

The Heiress's Lethal Algorithm
Chapter 1
The silent alarm didn't ring; it burned.
At exactly 3:14 AM, the platinum haptic ring on Seraphina Vance’s left index finger began to pulse with a searing, rhythmic heat. It was a failsafe she had designed herself, hardwired into the deepest, most inaccessible sub-basements of Aegis Global’s servers. A failsafe that was never, ever supposed to trigger.
Seraphina bolted upright in the massive king-sized bed, her breath catching in her throat. A heavy, unnatural fog clung to the edges of her mind—a side effect of the relentless "migraines" that had plagued her for the last six months. She pressed the heels of her hands into her eyes, forcing the grogginess back into the darkest corners of her brain.
She reached her hand out into the cold, empty space beside her. The sheets were perfectly smooth. Arthur was gone.
"System," Seraphina rasped, her voice dry and brittle in the cavernous master bedroom. "Initialize visual protocols. Audio only on my end."
The room’s artificial intelligence hummed to life. *"Good morning, Madam Vance. It is 3:15 AM. Your heart rate is elevated. Shall I contact emergency medical services?"*
"Override," Seraphina commanded, swinging her legs over the edge of the mattress. Her bare feet hit the heated hardwood floor, but a chill violently wracked her spine. "Identify the source of the haptic alarm."
*"Authorization required,"* the AI replied in its smooth, synthetic cadence.
"Vance, Seraphina. Authorization code: Icarus-Falling-Nine-Zero."
*"Code accepted. Madam Vance, a Level One breach has been detected in the subterranean biometric vault. The Genesis Drive has been removed from its physical cradle."*
The words hit her like a physical blow to the sternum. The Genesis Drive. Her father’s master encryption algorithm. The crown jewel of Aegis Global, capable of bypassing any digital security infrastructure on the planet. It was the sole reason Aegis held defense contracts with three different world governments.
"Impossible," Seraphina snapped, standing up so fast the room spun. She gripped the edge of the mahogany nightstand to steady herself. "The vault requires dual biometric verification. Retinal scan and a localized heartbeat signature. Who opened it?"
*"The biometric signatures utilized belonged to you, Madam Vance. And to Arthur Sterling, the acting Chief Executive Officer."*
"My biometrics?" Seraphina’s voice dropped to a lethal whisper. "I have been asleep in this bed since ten o'clock."
*"Records indicate your retinal scan was logged at 3:02 AM, accompanied by a localized heartbeat matching your exact physiological rhythm."*
Seraphina’s brilliant, calculating mind began to slice through the heavy fog clouding her brain. She turned toward her vanity mirror. Sitting next to her jewelry box was a velvet case containing her spare pair of smart-lenses—contact lenses she had coded herself to interact with Aegis terminals. They contained her retinal data. And the heartbeat? Her smartwatch. It had been missing for three days. Arthur had told her she must have misplaced it during one of her "episodes."
"That son of a bitch," she breathed, the realization crystallization into pure ice in her veins. "System, access the vault’s internal security feed. I want audio and visual. Project it onto the glass."
The massive floor-to-ceiling windows of her bedroom darkened, transforming into a high-definition screen. The grainy night-vision footage of the subterranean vault flickered to life.
There was Arthur. Her charming, perfect husband. The man she had elevated from a mid-level operations director to the public face of her empire so she could comfortably rule from the shadows. He was dressed in a sleek black trench coat, holding her missing smartwatch over the scanner while pressing one of her smart-lenses to the optical reader.
The heavy titanium doors hissed open on the feed.
"System, boost the audio," Seraphina ordered, her fingernails digging into her palms. "Isolate his frequency."
On the screen, Arthur slipped a Bluetooth earpiece into his ear as he stepped into the vault. Seraphina watched him walk directly to the central pedestal.
*"I'm in,"* Arthur's voice echoed through the bedroom, captured perfectly by the vault's hidden microphones. He sounded breathless, almost giddy. *"I told you it would work."*
A pause as he listened to whoever was on the other end of the line.
*"Of course she didn't wake up,"* Arthur scoffed on the recording, his handsome face twisting into a sneer that Seraphina had never seen before. *"I doubled her dosage tonight. The dumb bitch is practically comatose. She didn't even remember what day it was at dinner."*
Seraphina stopped breathing.
*The dumb bitch.*
The memory of dinner flashed through her mind. Arthur pouring her wine. Arthur pressing a small white pill into her hand. *“Take your medicine, Sera. Your migraines are making you confused again. You need your rest, darling. Your mind is slipping. I’m here to take care of you.”*
"He’s stealing it," Seraphina whispered to the empty room, a terrifying, unflinching calm washing over her. The panic of the last six months—the terror that she was losing her mind, that she was succumbing to the same neurological decline that had killed her mother—evaporated in a single, blinding flash of clarity. She wasn't sick. She was being hunted.
"System," Seraphina said, her voice dropping all pretense of shock. She was no longer the confused, ailing wife. She was the shadow owner of Aegis Global. "Run a real-time trace on the Genesis Drive's internal GPS ping. It has a micro-tracker embedded in the casing."
