PART 9: THE FLASH DRIVE
Nobody touched the flash drive.
Not immediately.
It sat in the center of Evelyn’s desk like a small piece of unexploded ordnance.
Richard Voss stared at it.Martin stared at it.
Patricia stared at it.
Finally, Evelyn picked it up.
“You’ve had this for fifteen years?”
Richard nodded.
“Fourteen years and eight months.”
“Why keep it?”
A shadow crossed his face.
“Because once I saw what was on it, I stopped knowing who I could trust.”
The room fell silent.
Evelyn walked to her laptop.
She inserted the drive.
A password screen appeared.
Twenty-seven characters.
Patricia looked at Richard.
“You memorized that for fifteen years?”
“I never forgot it.”
Richard stepped forward.
Slowly typed the password.
The drive unlocked.
Hundreds of files appeared.
Emails.
Contracts.
Bank transfers.
Meeting recordings.
Audit reports.
Thousands of pages.
Evelyn opened the first folder.
The date caught her attention immediately.
Fourteen years earlier.
Long before Clara.
Long before the children.
Long before the affair.
Long before Evelyn had even left her law practice.
She clicked a file.
A spreadsheet opened.
Then another.
Then another.
Patricia suddenly leaned forward.
“Oh my God.”
Martin frowned.
“What?”
Patricia pointed at the screen.
“These acquisition numbers.”
Evelyn froze.
Because she saw it too.
The fraud Richard described wasn’t theft.
Not exactly.
The company hadn’t been losing money.
Someone had been creating money.
Artificially inflating company values before acquisitions.
Selling assets at manipulated prices.
Moving profits through subsidiaries.
Making ordinary transactions appear extraordinary.
For years.
Richard watched their reactions carefully.
“You understand now.”
Evelyn slowly looked up.
“This wasn’t a rogue employee.”
“No.”
“This required multiple executives.”
“Yes.”
Patricia swallowed.
“How many?”
Richard’s answer was immediate.
“At least seven.”
The room became quiet.
Seven senior executives.
Seven people with enough authority to hide hundreds of millions of dollars.
Seven people who had likely spent years protecting one another.
Martin rubbed his face.
“This would have destroyed the company.”
“It still might.”
The answer came from Evelyn.
Everyone looked at her.
She continued scrolling through the files.
Then she stopped.
A name appeared.
One she recognized instantly.
Patricia saw it too.
Her face went pale.
“No.”
Martin frowned.
“What?”
Patricia pointed at the screen.
The name belonged to someone still working at Voss Meridian.
Someone trusted.
Someone respected.
Someone who had survived every leadership change.
Every audit.
Every scandal.
Every investigation.
Someone who currently sat on the board.
Harold Bennett.
The longest-serving director in company history.
Richard nodded slowly.
“He was one of them.”
Martin looked stunned.
“Harold?”
“The same Harold who taught me how to negotiate contracts?”
“Yes.”
“The same Harold who voted to remove me?”
“Yes.”
Martin stared at the screen.
Unable to process it.
Harold Bennett had been with the company for nearly thirty years.
He attended every holiday party.
Every shareholder meeting.
Every board retreat.
He was practically family.
Evelyn continued searching.
Then she found something else.
An audio recording.
She clicked play.
Static filled the room.
Then voices.
Old voices.
Younger voices.
A meeting.
Someone laughed.
Someone mentioned offshore accounts.
Then another voice spoke.
A voice everyone in the room recognized immediately.
Harold Bennett.
The room froze.
The recording continued.
“…if Richard ever finds out, we’re finished.”
Another man laughed.
“He won’t.”
Then came a third voice.
Calm.
Confident.
Dangerously familiar.
Victor Kane.
The room fell completely silent.
Because Victor wasn’t exposing the fraud.
He was participating in it.
Patricia looked at Richard.
“You were right.”
Richard didn’t look pleased.
He looked exhausted.
