Dayo read the headlines over coffee and felt sothing he had not felt in months.
Not anxiety. Not the tight-chested vigilance that had beco his default since Michael first showed him the photograph of Luna and Jennifer. Not the calculating coldness he wore in etings with Felix, in calls with the old man, in the small hours when he stared at server room screens and tried to read patterns in green text.
Joy. Simple and dark and completely uncomplicated.
He sat at his kitchen table in Los Angeles with the morning sun streaming through the window and scrolled through the news on his phone. Isobel Marchetti — gone, fled to Montenegro with a bag of cash and a hard drive full of sins. Leonard Tanaka — detained in Singapore, his yacht locked at Marina Bay, his whiskey drunk alone in an apartnt that had stopped being his the mont the headline hit. Silas Vane — not nad, never nad, but visible for the first ti in thirty years, his fingerprints on the glass where before there had been only smoke.
And Graham. Poor, desperate Graham, who had scread into a phone on the M25 and threatened to burn everything down. The world thought he had done exactly that. Three headlines in four hours, and every comnt section, every finance blog, every Twitter thread pointed at the sa man. Graham Whitfield had announced his intentions in a room full of witnesses, and now the evidence had dropped exactly as he promised.
Dayo took a sip of his coffee. It was lukewarm. He didn't care.
He thought about Michael Stern sitting in a dark office in Century City, watching the sa headlines, watching the sa fire. The servant who had decided to beco a king. Dayo had known — had confird through the old man three days ago — that Michael was the architect of the Graham leak. But Graham was just the first beam. Michael had looked at Graham's ltdown in Geneva and seen a story. A perfect, ready-made fra. And he had hung two more fires on it.
Isobel and Leonard. Burned with the sa precision, the sa routing architecture, the sa invisible hand. The LA tadata fingerprint that pointed to Dayo but slled of Michael.
Dayo set the phone down and looked out the window. The Los Angeles morning was gold and soft and completely indifferent to the empires collapsing across two continents. Sowhere in Geneva, a woman was driving to an airport with three passports. Sowhere in Singapore, a man was drinking whiskey and waiting for the police. Sowhere in London, a ghost was staring at a river and realizing that even ghosts could be seen if the light hit them right.
And in Los Angeles, Jason Dayo — JD — sat at his kitchen table and smiled.
Not because he was cruel. Not because he enjoyed destruction. But because for months, these people — and the man who served them — had pointed fingers at his family and threaten them. They had photographed his daughter without her knowledge. They had threatened to expose her na to the world. They had made Luna afraid to walk past her own window.
And now they were tearing themselves apart without him firing a single shot .
Dayo smiled finally understanding the Nigeria saying "That a knock of the head that would land on your head would definitely land even if you entered an airplane you will bring that head to recieve the knock."
Luna walked into the kitchen with Jennifer on her hip. The baby was nine months old now, sturdy and curious, her hands reaching for anything within grab range. She reached for Dayo's coffee cup. He moved it out of range and she made a noise of protest that dissolved into giggles when he tickled her chin.
"You're smiling," Luna said. It was an observation, not a question. She had learned to read his moods the way since they were together as he rarely expresses them.
"The smoke changed direction," Dayo said. "They're not looking at us anymore. They're looking at each other."
Luna nodded. She didn't ask for details. She set Jennifer in the high chair and poured herself coffee. "Then we use the window."
"That's the plan."
She looked at him over the rim of her cup. "What does that an?"
"It ans I've been reacting for months. Ducking, dodging, watching Michael manufacture my destruction while I tried to protect what matters." Dayo picked up his phone again, not to read headlines but to make calls. "Now the battlefield has changed. My enemies are eating each other. The people who blocked are suddenly interested in talking. And I have sothing they need."
"What?"
"Proof." Dayo stood up and kissed the top of Jennifer's head. Her hair slled like baby shampoo and sleep. "JD Records Nigeria just completed a five-artist rollout. Eighty-seven million streams on the first EP alone. Arican artists on Nigerian tracks, Nigerian artists breaking into global playlists, a whole pipeline that nobody believed would work. While their empires crack, mine is built and running. And the people who told to stay out of their market are about to discover that I don't need their permission to own it."
He walked to the window and dialed the first number.
The man answered on the second ring. No greeting, just the careful silence of soone who had been waiting for this call without knowing if it would ever co.
"It's Dayo," he said. "I've thought about your offer. I'm willing to hear what you have to say. And maybe — maybe — compromise a bit for sothing."
The man on the other end breathed out. Dayo could hear the relief in the exhale, could picture him in whatever Manhattan office he occupied, surrounded by platinum records and the nervous energy of a man who had bet against the wrong horse.
"When?" the man asked.
"Soon. I'll have my people call your people." Dayo hung up before the man could say more. He didn't need to hear gratitude or explanations. He just needed the man to know the door was open. A crack. Not wide enough to walk through, but wide enough to make him want to.
The second call went to the West Coast. A woman this ti, her voice sharp and controlled, the voice of soone who had built an empire in a business that ate won alive and ca out with blood on her teeth that wasn't hers.
"Dayo." She said his na like she was assessing its weight. "I wasn't sure you'd call."