*"Tracking... The drive is currently moving southbound on Interstate 85. Current speed: seventy-two miles per hour."*
"Patch me through to Dispatch Operator Benson on the secure encrypted line."
The phone rang twice before a gruff voice answered. *"Benson here. Ma'am? It's the middle of the night. Is everything alright?"*
"Benson, I need you to pull the city's DOT traffic feeds for I-85 South. Look for a black Mercedes S-Class. License plate Alpha-Tango-Seven-Niner."
*"Copy that, Madam Vance. Typing it in now."* Keys clacked loudly over the line. *"I have him. He's taking the exit toward the old shipping district. Pier 44. Do you want me to scramble a private security team? I can have interceptors there in ten minutes."*
"No," Seraphina said sharply. "If he sees Aegis security, he'll drop the drive into the bay. Stand down, Benson. Log this call as a routine system diagnostic."
*"Ma'am, you can't be suggesting you're going out there alone. Pier 44 is abandoned."*
"I am not suggesting anything, Benson. I am giving you a direct order. Scrub the traffic inquiry from your terminal and go back to your coffee."
*"...Understood, Madam Vance."*
Seraphina severed the connection. She didn't bother changing into street clothes. She threw a heavy black wool coat over her silk nightgown, shoved her feet into a pair of dark boots, and grabbed the keys to the Audi R8 she kept hidden in the secondary garage.
The drive through the rain-slicked streets of the city was a blur of neon and shadow. Seraphina gripped the leather steering wheel, her knuckles bone-white. Her mind raced, assembling the pieces of the puzzle with terrifying speed. Arthur was stealing the algorithm. But he couldn't use it himself; he wasn't a coder. He was a salesman. He had to be selling it.
"System," Seraphina spoke into her car's interface. "Ping the drive's location."
*"The drive is stationary. Coordinates place it at Warehouse 7, Pier 44."*
Seraphina killed the Audi's headlights as she turned onto the cracked asphalt of the pier. The rain was coming down in sheets, drumming a relentless rhythm against the windshield. She parked behind a rusted shipping container, completely obscured from view.
She slipped out of the car, the freezing rain instantly soaking her hair. She didn't feel the cold. She didn't feel anything except a cold, calculated rage.
She moved silently through the shadows, her boots making no sound on the wet concrete. As she approached Warehouse 7, she saw the faint glow of headlights cutting through the darkness. Arthur's black Mercedes was parked near the edge of the water. Another car—a sleek, unmarked silver sedan—was parked opposite it.
Seraphina pressed her back against a stack of wooden pallets, peering through the gap.
Arthur was standing in the rain, perfectly illuminated by the headlights. He wasn't holding a briefcase. He was holding the silver, rectangular casing of the Genesis Drive.
A woman stepped out of the silver sedan.
She was young, perhaps twenty-five or twenty-six, with perfectly coiffed blonde hair that defied the damp air. She wore a designer trench coat, tightly belted around her waist. But as she walked toward Arthur, the coat parted slightly, revealing the unmistakable, rounded curve of a pregnant stomach.
Seraphina’s breath hitched, but she forced herself to remain perfectly still.
"You got it," the woman said, her voice carrying over the sound of the rain. She sounded smug, thoroughly pleased with herself.
"I told you I would, Chloe," Arthur said, his voice dripping with an affection he hadn't shown Seraphina in months. He stepped forward, bridging the gap between them. "The old man's legacy. Worth three billion on the black market, and it's all ours."
Chloe reached out, tracing her manicured fingers over the silver casing. "And the wife? She didn't wake up?"
"Seraphina?" Arthur laughed, a cruel, dismissive sound that made Seraphina's stomach churn. "She doesn't even know what year it is. The inhibitors have completely fried her short-term memory. By the time I trigger the medical Power of Attorney on Friday, she'll be locked away in a private facility, and I'll have legal control of the entire Aegis board."
"You're brilliant, Arthur," Chloe purred, taking the Genesis Drive from his hands.
"I'm motivated," Arthur replied. He reached out, resting his hand gently on Chloe's pregnant stomach. He leaned down, placing a tender kiss against the fabric of her coat. "Everything I'm doing, I'm doing for him. For us."
Seraphina stood in the shadows, the freezing rain masking the single tear that slipped down her cheek. It wasn't a tear of sorrow. It was the physical manifestation of her old life dying.
*He thinks my mind is broken,* she thought, her eyes tracking every movement Arthur made. *He thinks my empire is his.*
Through the window of the pallets, Seraphina Vance watched her husband kiss his pregnant mistress. She didn't scream. She didn't run out and confront him. She simply pulled her phone from her coat pocket, opened her encrypted server access, and locked the master sequence to the Genesis Drive, rendering it a useless brick of metal until she personally authorized it.
Let them have the paperweight.
Arthur Sterling had just declared war on a woman who didn't divorce traitors. She bankrupted them. She ruined them. And she erased them.
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