Chapter 36
Camille’s point of view
There’s a particular satisfaction in watching something fall apart from a distance, in witnessing the precise moment when confidence shatters and reality crashes down Victoria had taught me that. “True power isn’t in the destruction itself,” she’d told me once, “but in knowing you orchestrated it while they never saw you coming.” As I sat at the head of the conference table in Kane industries executive boardroom, I savored that lesson, watching the faces of Pacific Maritime’s leadership crumble under the weight of their impending ruin.
I watched the numbers change on my tablet as Pacific Marline’s stock price plummeted. Each drop represented another piece of Stefan’s empire crumbling. The company’s board members sat across from me in Kane Industries main conference room, their faces growing paler by the minute.
“Your company lost forty percent of its value in the last hour,” I said, my voice carrying through the silent room. In fifteen minutes, when the market fully reacts to the news about your accounting irregularities, that number will hit sixty percent.”
Michael Chen, Pacific Maritime’s CEO, gripped his water glass so hard I thought it might shatter. “These accusations are baseless.”
“Are they?” I slid a folder across the polished table. “Our audit team spent six months combing through your records. Every questionable contract, every hidden payment, every secret deal with Rodriguez Shipping – it’s all there.”
The board members exchanged worried glances. They knew what this meant. Pacific Maritime controlled Stefan’s most important shipping routes. Without them, his entire operation would collapse.
“Kane Industries is offering to buy your remaining shares at thirty dollars each,” I continued. “Generous, considering they’ll be worth nothing by market close.”
“You can’t do this,” Thomas Rodriguez, Stefan’s uncle and Pacific Maritime chairman, pushed back from the table. “Rodriguez Shipping will fight-
“With what resources?” I cut him off. “The Rodriguez company is already overextended. Three banks have quietly frozen there credit lines. And their upcoming wedding is draining what cash reserves remain.”
My phone buzzed- a message from our source inside Rodriguez Shipping: Stefan just got the news. Complete meltdown in his office. Board calling emergency meeting.
I allowed myself a small smile. Let him rage. Let him feel powerless. Let him understand exactly what it meant to watch everything slip through his fingers.
“You have thirty minutes to accept our offer,” I told the board. “After that, these findings go to the SEC and every major financial publication”
“This is extortion,” Chen protested weakly.
“No, Mr. Chen. This is karma.” I met his eyes steadily. “You chose to tie your company’s future to Rodriguez Shipping Now you pay the price for that choice.”
My phone lit up with updates from our trading desk. Pacific Maritime’s stock In free fall. Investors dumping shares in panic. The trap I’d spent months setting had snapped shut perfectly.
The company’s chief counsel spoke up. “We need time to review.”
“Twenty–eight minutes now,” I interrupted. “Tick tock.”
In my earpiece, Victoria’s voice: “Well done. They’re crumbling exactly as predicted.”
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