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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Predator’s Masquerade

The boardroom of the Mercer Group didn't just feel professional; it felt glacial. Even in the sweltering heat of a mid-July afternoon, the executives sat with their shoulders hunched as if bracing against an Arctic wind. The silence was thick, heavy, and suffocating, broken only by the rhythmic, predatory tapping of a fountain pen against a glass table.

"I asked a fucking question. Or are you all deaf?"

The voice didn't need to be loud to command the room. It was low, resonant, and carried the jagged edge of a guillotine. The man at the head of the table, Calvin Voss, stopped his tapping. He was the reason for the frost in the air—a man whose reputation as a "walking bomb" was well-earned. He didn't just run companies; he conquered them.

"I—I—I… I am the one, sir." The Head of Department finally found his voice, though it was thin and reed-like. He looked as though he wanted to sink into the expensive mahogany floor.

Calvin leaned forward, his dark eyes locking onto the trembling man. "How many years did you spend in college?"

"Fifteen years, sir. Top of my class at Wharton."

"Five years," Calvin repeated, a slow, dangerous smile ghosting his lips. "Five years of elite education, yet you don't know how to draft a plan that doesn't read like a child's grocery list. It's not just incompetence; it's an insult."

The poor man's knees finally gave out. He slid from his chair to the floor, his hands clasped in a desperate plea. "Please, forgive me, Mr Voss! It will never happen again, I swear on my life. I'll redo it tonight. I'll stay until dawn!"

"Don't worry," Calvin said, standing up and buttoning his charcoal suit jacket with clinical precision. "I'm going to make sure it never happens again."

He began to walk toward the exit, his polished leather shoes clicking sharply against the floor. The disgraced executive began to stammer out a thank-you, his face flooding with relief, until Calvin stopped in his tracks at the threshold.

"You're fired, by the way. Security will escort you out before the sun sets."

Calvin didn't look back to see the man collapse into tears. He didn't care. In the city, Calvin Voss was a deity of industry. Respect wasn't something he asked for; it was the tax people paid just to breathe the same air. While his holdings were scattered across every sector of the skyline, the Mercer Group was his throne.

He entered his private office, where his right-hand man, Liam, was already waiting with a folder and a garment bag.

"The offer has been finalised, Mr Voss," Liam said as Calvin sank into his executive chair. "You have been officially hired as the new junior secretary for the Sunrise Group."

"Excellent," Calvin replied, his aura of menace shifting into something more calculating. "Have you secured the wardrobe?"

"Yes, boss. It's exactly what you asked for. Perfectly… ordinary."

Calvin ran a hand over the expensive fabric of his desk. "Good. I need to look appropriately pathetic for my first day. While I am 'working' there, you are to manage operations here. I want no mistakes, no delays, and no one—not even the board—to know where I've gone. Is that clear?"

"Crystal, boss."

"Get lost."

The Next Day

The sun rose over the city, glinting off the glass towers, but at the curb of the Sunrise Group, a very different man stepped out of a black sedan.

The man who emerged did not look like the titan of the Mercer Group. His hair, usually styled in a sharp, intimidating sweep, was now brushed forward into a soft, slightly messy college cut. His eyes, typically cold and piercing, were hidden behind a pair of thick, black-rimmed glasses that gave him an air of perpetual anxiety.

He had traded his three-thousand-dollar suit for a common blue-and-white checkered button-down and a pair of off-the-rack black trousers. He looked like a man who worried about his rent and collected vintage stamps—a lost puppy in a world of wolves.

But beneath the cotton shirt, his heart beat with the steady rhythm of a hunter. He straightened his collar, feeling the unfamiliar itch of the cheap fabric. He had a singular mission at Sunrise Group, and he would burn the building down from the inside to achieve it.

Standing before the lobby directory, Calvin Voss was gone. In his place stood Oliver, the unassuming new hire.

The elevator chimed as he ascended to the executive floor. When the doors opened, he found himself standing at the threshold of his enemy's inner sanctum. For a split second, the "Oliver" persona slipped, and the "Voss" fire flared in his eyes. He tightened his grip on his briefcase, forced a submissive slump into his shoulders, and pushed the door open.

The game had officially begun.

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