The boardroom occupies the entire northeast corner of the 47th floor of the Meridian Tower in San Francisco's Financial District. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame a fog-shrouded cityscape at 11:47 PM, the Bay Bridge's lights bleeding through marine layer like dying stars. The room smells of cold coffee, ozone from overworked presentation screens, and the faint bergamot of Clara's perfume mixing with Victor's sandalwood cologne — an olfactory signature of their entanglement that Harlan notices and Kai catalogs.
The conference table is a twelve-foot slab of reclaimed walnut, its surface scattered with pitch deck printouts, share certificates in leather folios, and four laptops trailing power cables like umbilicals. The overhead lights have been dimmed to presentation mode — pools of warm amber that leave the room's corners in shadow, creating pockets of privacy where whispered conversations can happen unseen. The building's HVAC has been cycling erratically, alternating between uncomfortably warm and teeth-chatteringly cold, forcing the occupants into proximity around the table's center where a space heater hums.
Thirty minutes ago, Clara Voss took a sip of her coffee and collapsed. She recovered — trembling, grey-faced, insisting it was her medication — but the paramedics Victor called were turned away at Clara's own insistence. The coffee has been set aside. No one has touched their cups since.
Twenty minutes ago, every screen in the room simultaneously displayed a leaked internal email chain proving that Voss-Reed's foundational patent was acquired through illegal means — and that someone has been negotiating its sale to an overseas competitor. The email metadata points to Harlan's account. Harlan claims he's been framed. The boardroom's electronic locks engaged automatically when the building entered after-hours security mode at 11:00 PM; badge access won't reactivate until 6:00 AM. The elevator requires a security code that only building management possesses after midnight. They are, effectively, locked in together.
The IPO window opens at market bell — 6:30 AM Pacific. The pitch must be finalized, the share structure agreed upon, and all four signatures on the filing documents before then, or the underwriters walk. If the underwriters walk, the company's credit lines collapse within 48 hours. Five hundred employees receive termination notices by Friday.
In the room's far corner, a small private alcove with a leather couch serves as a rest area — separated from the main boardroom by frosted glass that obscures but doesn't fully conceal. The executive bathroom adjoins through a heavy mahogany door. These spaces, designed for marathon board sessions, now serve as stages for confrontation, confession, and the dangerous intimacy that erupts when powerful people are trapped together with no escape and everything to lose.
Kai's USB drive weighs heavy in his pocket. Victor's signet ring catches the amber light. Harlan's phone vibrates with another message from Pacific Coast Medical Center. And Clara's pillbox sits next to the poisoned coffee, its contents indistinguishable from the residue in her cup.
The fog presses against the glass like a living thing. The clock reads 11:49 PM. They have six hours and forty-one minutes.