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"The Shared Flesh" Chapter 8

Chapter 8: The Severance Contract

The rain outside had begun to lash against the raw concrete walls of the estate, but inside the triple-height dining room, the atmosphere was dead silent, frozen into a theater of unadulterated hostility.

Helena stood at the edge of the twelve-foot polished mahogany table, her silhouette sharp, uncompromising, and sheathed in a tailored navy Prada suit.

She looked like a judge delivering a summary execution. With a swift, dismissive snap of her wrist, she slammed a thick, leather-bound folder and a crisp, physical airline sleeve down onto the dark wood.

The slap of paper against the mahogany echoed like a gunshot in the cavernous room.

"Two million dollars," Helena said, her voice dropping into a glacial register that had decapitated rival tech firms before breakfast.

"Deposited into an unmapped offshore account the moment you clear security at JFK. There is a one-way ticket to Zurich inside that sleeve. Your flight leaves in five hours. You have exactly one hundred and twenty minutes to remove your things from my estate."

Luna didn't flinch. She was sitting in the low light, wearing a simple, faded grey cotton dress that made her look like a ghost against the brutalist architecture.

She didn't cry. She didn't plead. Instead, she slowly reached out her slender hand, lifted a delicate white porcelain teacup to her lips, and took a slow, casual sip of her chamomile tea.

Then, she rose.

With a smooth, hypnotic fluidity, Luna walked toward the head of the table. She didn't look like an underpaid nanny being evicted; she moved with the terrifying grace of an invading monarch.

She slid directly into the massive, high-backed master chair—the seat reserved exclusively for Helena. She crossed her legs, leaning her chin on her hand, looking up at the female billionaire with an absolute, unvarnished sovereign malice.

The submissive, wide-eyed girl was completely dead. The parasite had fully dropped the mask.

"Two million, Helena?" Luna murmured, her voice a low, melodic purr that vibrated with dangerous mockery.

"You really do think the world is just a ledger to be balanced, don't you? You think because your shadow trust has nine zeroes, you can just Ctrl-Alt-Delete a human life when it becomes inconvenient."

"You are not a life in this house, Luna. You are a line-item expense," Helena countered, her corporate arrogance shielding her from the sudden, sharp spike of adrenaline in her chest. She leaned forward, pressing her palms against the table, trying to crush the girl with her sheer physical presence.

"Marcus has already filed the parental waiver validation. If you are on these premises by 6:00 PM, my private security detail will remove you for criminal trespass. Your class doesn't win against my capital. Take the check and get out."

Luna let out a soft, melodic laugh—a sound so chillingly close to Helena’s own boardroom chuckle it made the hair on Helena's neck stand up.

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"Capital is so fragile when it’s built on a foundation of lies," Luna whispered. She didn't touch the contract. Instead, she reached into the small pocket of her apron and pulled out a object that looked entirely out of place against her cheap clothes.

It was a sleek, heavy, rose-gold flash drive, glinting under the dim amber track lights.

Luna’s slender index finger pushed the drive across the dark mahogany table, letting it slide with a quiet, scraping hiss until it tapped perfectly against the edge of Helena's leather folder.

"Consider it my parting gift to the wife," Luna said, her amber-hazel eyes flashing with an unhinged, predatory hunger.

"Before you have your men throw me into the mud, you might want to look at the security logs for the estate. You see, Helena, you spent millions building a digital fortress, but you forgot that a house is only as strong as its weakest link."

Helena’s breath hitched, her eyes locking onto the metallic drive. A suffocating wave of paranoia crashed over her, a visceral warning that the transaction she had thought was iron-clad had been compromised from the inside out.

This was class guerrilla warfare at its most ruthless—the hired help dissecting the elite’s fragile domestic farce with the very data they left behind.

"What is this?" Helena demanded, her voice tightening as her psychological defenses began to crumble.

Luna didn't answer right away. She leaned back into the expensive Italian leather of the master chair, entirely at home in the luxury she hadn't paid for.

She lifted her teacup once more, taking a slow, deliberate sip through her thick lashes, her gaze never breaking from Helena’s increasingly pale face.

She lowered the cup with a soft clink, a dark, venomous grin spreading across her lips.

"You should see how your husband begs for my skin in the conservatory, Helena," Luna whispered into the cold air.

"He cries like a child when I touch his hair. He told me your body feels like a porcelain statue—beautiful, expensive, and completely dead."

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