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Chapter 3 - The House of Lies Falls

The cab dropped me off three blocks from

Marcus's office because that's all the cash I had left. Three blocks in

Manhattan might as well have been three miles when you're carrying the weight

of complete financial ruin and public humiliation. Every step felt like walking

through quicksand, my legs heavy with the kind of exhaustion that comes not

from physical exertion but from having your entire reality reconstructed in the

span of an hour.

 

The paparazzi hadn't followed me,

thankfully. They'd gotten their shots of Alexander Kane, pharmaceutical mogul,

being served divorce papers on the street like some kind of deadbeat. That

image would be on the front page of the Post tomorrow, probably with a headline

like "KANE'S PAIN" or something equally clever and devastating.

 

My phone had been buzzing constantly

during the cab ride; Marcus calling, unknown numbers that were probably

reporters, and a few that I recognized as business associates who'd undoubtedly

heard the news and wanted to either gawk at the wreckage or distance themselves

from the scandal. I'd turned it off somewhere around Fifty-seventh Street,

unable to bear the sound of my life falling apart in real time.

 

The security guard in Marcus's building

lobby looked at me with poorly concealed pity as I signed in for the second

time that day. Word traveled fast in Manhattan's legal circles, and I was

probably already the subject of whispered conversations in every law firm from

Midtown to Wall Street. The pharmaceutical king who lost his kingdom in a

single day.

 

Marcus was waiting for me when the

elevator opened on the fortieth floor, his face etched with the kind of concern

usually reserved for terminal patients. He didn't say anything, just placed a

hand on my shoulder and guided me back to his office. The folders were still

scattered across his conference table where I'd left them, crime scene evidence

of the systematic destruction of Alexander Kane.

 

"Drink?" he asked, moving toward

the bar cart in the corner of his office.

 

"It's not even noon," I said

automatically, then laughed at the absurdity of worrying about drinking

etiquette when my entire life had just imploded. "Yeah. Whatever you've

got."

 

He poured two glasses of something amber

and expensive, probably older than my marriage and definitely worth more than

the contents of my checking account. The irony wasn't lost on me, I was about

to become the kind of man who couldn't afford good whiskey, but here I was

drinking it in the office of Manhattan's most expensive lawyer.

 

"The reporters," Marcus said,

settling into the chair across from me. "How bad was it?"

 

"Bad enough." I took a sip of

the whiskey, letting it burn away some of the numbness that had settled in my

chest. "They knew everything. About the divorce, about the company, about

being locked out of my own building. How is that possible?"

 

Marcus's expression darkened.

"Someone fed them the story. Someone who wanted to make sure your

humiliation was as public as possible."

 

Elena. Or Roman. Or both of them, sitting

somewhere laughing about the man who'd been stupid enough to trust them

completely. The image made my stomach clench, but I pushed it down. I needed to

understand the full scope of what they'd done before I could even begin to

process the emotional devastation.

 

"Show me everything," I said.

"All of it. I need to know exactly how they did this."

 

Marcus hesitated. "Alex, maybe you

should take some time to…."

 

"Show me everything," I

repeated, my voice harder than I'd intended. "I spent ten years building

something from nothing. I deserve to know exactly how they tore it down."

 

He nodded slowly and began pulling

documents from the folders, spreading them across the table like a roadmap of

betrayal. Bank statements, corporate filings, transfer authorizations, each one

a small piece of a larger picture that was more devastating than I could have

imagined.

 

"Let's start with the personal

accounts," Marcus said, his voice taking on the clinical tone he used when

discussing particularly ugly divorces. "Elena had power of attorney, as

you know. Initially, she used it for legitimate expenses; household bills,

charity donations, the usual things a spouse would handle."

 

He showed me statements from six months

ago, everything looking normal. Mortgage payments, utilities, Elena's credit

card bills for what looked like reasonable amounts. Nothing that would have

raised any red flags.

 

"But three months ago, things

changed," he continued, sliding newer statements across the table.

"Small transfers at first, five thousand here, ten thousand there. Always

to different accounts, always with legitimate-sounding explanations in the memo

lines. 'Investment research,' 'Real estate consultation,' 'Legal fees.'"

 

I studied the statements, seeing my money

bleeding away in tiny cuts. Individually, none of the transfers seemed

significant. Together, they represented hundreds of thousands of dollars.

