Michael Carter was reviewing the final clauses of a contract—an international, multibillion-dollar deal with a major Asian tech firm, the crown jewel of everything he had built.
His office on the fiftieth floor of a glass tower overlooked the sprawling city he had helped shape. Afternoon sunlight glinted off polished mahogany and the face of his Swiss watch.
He was ruthless in business, obsessed with time, profit, control. Yet there was one place untouched by ambition: his seven-year-old daughter, Isabella. She was his only weakness, the quiet reason behind every relentless pursuit.
His phone vibrated. He expected the school or his assistant. Instead, the screen read: Isabella.
He froze. It was the house line—the nanny must have handed her the phone. Isabella never called on her own.
“Hey, sweetheart,” he said gently. “What’s wrong?”
Her voice was small, unsteady. “Daddy… my back hurts.”
Distracted by legal language still echoing in his mind, Michael tried to reassure her. “It’s probably nothing, honey. Put some ice on it. I’ll be home soon—I’m just finishing something important.” He regretted the words instantly.
“But it’s not a bump,” she whispered, fighting tears. “It feels… cold.”
A chill ran through him. “I’ll look when I get home. Is Margaret with you?” The nanny was reliable, though sometimes inattentive.
“Yes,” Isabella said.
Then silence. The line went dead.
Michael stared at the phone. Something cold.
Images from the past week rushed back—Isabella avoiding the park, barely touching her food, abandoning her drawings. Her brightness had dimmed. None of it felt right.
He snapped his laptop shut. “Cancel everything,” he told his assistant. “Family emergency.”
“Detective,” he said breathlessly. “I need immediate backup. There’s a hidden tunnel beneath my house. An armed man. My daughter is in danger.”