“He thanked me,” she said. “Said he’d handle it internally and told me to keep quiet until he reviewed the matter.”

Her eyes darkened, but her voice never shook.

“Three days later, I was called to Miranda Cross’s office.”

That finally made Jerome glance up sharply.

Mila continued. “She knew my brother’s name. She knew what school he went to. She knew he sometimes waited for me after work. She told me family was the most important thing in the world and that I should stop taking interest in matters outside my role.”

A cold silence expanded across the room.

“She was threatening Noah,” Elias said.

“Yes.”

“Why didn’t you come to me then?”

Mila let out a humorless breath. “Because I was twenty-six, broke, and one bad day away from losing custody of the only family I had left. You were Elias Cross. Men in my neighborhood crossed the street when your motorcade passed. I didn’t think I could reach you. I thought I’d die in the lobby before I ever got near you.”

The honesty of it landed harder than accusation.

“A week later,” Mila said, “I was suspended for falsifying documents and assisting in smuggling. They confiscated my laptop, blocked my account, took my badge, and pushed rumors into every hiring office near the harbor before I’d even walked out of the building.”

Noah’s small hand had found hers under the table.

Mila looked down at it for one second, then back at Elias.

“I tried to email myself backup files before they took my computer, but the message never sent. After that, no one would hire me. I started washing dishes at a diner in Dorchester and cleaning law offices at night. I sold my mother’s ring to make rent. When that money ran out…” She swallowed. “I started planning which bills I could ignore before the landlord locked us out.”

“Why come now?” Elias asked.

“Because Noah wouldn’t stop looking.”

She turned to her brother with a tenderness so unguarded it changed the room. “He started writing everything down. Every date. Every detail. Every time a lie didn’t line up with a number. I told him what mattered. He found what I couldn’t reach.”

Then she faced Elias again.

“And because whether people love you or fear you, everyone in Boston says the same thing about Elias Cross.” She held his gaze. “If he decides to care about the truth, nobody can buy him away from it.”

It was the kind of sentence most people would deliver to flatter a powerful man.

She did not flatter him.

She simply stated the bet she had made.

Elias rose from his chair and walked to the glass wall.

Below, Boston Harbor stretched gray and cold beneath the clouds. Freight moved through his port. Men worked under his name. Systems he had built were still breathing, still operating, still making him richer by the minute.

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