Chapter 40: Chapter 40

In the lavish central boardroom, spanning walls of windows framed the city lights sparkling into the twilight sky. A suffocating sense of crisis enveloped the atmosphere, so thick that it nearly strangled participants.Caspian loafed at the far end of the polished table, his body humming with pent-up energy. Soren, on the other hand, reclined in a high-backed chair, jacket crisply pressed, expression showing only the faintest hint of cold amusement. Their expressions reflected the tension riven through the company they both claimed to protect.

A murmur rippled through the gathered directors. Some nervously twiddled pens, and a few exchanged low whispers that a Montague family feud was distracting corporate business. A silver-haired man in a sharp suit, the lead director, cleared his throat. "We've gathered," he said solemnly, "to decide whether Soren Montague or Caspian Montague should be suspended while an investigation is launched." The firm cannot take much more of this standoff."

Everyone looked to Caspian, whose chin went up. He started softly,his voice raw with earnestness. "I know the scandal has made shareholders uncomfortable. Just that we can't let ethics be the price of short-term calm.If we allow corruption to fester, Hayes Enterprises will implode from the inside out." He rambled about unshakeable ideals, about how Hayes had been built on trust, and he directed the board to find the true source of rot -Soren's secret deals, machinations, and offshore accounts. The directors listened with taut respect, some noddingin reluctant assent.

Soren smiled as he tried to hold back a laugh across the table. "You speak very well," he said, looking around for effect. "But who's actually dirtying the company's name? Caspian's private dramas- insomnia, hasty marriage, public quarrels-have created chaos." He paused,allowing the

sting of his words to sink in. "Maybe I've made a mistake, but I made the mistake to protect Hayes Enterprises from my son's... instability."

An unsettled hush followed. Talia, who was sitting near the center,stiffened,remembering Soren's blackmail and hush-money plots. A dozen or so directors cast worried glances at one another, confounded about whether to remain loyal to Soren's previously unassailable authority or listen to the new allegations of misconduct. Then the lead director called for a vote, tension crackling like a live wire through the room.

"Soren" or "Caspian," the voices announced in an alternating cadence, the outcome precarious as each name was counted. As the count approached a tie,attention turned to an older board member regarded as a fiercely loyal ally of Soren through decades of service. He took a deep breath,his face drawn with conflict. Then, in a quavering voice, he declared he would abstain, spreading a sudden wave of astonishment acrossthe table.

A brief flutter rippled around the room-whispers,glances,hearts racing.Thanks to that unexpected abstention, the vote stayed deadlocked,but it required the board to schedule a second, deciding ballot. Caspian sighed,some tension tight in his shoulders as he realized that this battle was not won. Soren hid a flash of anger behind a steady nod, unwilling to let this unlooked-for wavering of support shake his plan.

The following morning, in a high-ceilinged hall that had been built to accommodate lavish shareholder meetings, the tension reached a manila-envelope-clutching pitch. They lined up in neat rows of chairs, the front row designated for the core Montague family and corporate executives.Gigantic glass panels lined the views of the skyline, with sunlight glittering through lacquered floors. Caspian sat toward the center, Celeste beside him in quiet. Talia stood to the left, surveying the crowd. Soren sat near the front, his posture outwardly relaxed but his eyes burning with a

dangerous intensity.

At the stroke of ten, the lead director walked to a podium and called the shareholders to order. Mutters dropped into a hush of anticipation. "We come together to discuss new allegations of wrongdoing," he said. "I have the floor Valentina Montague has requested." A current of curiosity swept through the audience as Valentina stood regal in a dark green suit that matched her solemn resolve.

She glanced at Caspian, then at Celeste, as if drawing strength from them.She turned to the assembled stakeholders and described accounts kept secret, funds funneled to a mistress, and questionable investments that sent money into shady deals. Her voice quavered at first but then gained vigor.A hush thicker than silence consumed the hall, some audience members leaning in, others staring in grim acceptance-apparently not entirely shocked by Soren's machinations.

Soren sat straight, knuckles turning white as they pressed against his armrests. As Valentina's speech crescendoed, she beamed each damning figure onto a massive screen against the entirety of evidence that Roman had painstakingly assembled. Among those invited press who had come to observe, murmurs exploded, and cameras flashed. The front row of board members shot nervous looks at each other. Soren's meticulously curated facade started to crack, a muscle in his jaw twitching.