"I wasn't sure I would either." Dayo watched a bird land on the balcony railing, puff its chest, and fly away. "But things have shifted. My calendar opened up. I'm willing to hear your offer. And I'm open to finding middle ground on the right terms."
"Middle ground." She laughed, a short sound that wasn't amusent but wasn't hostility either. "That's not a word I associate with you."
"I'm learning new words." Dayo paused. "Call my office. Valery will set sothing up. Don't make wait too long — my calendar has a habit of filling fast."
He hung up. Two down. One to go.
The third call was to the South. Atlanta, specifically. The man who answered had a voice like gravel in honey, slow and warm and dangerous if you mistook warmth for softness.
"Well, well. The ghost calls back."
"Not a ghost," Dayo said. "Just busy."
"Busy burning down the music industry, from what I'm reading."
"Not . I just make the music. Other people handle the fireworks." Dayo leaned against the window fra. The morning sun was warm on his face. "I've thought about what you said. Last ti we talked, you made an offer. I'm willing to sit down and hear it properly. And I'm open to compromise — if the value is right on both sides."
The man was quiet for a mont. Then: "You know I wasn't the only one saying no. I wasn't even the loudest."
"I know. But you're the one I'm calling. That should tell you sothing."
"It tells the battlefield shifted and you need allies."
"It tells you I have a window, and I'm choosing who gets to look through it." Dayo straightened up. "Have your people call mine. We'll find a table."
He hung up and set the phone on the counter. Three calls. Three doors cracked open. Not commitnts — not yet. But openings. Conversations. The beginning of sothing that had been impossible three days ago and was now inevitable.
Luna was watching him. Jennifer was saring oatal on her tray with the focused intensity of a sculptor working marble.
"What did they offer?" Luna asked.
"Doesn't matter yet. What matters is that they're offering. Three months ago, those calls went to voicemail. Three days ago, they would have been polite refusals. Today, they're eager." Dayo picked up his coffee and drank the rest, cold and bitter and perfect. "Michael did a favor. He burned down the wall that was blocking my path. The gatekeepers who told to stay out — they're suddenly very interested in what I built while they weren't looking."
"And Michael?"
Dayo's expression shifted. The joy didn't leave, but sothing harder settled beneath it. "Michael thinks he's invisible. He thinks Graham takes the bla, the bosses take the fall, and he walks away with clean hands. But Silas knows. Silas is too smart not to see the hand in the fire. And when Silas moves against Michael — and he will move — the smoke shifts again."
"You're going to let them destroy each other."
"I'm going to let them do what they started." Dayo walked to the high chair and wiped oatal from Jennifer's chin with his thumb. She grabbed his finger and held on, her small hand surprisingly strong. "I'm not the one who pointed guns at my family. I'm not the one who built walls to keep out. I'm not the one who leaked evidence and frad innocent people. They did that to themselves. I'm just... not getting in the way of the consequences."
Luna stood up and walked to him. She put her hand on his chest, over his heart, the way she did when she wanted him to feel that she was real and solid and waiting.
"And if they both survive?" she asked. "Silas and Michael? If they make peace and turn back toward us?"
Dayo looked at her. Really looked at her. The woman who had left him once because he wouldn't let her in. The woman who had co back because he finally had. The mother of his child. The only person in the world who knew where all his doors were and had never walked through one without knocking.
"Then I'll be ready," he said. "Because I'm done reacting. I'm done ducking. I have allies on the phone, an empire running in Nigeria, a team in Austin, and a man in a dark room who owes favors. Michael built his plan on the assumption that I was the victim. That I would scramble, defend, beg. He never planned for to build while he burned."
He kissed Luna — quick, hard, the kind of kiss that held everything he couldn't say. Then he kissed Jennifer's forehead and walked toward his office.
"Where are you going?" Luna asked.
"To call Felix." Dayo paused at the doorway. "Because Michael's plan has one flaw. He frad Graham perfectly. He burned Isobel and Leonard beautifully. But he left evidence in the architecture. The Montreal server. The shell company paynts. The tistamps. Felix and I have been looking at them for days. And when Silas finally moves — when he decides he can't afford caution anymore — I'm going to make sure he has everything he needs to find the man who burned his house."
"You're feeding Silas evidence?"
"I'm clearing a path." Dayo smiled. It wasn't the dark joy from the kitchen table. It was sothing colder. Sothing that had been forged in months of watching his family threatened and his na weaponized. "Let the master hunt the servant. Let the man who built Michael destroy him. And while they're focused on each other, I'll be building the thing they never thought I could build without them."
He walked into his office and closed the door.
Outside, the Los Angeles morning continued its indifferent gold progress. Cars humd on the freeway. Birds circled above the canyon. Three phone calls sat in the mory of a burner phone, three cracks in a door that had been bolted shut for months.
And sowhere across the city, in a dark office with blackout curtains and three glowing monitors, a servant nad Michael watched the fire he had set and waited for the smoke to clear.
He did not know that the smoke was changing direction. He did not know that the man he had frad as the villain was now smiling into his coffee, making phone calls, and building the very thing Michael had spent months trying to prevent.
The war was not over. But for the first ti in months, the wind had shifted. And Jason Dayo — JD — was finally, gloriously, off the defensive.
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