As if being proven right after fifteen years felt less like victory and more like confirmation of an old wound.
Martin sat heavily in his chair.
“Then why disappear?”
Richard answered quietly.
“Because somebody betrayed somebody.”
Evelyn paused the recording.
Her legal instincts were screaming now.
Something still didn’t fit.
The numbers.
The fraud.
Victor.
Harold.
The fake death.
The affair.
The doctor.
They connected.
But not completely.
There was still a missing piece.
Then she opened the final folder.
The folder had no name.
Just a date.
Three years ago.
The year Victor supposedly died.
Inside was a single video file.
Nothing else.
Everyone watched as Evelyn clicked it.
The video began.
A hotel room.
Poor lighting.
Shaky camera.
Victor Kane sat alone at a table.
He looked terrified.
Not cautious.
Terrified.
The timestamp showed it was recorded two days before his supposed death.
Victor looked directly into the camera.
Then he spoke.
“If you’re watching this, I either disappeared…”
He paused.
“…or they finally killed me.”
Nobody moved.
Victor continued.
“The fraud is real.”
Richard closed his eyes.
Patricia gripped the edge of the desk.
Martin stared at the screen.
Then Victor spoke the sentence that changed everything.
“But Harold Bennett isn’t the leader.”
The room froze.
Victor leaned closer to the camera.
“The person running everything…”
His voice dropped to a whisper.
“…is a member of the Voss family.”
Silence.
Absolute silence.
Then the video ended.
Just ended.
No explanation.
No name.
Nothing.
The screen went black.
For several seconds, nobody breathed.
Then Martin slowly turned toward his father.
Richard looked genuinely shocked.
Patricia looked terrified.
Evelyn stared at the dark screen.
Because the Voss family only had three living members connected to the company.
Richard.
Martin.
And Adrian.
One of them had been at the center of a fifteen-year conspiracy.
And somewhere in the world, Victor Kane was still alive.
Meaning he probably knew which one.
PART 10: THE NAME NOBODY WANTED
Nobody spoke for nearly a minute.
The black screen reflected their faces back at them.
Richard looked stunned.
Patricia looked frightened.
Martin looked sick.
Evelyn looked thoughtful.
Because panic never solved anything.
Evidence did.
Finally, she broke the silence.
“Play it again.”
The video restarted.
Victor appeared.
Tired.
Terrified.
Older than his years.
Everyone listened carefully.
Every word.
Every pause.
Every breath.
When the recording ended a second time, Evelyn closed the laptop.
“He’s telling the truth.”
Martin stared.
“How do you know?”
“Because liars add details.”
She folded her hands.
“Victor didn’t.”
Patricia nodded slowly.
Evelyn continued.
“He gave only one piece of information.”
A member of the Voss family.
Nothing more.
Nothing less.
Richard sat heavily in a chair.
“There are only three possibilities.”
Martin looked at him.
“You.”
Richard nodded.
“You.”
Then his eyes moved toward the empty chair Adrian once occupied.
“And Adrian.”
The room became silent again.
Three names.
Three suspects.
One family.
Martin laughed bitterly.
“Wonderful.”
Patricia opened another file from the flash drive.
Then froze.
“Evelyn.”
Everyone looked up.
Patricia’s face had gone pale.
“What is it?”
Without speaking, she turned the screen around.
A transaction ledger filled the monitor.
Hundreds of payments.
Hundreds.
Dates spanning more than a decade.
Evelyn scanned the page.
Then stopped.
Every transaction required executive approval.
Every transaction carried the same authorization code.
Not a signature.
A code.
An internal security credential.
Martin leaned forward.
His eyes widened.
“I know that code.”
Richard looked at him.
“So do I.”
Patricia frowned.
“What does it mean?”
Martin swallowed.
Then answered.
“That code belonged to Adrian.”
Nobody moved.
Nobody even blinked.
Patricia stared.
“Are you sure?”
“Yes.”
Richard’s expression darkened.
