The motorcade didn’t just arrive; it invaded. A massive convoy of black armored SUVs, led by heavy combat trucks, pulled into the plaza of the secondary headquarters. Ethan had initially argued for a more discreet entrance, but Jason had been relentless in his insistence.
"Chief, after the rumors of the last few weeks, they need to feel your weight. They need to see the power of Royal before you even speak a word," Jason had said.
As the vehicles were brought to a stop in perfect formation, the presence of the convoy alone sent a wave of visible terror through the staff watching from the lobby windows. The heavy doors of the lead vehicle swung open, and the guards scrambled to clear a path.
Ethan stepped out first. He adjusted his jacket, his presence radiating an aura of absolute authority that seed to physically press down on everyone nearby. Following closely behind him was a phalanx of the most powerful won in the city—Lena, Cassandra, and Alexandria—each looking lethal and elegant. Jason walked a half-step behind Ethan’s shoulder, looking like a reaper in a tactical suit.
Two guards sprinted ahead, throwing open the massive double doors of the headquarters. As Ethan walked through the lobby, ti seed to freeze. Employees stopped in their tracks, dropping files and staring in awe. It was the first ti many of them had seen the "Ghost of North End" in person.
Whispers broke out like a wildfire. "Is that him?" "He’s terrifying..."
Several female staffers gasped, their faces flushing as they took in his sharp features and the raw, masculine power he projected. Many found themselves unable to look away, completely captivated by the man who held their lives in his hands. Ethan ignored them all, his gaze fixed forward with icy indifference.
They reached the grand elevators and ascended to the top floor, where the main auditorium had been converted into a high-security conference hall. The guards at the entrance stood as stiff as statues as Ethan approached. They threw the doors open, revealing a room packed with over fifty managers and executives sitting in tiered rows.
The chatter inside died instantly. The temperature in the room seed to plumt as Ethan walked down the center aisle toward the podium. The sound of his footsteps was the only thing heard—a steady, rhythmic beat that felt like a countdown.
"He looks younger than the photos," one executive whispered, his voice trembling.
"He looks like he’s already decided who lives and who dies," another replied, clutching his briefcase so hard his knuckles turned white.
Ethan reached the front, turned around, and surveyed the crowd. He didn’t speak imdiately. He simply leaned against the mahogany table, let his eyes roam over the sweating faces of his subordinates, and waited for the silence to beco unbearable.
He didn’t need a microphone; his voice carried a natural, resonant power that filled every corner of the auditorium. He looked out at the sea of faces—so pale with fear, others trying to maintain a mask of corporate dignity.
"My na is Ethan Blake," Ethan said.
He let the na hang in the air for a mont, letting the weight of it sink in.
"I am the sole owner, the founder, and the only master of this organization. Let us be clear from the start: there are no partners here. There is no board of directors. There is no committee to appeal to. My word is the only law that exists within these walls," Ethan said.
He stepped around the podium, walking slowly along the front row. The managers flinched as he passed, as if his shadow were a physical weight.
"I have been away for a short ti, and it seems so of you developed a very dangerous delusion. I’ve heard whispers. I’ve read the reports. So of you have started to believe you are indispensable. You thought that because you manage a district or control a supply line, you could hold this company hostage," Ethan said.
He stopped in front of a senior executive who was sweating profusely.
"I know about the ’private arrangents.’ I know about the resources and contacts used to pressure other leaders. You’ve extorted your subordinates, you’ve stolen from the coffers, and you’ve sabotaged operations just to prove you were ’needed’ to fix them. You’ve treated my empire like a feast for parasites," Ethan said.
Ethan’s eyes turned cold, flickering with a faint, predatory light.
"That era ends today. Right now. You thought you were big fish in a small pond, but you forgot who built the pond. Every cent you stole, every contact you turned against us, and every bit of leverage you think you have... it is all worthless now," Ethan said.
