Elayne remained seated, a statue of quiet obedience. It was the role she had perfected, the one stipulated in the iron-clad NDA she'd signed upon marrying his son. She offered a small, deferential nod that she hoped looked appropriate rather than hollow. Theodore didn't look at her. He strode past her chair, his eyes fixed on the empty seat at the head of the table, the wake of his cologne-sandalwood and cold ambition-washing over her.
He took his seat. Her husband, Calhoun, followed, his movements precise and economical. He gave her a clinical glance, an assessment, not an acknowledgment. She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear, a placid gesture to mask the storm brewing inside her.
"Let's begin," Theodore said, his voice booming without the aid of a microphone. He placed his hands flat on the table. "As you all know, the hostile takeover attempt by Barton Garrett is completely neutralized. The board had doubts. The market had doubts. But Maynard Global delivered."
Polite applause rippled through the room. Elayne straightened her spine. This was it. The Chimera protocol was the ghost engine behind their victory. She had been the one to profile the corporate raiders, to identify the digital tripwires, to map the network of shell companies Garrett used to mask his attack. She had spent sleepless nights not coding, but hunting, leaving her eyes burning and her skin gray. She wasn't ready to stand-that was forbidden-but she was ready for the silent acknowledgment, to finally be seen by Calhoun, not just as the wife, but as the architect.
Theodore raised a hand, silencing the room. He gestured toward his youngest son, Conrad, who stood by the presentation screen.
"None of this would have been possible without the vision of the project lead," Theodore said, a rare warmth entering his tone. "I give you... my son, Conrad Maynard."
The conference room door opened, not a side door for catering, but the main entrance, admitting a team of PR staff with cameras.
Elayne's breath hitched in her throat, a physical block that stopped the air from reaching her lungs.
Conrad stepped forward. He was wearing a tailored Tom Ford suit that looked more suitable for a magazine cover than a quarterly review, his hair artfully disheveled. He looked like a star. He looked like the opposite of the eighteen months of silent, thankless grit Elayne had just survived.
"Conrad?" The name was a silent scream in her mind, dissolving in the sudden, thunderous applause that erupted around her. The sound was high-pitched, ringing in her ears like tinnitus.
The massive screen behind Theodore flickered and changed. The title slide for Project Chimera appeared. Underneath the bold text, in elegant font, it read: Project Director: Conrad Maynard.
Elayne's hand went numb. The Montblanc pen she had been holding slipped from her fingers and hit the glass table with a sharp clack.
Heads turned. A few board members glanced at her, their expressions ranging from pity to confusion, before quickly averting their eyes back to the shining figure at the front.
Conrad glided to the front of the room. He took the microphone from his father, his nails manicured to a lethal point. He scanned the room, his gaze flickering over Elayne for a split second-a look devoid of guilt, filled only with a childish triumph.
"Thank you, Father," Conrad said, his voice light and airy. "When I first conceptualized the Chimera defense protocol..."
He began to speak. Elayne felt the blood drain from her face. Conrad was reciting the executive summary Elayne had written two nights ago. He was using her words, her cadence, even pausing for emphasis at the exact spots she had marked in the draft she had anonymously uploaded to the secure server.
He doesn't even know what a psy-ops profile is, Elayne thought. The logic center of her brain was misfiring. She felt an overwhelming urge to stand, to scream, but the NDA was a physical chain around her throat. Three years. She had promised three years of silence in exchange for him saving her life. The contract was almost up.
Her eyes darted to Calhoun. He was watching the presentation, his expression unreadable, analytical. Did he know? Did he sanction this? The thought was a shard of ice in her gut.
That's my work, she thought, the words a silent, desperate drumbeat.
Theodore's head snapped toward the small sound of the dropped pen. His eyes, usually indifferent, were now sharp shards of ice. It was a look of absolute warning. Be still, the look said. Do not embarrass this family.
Elayne looked around the room. The security guard by the door shifted his weight. The board members were staring at their tablets. If she made a scene, she would be the hysterical wife. The liability.
She bit her lip so hard she tasted the metallic tang of blood. Slowly, agonizingly, she lowered her hand from the table.
Conrad finished the speech. The room exploded in applause again. Theodore beamed, placing a hand on Conrad's shoulder, presenting him to the world like a trophy.
Elayne sat in the shadows, her hands gripping her knees under the table to stop them from shaking.
When the meeting adjourned, the room gravitated toward Conrad. Elayne waited until the crowd thinned, then saw Calhoun approaching the coffee station. She stood, intending to intercept him, to communicate with a look, a touch-anything.
"Calhoun," she began, her voice a silent thought.
He adjusted his silk cufflink, not meeting her eyes. "Conrad needed the win, Elayne. The narrative required a public face. The Van der Sloot family is looking for a rising star to manage their joint venture. A title like this... it increases his value." He spoke in a low, dispassionate murmur, as if discussing a stock transfer.
Elayne felt like she had been punched in the gut. "His value? What about the integrity of the work? I'm the one who did the work. So I'm just... what? A ghost? A stepping stone?" The questions raged in her mind, but her face remained a placid mask.
Calhoun finally looked at her. His expression was flat, bored. He reached out and brushed an imaginary piece of lint from her shoulder, a gesture that felt more like a dismissal than comfort. "You are the silent asset, Elayne. You need to be sensible. This is for the stock price. This is for the family."
He turned and walked away, checking his phone.
Elayne stood alone in the empty conference room. The silence was deafening. She pulled out her phone, her fingers fumbling as she brought up the encrypted messaging app. She typed a single character to her only contact, an old handler from her past life. She needed someone to tell her she wasn't crazy, that she existed.
The message sat there. One gray checkmark. Not delivered.
The contact was offline. Super busy. Catch up later.
Elayne stared at the screen until it went black. She looked out the window at the skyline she had helped defend, realizing for the first time that she was completely invisible.