The old man suddenly looked ten years older.
“Show me.”
Patricia enlarged the document.
Richard examined it carefully.
Line by line.
Payment by payment.
Then he closed his eyes.
Because he knew.
Before anyone else spoke, he knew.
When he opened them again, there was no doubt left.
“It was Adrian.”
The words landed heavily.
Martin looked away.
Richard stared at the floor.
Neither man seemed surprised.
Only disappointed.
The disappointment hurt more.
Because Adrian had always been the brilliant one.
The careful one.
The responsible one.
Martin was charisma.
Adrian was discipline.
Or so everyone believed.
Evelyn continued digging through the files.
Then she found something else.
A letter.
Unsigned.
Undated.
Addressed only to Victor.
She opened it.
The first sentence made her stomach tighten.
Victor,
If Martin ever discovers the truth about his medical records, everything falls apart.
The room froze.
Martin looked up immediately.
“What?”
Evelyn kept reading.
The letter continued.
The diagnosis must remain unquestioned. Richard cannot know. The company cannot know. Most importantly, Martin cannot know.
Martin stood.
His chair rolled backward.
For several seconds he couldn’t speak.
Then:
“My diagnosis?”
His voice cracked.
Nobody answered.
Because everyone was reading.
Every line made things worse.
The infertility report.
The fraud.
The trust amendments.
The affair.
None of them had been separate events.
They were connected.
Connected through Adrian.
Connected through control.
Connected through money.
Finally Martin whispered:
“No.”
Evelyn looked up.
His face had gone white.
“Adrian knew?”
Nobody answered.
The silence was answer enough.
Martin slowly sat down again.
His brother.
His own brother.
Had known the truth.
For years.
Maybe from the beginning.
Maybe before Clara.
Maybe before the first child.
The realization broke something inside him.
Richard watched his son quietly.
Then said the one thing Martin never expected to hear.
“I’m sorry.”
Martin looked up.
The old man held his gaze.
“I should have seen it.”
For the first time in Martin’s life, his father wasn’t defending himself.
Wasn’t explaining.
Wasn’t controlling.
Just apologizing.
And somehow that made everything hurt more.
Then Patricia’s phone rang.
The sound startled everyone.
She checked the screen.
Unknown number.
She almost ignored it.
Then a voicemail notification appeared immediately afterward.
The room was silent as she pressed play.
A man’s voice filled the office.
Calm.
Measured.
Familiar.
Every person in the room recognized it instantly.
Victor Kane.
“Stop looking at Richard.”
The message crackled.
Then continued.
“Stop looking at Martin.”
A long pause followed.
Then Victor spoke the words that made Evelyn’s blood run cold.
“If you want the truth…”
Another pause.
“…find Adrian before they do.”
The voicemail ended.
Nobody moved.
Nobody spoke.
Because Adrian Voss had disappeared three days earlier.
And suddenly everyone understood the same terrifying thing.
Someone was hunting him.
PART 11: FINDING ADRIAN
For several seconds after the voicemail ended, nobody spoke.
Victor’s final words echoed through the office.
Find Adrian before they do.
Patricia was the first to break the silence.
“Who is ‘they’?”
No one answered.
Because none of them knew.
And that frightened Evelyn more than anything she had uncovered so far.
Fraud could be traced.
Money left records.
Contracts left signatures.
People left evidence.
But an unknown enemy?
That was something else entirely.
Martin stood and walked toward the window.
The city stretched below them.
Thousands of people moving through ordinary lives.
Meanwhile, somewhere out there, his brother had vanished.
And according to Victor Kane, someone was looking for him.
The same someone who had apparently spent years protecting a conspiracy buried deep inside Voss Meridian.
Finally, Martin turned around.
“We find him.”
Richard nodded.
“Agreed.”
Patricia looked skeptical.
“How?”
Martin laughed bitterly.
“My brother always had a pattern.”
Evelyn raised an eyebrow.