 

"I never saw these," I said.

"The statements go to Elena. She handles the household finances."

 

"Convenient," Marcus said dryly.

"The transfers accelerated two weeks ago, right after you left for Japan.

That's when the real damage was done."

 

The next set of documents made my hands

shake. My investment portfolio, forty-seven million dollars accumulated over ten

years of careful planning and aggressive growth, liquidated in a matter of

days. Stock sales, bond redemptions, mutual fund withdrawals, all authorized by

Elena's power of attorney and all converted to cryptocurrency within hours of

the sales.

 

"Cryptocurrency?" I asked.

 

"Untraceable once it moves

offshore," Marcus explained. "Elena transferred it to digital wallets

registered to shell companies in the Cayman Islands. From there, it could go

anywhere; Switzerland, Singapore, anywhere banking privacy laws make recovery

nearly impossible."

 

"And the company?" I asked,

though I already knew the answer would destroy what was left of my faith in

human nature.

 

Marcus pulled out a thick folder labeled

"Kane Industries Corporate Restructuring." Inside were documents I

recognized, papers I'd signed over the past two years as part of what Roman had

described as "routine corporate governance updates" and "tax

optimization strategies."

 

"Roman's been planning this for a

long time," Marcus said quietly. "Every document you signed, every

restructuring amendment, every board resolution, it was all designed to

centralize control in a way that could be triggered at the right moment."

 

I flipped through the papers, seeing my

own signature on document after document that I'd signed without reading

carefully. Roman had always been the detail guy, the one who handled the legal

minutiae while I focused on the big picture. I'd trusted him to protect our

interests.

 

Instead, he'd been systematically

positioning himself to steal everything we'd built.

 

"The Takahashi merger was the perfect

cover," Marcus continued. "While you were focused on closing the

deal, Roman filed emergency corporate restructuring papers citing 'shareholder

protection protocols' in case of hostile takeover attempts. Except the only

hostile takeover was his own."

 

"How much?" I asked, my voice

barely above a whisper. "How much of the company does he control

now?"

 

"Eighty-seven percent," Marcus

said. "You retain thirteen percent as founder's shares, but Roman controls

the board, the operations, and most importantly, the profits from the Takahashi

deal."

 

Twelve billion dollars. The biggest

success of my career, the deal that was supposed to secure my family's future

for generations, was now going to fund the man who'd destroyed my family.

 

"There's more," Marcus said, and

I wanted to laugh at the impossibility of there being anything worse. "The

penthouse, the house in the Hamptons, the art collection, Elena filed

quit-claim deeds transferring everything to joint ownership, then immediately

transferred her half to a trust she controls."

 

"So I own half of everything and

nothing at the same time," I said.

 

"Exactly. And with the divorce

proceedings, she's asking for half of your remaining assets as part of the

settlement. If she gets it, you'll be left with essentially nothing."

 

I leaned back in my chair, staring at the

ceiling of Marcus's office. Somewhere above us, in towers just like this one,

Roman was probably meeting with the board of directors of my own company,

explaining how Alexander Kane had suffered a "personal breakdown"

that made him unfit to lead. Elena was probably with her divorce attorney,

crafting a narrative about an absent husband who cared more about business than

his marriage.

 

Both of them were counting money that used

to be mine.

 

"The security footage," I said

suddenly, remembering Marcus's earlier mention of evidence. "You said

there was footage of the theft?"

 

Marcus's expression grew even more grave,

which I hadn't thought was possible. "Alex, I need you to understand

something. What I'm about to show you... it's not just evidence of financial

crimes. It's evidence of how long they've been planning this, and how little

they thought of you while they were doing it."

 

He moved to his computer, pulling up what

looked like a security system interface. Multiple camera feeds from various

locations; my apartment, Roman's office, restaurants, hotels.

 

"I hired a private investigator last

month when some of the financial irregularities first came to light,"

Marcus explained. "I thought Elena might be having an affair, maybe being

blackmailed. I never imagined... this."

 

The screen showed a grid of video

thumbnails, each one timestamped over the past several months. Some were from

security cameras in public places, others looked like they'd been taken with

hidden cameras or long lenses. All of them featured Elena, Roman, or both.

 

"Start with this one," Marcus

said, clicking on a thumbnail dated three months ago. "Roman's office, the

day after you left for the preliminary negotiations in Tokyo."

