CHAPTER 3: The Web of Deception

The silence that followed the commander’s salute was heavier than any I had ever experienced. It was the sound of a legacy—built on decades of greed, backroom deals, and the systematic dismantling of lives—collapsing in real-time. Victor Harrington, the man who had owned the skyline, now looked like a ghost haunting his own tomb.
"Eighteen months," I repeated, my voice calm, cutting through the murmurs like a blade. "Eighteen months of tracing every shell company, every offshore account, and every bribe paid to ensure this ballroom remained untouchable. You thought your power was absolute, Victor. You thought people were merely pawns to be sacrificed in your game of chess."
He lunged forward, his face twisting in a desperate, ugly mask of rage. "You think you can just march in here and ruin me? I have friends in the highest offices. I have journalists on my payroll. This is a PR stunt, a mistake!"
"It’s not a mistake," I said, stepping toward him, my heels clicking sharply against the cold marble. "It’s a rescue mission."
As I spoke, the agents began distributing documents to the guests—the true face of Harrington Industries. These weren’t just financial reports; they were testimonies. Victims of the corporate environmental poisoning, families whose businesses had been liquidated to fuel Victor’s vanity, and employees who had been silenced for daring to whistleblow. The room, once filled with the clink of crystal, was now filled with the frantic rustling of paper.
One by one, the elite guests stopped reading. Their faces changed from confusion to horror. The senators, the investors, the socialites—they were looking at the receipts of their own complicity. By associating with Victor, they had unknowingly been financing his darkest secrets.
"I didn't know," a prominent senator whispered, his voice trembling. He dropped the document as if it were burning his skin. "I honestly didn't know."
"Ignorance is no longer a defense," I reminded them, turning to the room at large. "Tonight is about accountability. Every person who ignored the signs, who looked the other way for a slice of the profit, is going to have to face the truth. But tonight, it ends."
Victor stood frozen, his phone ringing incessantly in his pocket—calls from board members, lawyers, and frantic assistants, all abandoning ship simultaneously. He looked at me, a flicker of something resembling fear appearing in his eyes. He realized then that he wasn't just being arrested; he was being erased. His influence had vanished the second the first federal agent stepped through those doors.
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"You're a monster," he spat, but his voice lacked conviction.
"No," I replied, signaling for the agents to escort him away. "I’m the mirror."