He turned back to the room, his voice dropping to a low, lethal silkiness.
"You are not indispensable. You are barely even relevant. And I am here to show you exactly what happens to a ’leader’ who forgets who he serves," Ethan said.
The silence in the auditorium was broken only by the sound of heavy breathing and the faint hum of the air conditioning. Ethan scanned the rows of seats, watching as so of the n tried to whisper to one another, their eyes darting toward the exits.
Ethan turned his head slightly toward Lena. "Did you bring what I asked for?" Ethan said.
"Everything is ready, Ethan. They’re right outside," Lena said.
On cue, the heavy doors at the back of the auditorium swung open. Several ard guards marched in, pushing a large industrial cart stacked high with thousands of printed pages, organized into thick, bound folders. The tallic rattle of the cart echoed like a funeral bell. The guards began handing out the folders, dropping them onto the desks of the executives with a heavy thud.
"Go ahead. Open them. It’s a little gift I’ve prepared to refresh your mories," Ethan said.
As the managers opened the first few pages, the room went deathly silent. The arrogance that had been simring under the surface—the bravado they had used to justify their "executive decisions"—evaporated instantly.
The folders contained everything.
Every encrypted ssage, every offshore bank account number, every secret eting recorded by hidden microphones, and even GPS logs of where they had been and who they had t. It wasn’t just a summary; it was a microscopic view of their betrayals. The weight of the paper in their hands felt like lead, pinning them to their seats.
"What you’re holding is the map of your own graves. I have the dates, the tis, and the exact amounts you thought were hidden. You thought you were playing a ga of chess while I was away, but you didn’t realize the board itself was watching you," Ethan said.
One manager’s hands shook so violently that his folder slid off the desk, scattering pages across the floor. He didn’t even reach down to pick them up; he just stared at Ethan with the hollow eyes of a condemned man.
"Look at the last page. That is the current balance of your personal accounts. Or rather, what the balance used to be before Crul emptied them three minutes ago. You are currently holding the only things you own in this world: those pieces of paper," Ethan said.
The reality of their situation crashed down on them. They weren’t just being fired; they were being erased.
"You don’t need to know who or what Crul is. All you need to understand is that I have the power to do more than just end your careers. I can end your lives. I can send you to a prison cell so deep the sun will beco a mory, or I can simply make you vanish from this earth. And let’s be honest—if you disappeared tomorrow, no one would co looking for you. In my eyes, you are nothing more than insignificant pieces of shit," Ethan said.
The sound of pages turning frantically filled the hall. n with trembling fingers reached the final sheet of their dossiers, their hearts hamring against their ribs.
"Check the last page. Everyone who finds a bright red sheet of paper... get up. Now. Get out of my sight. I never want to see your faces again as long as I live. If I ever cross paths with you, or if you even think about ntioning the na ’Royal’ to the outside world, I will make sure you regret every breath of your miserable lives," Ethan said.
About twenty managers stood up at once, their chairs scraping loudly against the floor. They didn’t wait to be told twice. So stumbled, others practically ran toward the exits, leaving their folders behind. They were the "lucky" ones—the ones who had only been greedy or lazy, but not truly treacherous. They were being cast out into the world with nothing, but they were keeping their lives.
Ethan watched them flee with a look of pure disgust. When the heavy doors finally slamd shut behind the last of them, the room felt much larger and significantly colder.
Ethan turned his gaze back to the thirty people who remained in their seats. They looked at their last pages. There was no red paper there. Only a black sheet with a single gold seal.
"Now that the trash has been taken out, we can discuss what to do with the traitors. You thirty... you didn’t just steal. You conspired. You sold secrets to the Scavengers and Parthenon. You thought you could replace ," Ethan said.
He stepped down from the podium and walked toward the first row, stopping inches away from the man who had been the ringleader of the internal coup.
"Jason, bring the ’special’ chairs. Our friends here are going to be with us for a very, very long ti," Ethan said.
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