The Glass Takeover

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Victoria Vance didn't use knives; she used non-disclosure agreements and hostile takeovers. In the shark-tank of London's Canary Wharf, she had been the 'Golden Girl' of Sterling & Co., the youngest partner in the firm's history. Then came the 'Night of the Long Knives', where the senior partners framed her for a series of insider trading scandals to cover their own tracks.

They didn't just fire her; they blacklisted her. They turned her into a pariah in the only world she had ever known.

Victoria spent three years in a small apartment in East London, living on canned soup and hatred. She didn't spend her time mourning; she spent it analyzing. She mapped every weakness of Sterling & Co., every secret debt, every illicit affair of the partners who had betrayed her.

She returned not as an employee, but as a predator.

She created a shell company in the Cayman Islands, using a series of complex loans to quietly buy up the debt of the very men who had cast her out. One by one, she began to call in the markers.

The first partner, a man named Arthur, found himself bankrupt overnight. He came to her office, begging for a loan. Victoria looked at him from behind her glass desk, her expression as cold as the steel of the building.

"I don't give loans, Arthur," she said. "I buy liabilities. And right now, you are a very expensive liability."

She forced him to sign over his shares for a penny. Then she did the same to the others. She didn't want their apologies; she wanted their seats.

The final confrontation happened in the boardroom. The remaining partners looked at her with a mixture of fear and respect. She had not just taken their money; she had taken their identity.

"You're a monster, Victoria," the senior partner whispered.

"I learned from the best," she replied, sliding the final merger document across the table. "I'm not a monster. I'm just the logical conclusion of the culture you created."

As she took the chair at the head of the table, Victoria felt a strange emptiness. She had won the game, but she realized the game was all there was. She looked out at the London skyline and wondered if there was any part of her left that didn't speak in the language of profit and loss.

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