 

The video opened in a window that took up

half his computer screen. Roman's office at Kane Industries, the one with the

view of Central Park that he'd always joked made him feel like a real CEO.

Roman was behind his desk, but he wasn't alone.

 

Elena was there, sitting in the chair that

visiting clients usually occupied, except she wasn't dressed like someone

conducting business. She was wearing the blue dress I'd bought her for our

anniversary, the one she'd claimed was too expensive to wear anywhere except

special occasions.

 

Apparently, planning my destruction

qualified as a special occasion.

 

I watched my brother and my wife lean

across his desk toward each other, their voices too low for the camera to pick

up but their body language unmistakably intimate. Roman reached across the desk

to touch Elena's hand, and she smiled at him the way she used to smile at me

when we were first married.

 

"This is from the day they started

the major fund transfers," Marcus said quietly. "Keep watching."

 

Roman pulled out a laptop and turned it

toward Elena, showing her something on the screen. Even through the grainy

security footage, I could see it was a banking interface, my banking interface.

Elena nodded and pointed at something, and Roman began typing.

 

They were stealing my money while sitting

in my company's office, using my brother's computer and my wife's

authorization, and they looked like they were planning a vacation.

 

"There's more," Marcus said, his

hand hovering over the mouse. "Hours of footage, from multiple locations.

But Alex, once you see all of this, you can't unsee it. Are you sure you're

ready?"

 

I thought about the man I'd been that

morning, stepping off a plane from Tokyo with merger documents in my briefcase

and love in my heart. That man was dead now, killed by bank statements and

legal documents and the growing realization that nothing in his life had been

real.

 

The man sitting in Marcus's office now

needed to know the truth, no matter how much it destroyed what was left of

Alexander Kane's faith in the world.

 

"Show me," I said.

 

Marcus clicked on another video, this one

timestamped just two weeks ago. The camera angle was different, more intimate,

like it had been taken from inside a hotel room. The image was crystal clear,

and what I saw made my heart stop completely.

 

Elena and Roman in bed together, not just

having sex but laughing afterward, sharing some private joke while they lay

tangled in sheets that looked expensive and unfamiliar. Roman said something

that made Elena throw her head back in genuine laughter, the kind of unguarded

joy I hadn't seen from her in months.

 

Maybe years.

 

"They look happy," I said, the

words coming out strangled and bitter.

 

"This was taken at the Plaza,"

Marcus said. "The same day Elena told you she was visiting her sister in

Philadelphia. Roman told your assistant he was in meetings with potential

investors."

 

They'd been lying to me so casually, so

completely, that they'd created an entire alternate reality where their

betrayal was just another part of their daily routine. Business meeting, lunch,

destroy Alex's life, dinner, more sex, plan tomorrow's deception.

 

"How long?" I asked. "How

long have they been..."

 

"The earliest footage I have is from

eighteen months ago," Marcus said. "But based on some of the

financial patterns, I think it started even earlier. Maybe two years, maybe

longer."

 

Two years. Two years of Elena kissing me

goodbye when I left for business trips, then immediately calling Roman to

arrange their next rendezvous. Two years of Roman asking about my travel

schedule, ostensibly to coordinate business operations, but actually to

schedule time with my wife. Two years of me working eighteen-hour days to build

a future for people who were actively plotting to steal it.

 

"There's one more thing," Marcus

said, and his voice carried a note of warning that made my blood chill.

"This is the one that... Alex, this is the one that will hurt the

most."

 

He clicked on a video thumbnail dated just

three days ago, while I was in my final meetings with the Takahashi family. The

timestamp showed it was taken around the time I was calling Roman to share the

news of our biggest success.

 

The footage was from a restaurant I

recognized; El Restaurante de Lujo, Elena's favorite, the place where I'd

proposed to her five years ago. Elena and Roman were at a corner table,

champagne glasses raised in what was clearly a celebration.

 

Roman was talking animatedly, gesturing

with his hands the way he did when he was excited about something. Elena was

leaning forward, hanging on every word, her face glowing with an expression I

remembered from our early days together.

 

They were celebrating. While I was half a

world away, closing the deal that would make us billionaires, they were

toasting the success of their plan to destroy me.

 

Marcus turned up the volume, and I could

hear fragments of their conversation over the restaurant's ambient noise.

