Shadow Protocols

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Chapter 1 Amy

Amy

The boardroom smelled like burnt coffee and fear.

Amy Moretti sat at the head of the table, hands folded, spine straight, and let the silence stretch until Devon Cassidy's voice cracked under the weight of it.

"The penetration testing results came back," Devon said. "We failed three of the twelve simulated attack vectors."

"Which three."

"Lateral movement detection, insider threat modeling, and—" he glanced at his tablet like it might rescue him "—zero-day response time."

"Those are the three categories ARES will score us on most heavily." Amy's voice never rose. It didn't need to. "We have eleven weeks until the government's evaluation team walks through this building. Eleven weeks to prove Sentinel Dynamics deserves twelve billion dollars of taxpayer trust, and you are telling me we failed the exact benchmarks that matter."

Nobody at the table breathed.

She let her gaze move down the row of executives—men and women who had built careers on being the smartest person in every other room they'd ever entered, and who now looked at their laptops like the wood grain held answers.

"Fix it," she said. "I don't want excuses. I want a revised remediation plan on my desk by Friday morning."

The meeting dissolved into the particular silence of people trying to leave a room without appearing to flee it. Amy remained seated until the last chair scraped back, until she was alone with the hum of the building's climate control and the skyline beyond the window, gray and indifferent.

She allowed herself exactly four seconds of stillness before her phone buzzed.

Diane Okafor, VP of HR: Do you have five minutes? Something you need to see.

Amy almost declined. She had a stack of financial models to review before the ARES steering committee call, and Diane's "somethings" tended to be personnel disputes dressed up as emergencies. But something about the phrasing—need to see, not want to discuss—made her type back a single word.

Come.

Diane arrived within ninety seconds, which told Amy she'd been waiting outside the door.

"I know you hate being ambushed," Diane said, sliding into the chair across from her, "so I'll be fast. We've been trying to fill the Director of Predictive Threat Intelligence role for four months. Nobody clears your bar. Today, someone did."

"Define cleared."

"He rebuilt our entire threat-prediction model from public job postings and a single leaked vendor contract. In forty-eight hours. Unpaid. Unsolicited. He sent it to recruiting as a writing sample."

Amy set down her pen. That got her attention in a way salary negotiations never did. "Who is he."

"Twenty-seven years old. No major firm on his résumé—he's been consulting independently. References check out, but they're strange. Vague. Like he's been careful about what people know."

Something in Amy's chest tightened, an old and useful instinct she'd learned never to ignore. People who were careful about what others knew usually had something worth hiding.

"Bring him in," she said. "Today. I'll interview him myself."

Diane blinked. "You never sit in on Director-level interviews."

"I'm making an exception." Amy's eyes drifted back to the window, to the city she had spent a decade convincing to trust her. "If he's as good as you say, I want to see it with my own eyes before I decide whether to be impressed or suspicious."

"And if he's not?"

"Then he wasted an afternoon he'll never get back."

Two hours later, her assistant's voice came through the intercom, careful and clipped. "Ms. Moretti. Mark Romano is here for his four o'clock."

Amy closed the folder in front of her, squared its edges against the desk, and said the only word the moment required.

"Send him in."

The door opened.

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