The Shadow Protocol

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25

The rain in Los Angeles doesn't wash things clean. It just makes the grime slicker.

I was sitting in my office on Sunset Boulevard, watching the water streak the window, when the envelope arrived. No return address. Inside was a photograph and a single sentence: "Find out if Rebecca Devereaux ever existed."

The photograph showed a woman I had never seen—dark hair, high cheekbones, a smile that suggested she knew something nobody else did. Behind her, through a French window, I could see what looked like a swimming pool and palm trees. The Devereaux estate in Beverly Hills.

Richard Devereaux was one of the biggest names in postwar California real estate. He had built half the strip malls from Hollywood to Long Beach. He was also a philanthropist, a veteran of the Pacific campaign, and a widower whose devotion to his late wife Rebecca had become something of a local legend. Every November, he donated ten thousand dollars to the Rebecca Devereaux Memorial Hospital for Children. Every Thanksgiving, he gave a speech at the Rotary Club about the woman who "taught him what compassion meant."

Compassion. That was the word I kept hearing. Compassion, charity, love. All wrapped up in a package that smelled suspiciously like a brand.

I started with the easy stuff. Public records. Birth certificates, school records, marriage licenses. Rebecca Devereaux, born Rebecca Louise Ashworth, was born in San Francisco in 1912. She attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart. She married Richard Devereaux in 1937. She died in a boating accident off the coast of Catalina Island in 1944.

Everything checked out. Which meant everything was probably fake.

I drove to Catalina that weekend. The boating accident had been reported in the newspapers—Rebecca's speedboat capsized in a sudden squall. Her body was never recovered. Richard Devereaux had identified her personal effects: a pearl necklace, a silver locket, a copy of Jane Eyre.

But when I visited the Coast Guard station in Avalon, the retired sergeant on duty scratched his head. "Catalina Island," he said. "I've been coming here since before the war. There was never a boating accident. Not that I remember."

I went to the Convent of the Sacred Heart in San Francisco. The nuns had no record of a Rebecca Ashworth. Not in the enrollment books, not in the alumni registry, not in the death records spanning eighty years.

No school. No birth certificate that anyone could produce. No friends, no relatives, no trace of a life before she became Richard Devereaux's wife.

I went back to Beverly Hills and watched the house. Devereaux emerged every morning at eight, sharp in a white suit, kissing the portrait of Rebecca in the foyer before he left. He visited the hospital every Wednesday. He spoke at charity galas with the practiced sorrow of a man who had perfected his grief.

Then I found the connection.

Rebecca Ashworth—the fictional Rebecca—appeared in the public record exactly one month before Richard Devereaux married her. And exactly one month before that, Devereaux had closed a land deal that netted him two million dollars. The deal involved properties that had been condemned by the city for health violations. But Devereaux's "widow's charity" had lobbied the health board to reverse the condemnation, calling Rebecca's "personal connection" to the buildings a matter of deep sentimental value.

Rebecca was not a wife. She was a lobbying tool. A phantom designed to manipulate city officials, to open doors, to turn condemnation into profit. Every speech about grief was a sales pitch. Every charity donation was an investment.

I took my findings to the Los Angeles Times. The editor read my notes, looked at me over his glasses, and said, "Jack, you've got a good story. But Devereaux has lawyers who could bury us in litigation for a decade. And half the city loves that man. They'll say you're attacking a grieving widower."

"I'm attacking a liar," I said.

The story ran on a Sunday. Small, buried on page twelve. By Monday, Devereaux's lawyers had filed a defamation suit naming me, the editor, and the newspaper. By Wednesday, the city council voted to drop all investigations into his past deals. By Friday, my office had been vandalized—windows smashed, desk overturned, the photograph of Rebecca Ashworth torn in half.

I sat in the wreckage and lit a cigarette. The rain started again, making the grime slicker.

Rebecca Devereaux never existed. But she was more real than most people I knew. She was a weapon, a shield, a key that unlocked doors in a city built on sand and lies. And Richard Devereaux would keep her alive as long as it served him.

I crushed out my cigarette and picked up the telephone. There were other liars in Los Angeles. Other phantoms holding open doors. The city was full of them.

Rebecca was just the first.

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Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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