 

"...can't believe how easy it

was..." Elena's voice, slightly slurred from champagne.

 

"...always said he trusted too

much..." Roman's laugh, the one I'd heard a thousand times when we shared

jokes about other people's misfortunes.

 

"...actually feel sorry for him

sometimes..." Elena again, though she didn't look sorry. She looked

radiant.

 

"...he'll land on his feet. He always

does. Besides, we deserve this more than he does..."

 

That was Roman's voice, speaking about me

like I was a stranger, a business obstacle to be removed rather than the

brother who'd raised him, sacrificed for him, built an empire with him.

 

The video continued for several more

minutes, showing them laughing, touching, planning their post-Alex future with

the casual indifference of people discussing the weather. At one point, Elena

pulled out her phone and showed Roman something that made him laugh so hard he

nearly knocked over his champagne glass.

 

"That's when you texted her the photo

from Tokyo," Marcus said quietly. "The sunrise picture with the

message about missing them both."

 

I remembered sending that text, remembered

the warm feeling in my chest as I thought about sharing this success with the

two people I loved most in the world. While I was composing that message,

filled with love and anticipation, they were literally laughing at my devotion.

 

The video ended with Roman and Elena

leaving the restaurant together, his hand on the small of her back in a gesture

of casual ownership that I'd seen him use with his previous girlfriends. Except

Elena wasn't his girlfriend.

 

She was supposed to be my wife.

 

Marcus minimized the video window and

leaned back in his chair, watching me with the careful attention of someone

expecting a complete psychological break. Maybe that's what this was, maybe I

was having some kind of breakdown and hallucinating this entire nightmare

scenario.

 

But the bank statements were real. The

legal documents were real. The video footage was real.

 

The only thing that hadn't been real was

my life.

 

"There are dozens more," Marcus

said quietly. "Months of footage, recordings, financial documents. Enough

evidence to prove conspiracy, fraud, theft, adultery, everything you'd need for

both criminal charges and civil recovery."

 

"Criminal charges," I repeated,

the words feeling strange in my mouth.

 

"Alex, they stole from you.

Systematically, deliberately, with premeditation. Elena's power of attorney

gave her access to your personal accounts, but she used that access to commit

felony theft. Roman's corporate maneuvering crosses into fraud territory. We

could have them both arrested."

 

I thought about Elena in handcuffs, Roman

in a prison jumpsuit, both of them paying for what they'd done to me. The idea

should have felt satisfying, should have felt like justice.

 

Instead, it just felt empty.

 

"But?" I asked, because there

was clearly a but coming.

 

"But proving it means exposing

everything. The affair, the theft, your complete financial ruin, all of it

becomes public record. Every detail of how thoroughly they fooled you becomes

front-page news. And even if we win, even if they go to prison, the money is

probably gone forever. Hidden in offshore accounts, converted to assets we'll

never be able to trace."

 

So my choices were to let them get away

with destroying my life, or to destroy what was left of my reputation in a

futile attempt at justice that wouldn't even recover my stolen fortune.

 

"There's one more video," Marcus

said, his voice so quiet I almost didn't hear him. "From yesterday. Right

after Elena filed the divorce papers."

 

I looked at him, seeing something in his

expression that was even worse than pity. It was the look of a man who was

about to deliver a death blow.

 

"You don't have to watch it," he

said. "Maybe you shouldn't watch it."

 

But I was already reaching for the mouse,

my hand moving without conscious thought toward the final video thumbnail. It

was timestamped from last week.

 

My hand hovered over the play button,

trembling slightly from exhaustion and emotional shock and the terrible

certainty that whatever I was about to see would finish the job of destroying

Alexander Kane completely.

 

In the past six hours, I'd lost my

fortune, my company, my home, my wife, and my brother. I'd discovered that my

marriage was a lie, my partnership was a fraud, and my trust was a weapon that

had been used to destroy me.

 

But something told me I hadn't seen the

worst of it yet.

 

Something told me that the real

devastation was waiting behind that play button, in whatever Roman and Elena

had said or done after they'd finished stealing my life.

 

My finger touched the mouse button,

hesitating for just a moment as I realized that there would be no going back

from whatever I was about to learn.

 

The Alexander Kane who'd stepped off a

plane that morning with love in his heart and success in his briefcase was

already dead.

 

It was time to find out who would take his

place.

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