started.
It wasn’t a "gut feeling"... I don’t believe in the mysticism of the stomach. It was a data point that didn’t sit right. My father’s call. The thing he didn’t say. Usually, I can read the negative space in Charles’s conversations; I can see the shape of the missing information.
This ti, the silhouette was jagged. Unclear.
That ant I had missed sothing. And I don’t miss things.
"Get the invite details for tonight," I said to my father’s assistant over the line. "The full brief. Guest list, program, bios. Now."
"Of course, Mr. Wolfe. I’ll have it sent over."
The delay was the second warning. It took five minutes... four minutes longer than it should have for a standard digital file. That ant soone was deciding what to include. Soone was filtering. My grip on my phone tightened.
The PDF arrived with a soft chi. I opened it.
tropolitan Club. Black Tie. Stakeholder Dinner: Celebrating dical Excellence.
The Governor’s office was the host. The Wolfe family were listed as principal stakeholders for the hospital’s new wing. All standard. Then I scrolled to the guest of honor.
Dr. Nicholas Bennett.
There was a photograph. Professional. Formal. A man in a white coat with a polite, asured smile. I stared at the face. He looked like Noah. Not identical, but the bone structure was a mirror image.
But where Noah looked like a ray of sunshine that had been forced to learn how to hide, this man looked like he would find that sunshine and crush it just to see if it made a sound.
The eyes were empty. I knew that look. I saw it in the mirror every morning. But in this man, it was sharpened by a different kind of arrogance.
I typed the na into a search bar. The results were instantaneous. The Miracle at the Presbyterian hospital. The Governor’s Wife Saved by Local Hero. Dr. Nick Bennett: The Gold Standard of Surgery.
And then, the related articles. The family history. The Bennett na.
My mind flashed back to Spain. To the bar where the air slled like brine and expensive gin where I picked Noah up.
He had been drunk, not just buzzed, but bitter-drunk, the kind where the walls co down and the ghosts co out to play. He’d talked about his brother. About the twin who got everything. About the parents who had made their preference architectural, building a life that had no room for a second son.
Nick, he had said. His brother’s na was Nick. He was the one they kept.
I hadn’t filed it carefully at the ti. It was background noise, part of the texture of who Noah was. It wasn’t operational.
Until now.
The realization clicked into place with the cold finality of a lock turning.
My father knew. He had to have known. The Wolfe family sat on the board of that hospital. Charles had personally vetted the "dical Excellence" initiative. The invite list would have crossed his desk a dozen tis.
He hadn’t ntioned the guest of honor because he hoped I’d bring Noah there, blindsided.
It was a test. Or a warning. Or perhaps just Charles moving pieces on a board he felt I was getting too comfortable with. He was exposing Noah to the very thing that had broken him, just to see how I would react when I had to pick up the pieces.
"Drive faster," I said. My voice was low, but the driver didn’t hesitate. The car surged forward, weaving through the evening traffic.
I didn’t call Noah. I didn’t warn him. If he was already in the building, a phone call would only distract him, make him look weak or panicked.
But a mory kept looping in my mind.
Noah in that alleyway, punching , a because he was too heartbroken to hold his own hands still. Noah on his knees in my office, begging for a job he didn’t even want. Noah crying in a hotel room in Spain because the world was too loud.
He wasn’t built for this room. Not yet. He was a creature of nerves and raw, bleeding honesty, and I had sent him into a den of wolves wearing Bennett masks.
"Faster," I repeated.
We pulled up to the tropolitan Club with a screech of tires that was entirely unbecoming of a Wolfe. I was out of the car before it had fully settled.
I didn’t give my na to the staff at the door. I didn’t wait for an escort. I moved through the foyer like a storm front, my eyes scanning the marble expanse.
The lobby was filled with the managed quiet of the elite, but there was a cluster of people near the archway. A disturbance. Curiosity was a sharp scent in the air.
I saw them. Two security guards, their backs to . And between them, Noah.
He was standing his ground, his jaw set so hard I could see the muscle twitching in his cheek. His eyes were bright... not with tears, but with a specific, incandescent fury. He looked like he was choosing not to break.
And then there was the other one. The twin. Nicholas. Standing there with a smirk that made my blood turn to ice. And George Bennett, the patriarch, looking at Noah as if he were a vermin that had crawled into a cathedral.
The security guards moved. Their hands reached out to take Noah’s arms.
"Go on. Lay a finger on my assistant. I’ve been looking for sothing to do tonight and I could use a reason. I haven’t had to bury anyone this week." I said, my voice cutting through the room.
The room went still. It was the specific, breathless silence that happens when a predator enters a room of herbivores.
The guards froze. They didn’t even look back; they just stopped, the air around them suddenly too dangerous to breathe.
Noah didn’t turn around either. But I saw his shoulders drop—just a fraction. A minute release of pressure. He knew the voice. He knew he wasn’t alone anymore.
I stepped forward, my gaze fixed on George and Nicholas Bennett. I didn’t look at Noah yet. I needed them to understand exactly whose territory they had just stepped into.
"I believe there’s been a misunderstanding," I said, my voice a silk-wrapped blade. "You seem to be confused about who belongs in this room."
User Comments
0 comments from readers