He stood up suddenly, voice striking the air. "How dare you," he hissed,looking from Valentina to Caspian. "I fought to keep this company up and running for several decades, building relationships in service of it.Now I'm being crucified by my own family." His eyes glistened with venom as he fixed Caspian with a stare. "You think you can control Hayes Enterprises without me? You're naive."

Security guards, jolted by his tantrum, moved in at the lead director's cue.Their presence only thickened the hush. Soren initially stood frozen,unwilling to acknowledge their authority. Caspian jerked to attention,half-standing in his seat, conflicted between aghast horror and a sort of sympathy for the man he'd once idolized. At a curt nod from the director,two guards finally escorted Soren from the hall. He fought a scowl but parted the crowd, spraying hateful words. When he walked past Caspian,he hissed in one of his cutting whispers, "This isn't over. You don't wash away blood that easily."

Outside, the racket began to fade. The long-held breath in the meeting hall was colectively exhaled. Caspian closed his eyes, his shoulders sinking slowly under the burden of relief and the residual dread. The empire that had once felt eclipsed by Soren's presence now felt on the brink of real change-and a much mnore perilous vengeance from a father bent on revenge.

The next day was crisp and clear, and a throng of reporters stood on the wide, marble steps outside the skyscraper that bore the Hayes Enterprises name. Cameras trained on a makeshift podium in front of the main entrance, microphones set in a semicircle for a press conference.Security personnel remained vigilant and ready to respond. The tension was both palpable and electric, a sense that a dramatic chapter was about to be closed.

The glass doors opened and Caspian came through with Celeste by his side. Their clasped hands suggested solidarity, but each held a look of grim determination. Talia and Roman waited behind, quietly radiating relief that Soren was at least nowtemporarily off Hayes' hallways. Press clamored and flared, camera flashes, half-shouted questions about Soren's forced exit, the alleged fraud, the fate of the company.

Caspian cleared his throat. "As of now, with board approval," he said,voice perfectly even, "I'm back as C.E.O. This vote ends an ugly chapter during which corruption darkened Hayes Enterprises." He paused,allowing that statement to sink in. Heads nodded around him,microphones tilted toward him, drawing everything he said closer. "I accept my responsibility for any disruption created during my leadership,but my father's machinations do not reflect us. I pledge to overhaul the firm's governance, demanding transparency and accountability at every level."

Celeste played to the onlookers, remembering getting eviscerated in tabloids as a gold-digger. Now, they saw Caspian standing beside them,arm in arm with hers, each breath a renewed trust. Her heart swelled with relief, even as Soren's last hateful words echoed in her head.She felt Talia's comforting hand on her shoulder as if to say, "We accomplished this, but be careful."

A ripple of whispered approval went through. Reporters hurled pointed questions-would Caspian bring charges against Soren,how would the firm deal with the fallout from its scandal, what was Celeste's title now?Steady as always, Caspian laid out new policies, clearing Celeste of all past wrongdoing. His insomnia-which Soren once wielded lke a weapon-now stood as a symbol of personal struggle he refused to camouflage.Applause and camera flashes swelled as he finished by praising employees and shareholders who "weathered the storm" without abandoning Hayes.

Celeste sighed, her eyes welling up as reporters yelled for more details. As they walked toward the lobby doors, Caspian leading her, each footfall felt like a step closer toward leaving behind Soren's reign of terror, toward the dawning hope of a new day. Inside the glowing foyer, Talia and Roman stood waiting, sharing small smiles with one another. Caspian laughed,tense with nerves. "We'll rebuild," he said softly,voice tired but

determined. "This time, with honesty."

Later still, in a darkened room away from the glare of spotlights, Soren squatted in front of a television broadcasting a re-run of Caspian's speech.Smoke wafted from the ashtray at his elbow,gloom surrounding him.A phone rang. A devious grin formed across his face as he picked up the receiver, and the voice at the other end was recognized. "Yes," he answered."I understand that you are giving a second chance." It's dark,and the light dances across his face, but you catch a glimpse of a man who has not yet been vanquished, poised to hatch new plots against the empire that just ousted him.

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