“A pattern?”
“When things got complicated, Adrian disappeared.”
Richard’s expression darkened.
“He’s right.”
Patricia looked between them.
“Where would he go?”
Martin didn’t hesitate.
“The lake house.”
Evelyn frowned.
“What lake house?”
“The one our grandfather built.”
Richard’s eyes narrowed.
“I sold that property years ago.”
Martin shook his head.
“No.”
Richard stared.
“What do you mean no?”
Martin folded his arms.
“I checked the deed after Mom died.”
The old man said nothing.
Because suddenly he realized where this was going.
“You didn’t sell it.”
Richard’s jaw tightened.
Martin continued.
“You transferred it.”
Silence.
Patricia looked confused.
“Transferred it to who?”
Martin slowly answered.
“Adrian.”
No one spoke.
Because if Martin was right…
Adrian had a private property no one had connected to him.
A perfect place to disappear.
Three hours later, they were driving north.
Evelyn rode in the passenger seat.
Martin drove.
Patricia sat in the back reviewing documents.
Richard followed in a second vehicle.
The drive lasted nearly four hours.
No one talked much.
Each person was lost in thought.
The farther they traveled from the city, the more isolated the landscape became.
Dense forest.
Empty roads.
Old farms.
The kind of places where secrets could survive for decades.
As dusk approached, Martin turned onto a narrow gravel road.
“There.”
A weathered wooden gate stood ahead.
Beyond it sat a large lake surrounded by pine trees.
And at the far end of the shoreline…
A cabin.
Lights glowed in the windows.
Martin slowed the car.
Nobody said a word.
Because someone was definitely there.
They parked fifty yards away.
The four of them walked toward the cabin.
The evening air felt strangely still.
No birds.
No wind.
No sound.
Just silence.
Evelyn reached the porch first.
She knocked.
Nothing.
She knocked again.
Still nothing.
Then Martin tried the handle.
Unlocked.
The door swung open.
The cabin was empty.
But only recently.
A coffee mug still sat on the table.
A lamp remained switched on.
A half-eaten sandwich rested on a plate.
Someone had left in a hurry.
Very recently.
Patricia stepped forward.
“Adrian?”
No response.
Martin searched the bedrooms.
Richard checked the back rooms.
Evelyn examined the living area.
Then she noticed something on the floor.
A photograph.
Bent.
Partially hidden beneath a chair.
She picked it up.
Her stomach tightened.
The photograph showed Adrian.
Clara.
Victor Kane.
And a fourth person.
A woman.
Older.
Perhaps in her sixties.
Evelyn had never seen her before.
Neither had Patricia.
But when Richard saw the photograph…
His face turned completely white.
Martin noticed immediately.
“Dad?”
Richard didn’t answer.
His hands were shaking.
“Dad.”
Finally the old man whispered:
“No.”
Evelyn looked at him.
“You know her.”
Richard stared at the photograph.
For a long time he couldn’t seem to breathe.
Then he finally spoke.
“That’s impossible.”
The exact same words Martin had spoken days earlier.
Evelyn stepped closer.
“Who is she?”
Richard swallowed.
His eyes never left the photograph.
Then he gave the answer.
The answer that froze everyone in the room.
“My wife.”
Silence.
Martin blinked.
“What?”
Richard looked up.
His voice barely worked.
“My wife.”
Martin stared.
“Dad…”
Then realization hit him.
Hard.
Because his mother had been dead for eleven years.
The woman in the photograph was Margaret Voss.
Martin’s mother.
Richard’s wife.
Officially deceased.
Buried.
Mourned.
Gone.
And yet there she was.
Standing beside Adrian.
Beside Clara.
Beside Victor Kane.
Smiling at the camera.
Alive.
The room became utterly silent.
Then a car engine roared outside.
Everyone turned toward the window.
Headlights flashed through the trees.
Someone had just arrived.
And whoever it was…
Was heading straight for the cabin…….