The DNA Folder On The Reception Counter Changed Harrison Global Before The CEO Could…

Adrian Harrison stopped between the revolving doors with rain shining on the shoulders of his charcoal coat.

For three seconds, the lobby kept moving without him.

A woman in red heels crossed toward the elevators. A courier scanned his badge at the turnstiles. The espresso machine hissed from the coffee bar. The digital wall above reception still showed the words EMERGENCY BOARD SESSION — HARRISON HEIR VERIFICATION.

Then his eyes dropped from the screen to Noah.

My son stood beside me in his navy blazer, one hand locked around my fingers, the other gripping the strap of his school backpack. He did not hide. His gray-green eyes stayed on Adrian’s face with the serious, steady stare I had seen every morning for eight years across our tiny kitchen table.

Adrian’s mouth opened once.

Nothing came out.

Margaret recovered first.

“This is absurd,” she said softly, smoothing one pearl at her throat. “Adrian, go upstairs. The board can handle a trespasser.”

The chairman, Walter Bennett, did not move away from the elevators. He was seventy-one, broad-shouldered, with a silver cane in his right hand and a document folder under his left arm. Beside him, company counsel Denise Mallory held a tablet against her chest.

“No one is going upstairs yet,” Walter said.

The lobby changed temperature without the air-conditioning moving.

Adrian walked toward us slowly. His shoes struck the marble in clean, even sounds. At five feet away, he stopped and looked at me like he was matching a face from another lifetime to the woman standing in front of him.

“Elena,” he said.

My name came out rough.

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