NOVEL My Fated Alpha's Cruel Game Chapter 293 Exposed to Light

My Fated Alpha's Cruel Game

Chapter 293 Exposed to Light
  • Prev Chapter
  • Background
    Font family
    Font size
    Line hieght
    Full frame
    No line breaks
    Text to Speech
  • Next Chapter

Chapter 293: Chapter 293 Exposed to Light

Elena’s POV

Asher watches me with that knowing look, like he can read every thought behind my carefully controlled expression.

The afternoon brings our first real complication.

Not the resistance I expected. Not the sabotage I prepared for.

A person.

Elise walks into my office after requesting meetings for days. She’s a mid-level administrator with a spotless record and efficient work history. Budget reviews, personnel oversight, compliance checks. Every excuse she gave sounded legitimate and carefully chosen.

I finally agreed to see her.

She settles into the chair across from my desk, hands clasped so tightly her knuckles have gone white. Her spine is rigid, like she’s steeling herself for a blow she’s already decided to take.

"I know what you’re investigating," she says without any lead-up.

I keep my expression neutral. Every reaction costs something, and I don’t waste currency on impulse.

"Do you," I say evenly.

"Yes." Her voice is steady. "Because I helped enforce parts of it."

That catches my attention.

No excuses. No denials. Just plain ownership.

I lean back in my chair, creating space for her to continue or retreat if she needs to. "Why are you telling me this." fгeewebnovёl.com

"Because I believed it was legitimate at first," she says. "Then I stopped questioning anything. And people got hurt because of what I did."

Her voice stays controlled, but her hands betray her. They shake with a fine tremor, like something held under pressure for too long.

"I want to help you tear it apart," she continues. "Before anyone else uses it to cause more damage."

This is what no one warns you about when you’re dismantling corruption.

The moment when the system decides to confess.

I study her face carefully. There’s no scheming there, no calculated angle. Just bone-deep weariness and something that might be relief at finally speaking the truth aloud.

"There will be consequences for coming forward," I tell her.

"I know."

"And you’re here anyway."

"Yes."

I nod once. "Then you’ll help us trace the enforcement channels."

The breath she releases sounds like it’s been trapped in her chest for years.

After she leaves, Asher closes the office door with deliberate quiet.

"That could backfire," he says.

"It already did," I reply. "This is just dealing with the aftermath."

By evening, our task force has real power.

We’ve identified the most dangerous policies. The ones that offered protection based on conditions. The ones designed to create silence through fear. The ones that could be quietly activated by people with the right access and believable cover stories.

We shut them down systematically.

Not with public announcements or dramatic gestures.

Through code changes. System modifications. Enforcement chains that now lead nowhere. Processes that once operated smoothly now hit dead ends without explanation, like pathways that suddenly terminate in solid walls.

That first night, I sleep lightly but without interruption.

No emergency calls. No nightmares. Just rest that doesn’t feel like surrender to exhaustion.

The next morning, the pushback begins.

Subtle at first.

A report arrives twelve hours late. A routine request gets bounced between three different departments. A scheduled meeting disappears from calendars with a vague note about rescheduling "when appropriate."

Asher spots the pattern before I do.

"They’re probing for weak spots," he says as we walk through the main corridor, our footsteps creating soft echoes against the stone walls.

"Let them probe," I say. "We’re not taking the bait."

During breakfast, conversations flow around us instead of including us.

The atmosphere feels carefully neutral. Too measured. The kind of calm that’s really just watchful waiting to see which side gains momentum.

By noon, Ruth appears in my doorway with another name.

Someone with real influence this time.

Someone who profited directly from the old arrangement and just realized their advantage is disappearing.

"They’re requesting a meeting," she tells me.

"Of course they are."

I don’t give her an immediate answer.

Instead, I excuse myself to the restroom. Wash my hands slowly. Splash cool water on my face. Take measured breaths. When I catch my reflection in the mirror, I don’t look away this time.

I’m not checking for signs of breakdown.

I’m checking for determination.

When I return to my office, I say, "Schedule it for tomorrow."

Let them spend tonight wondering what I know and what I’m prepared to reveal.

That evening, Asher and I walk the compound grounds.

No security detail trailing behind us. No formal agenda. Just movement under the open evening sky. The air carries a crisp edge. The exterior lighting casts everything in soft shadows. The entire facility seems to be holding its breath.

"How are you holding up," he asks.

"Better than I expected," I admit. "This feels different than I thought it would. Less like combat."

"It’s not a fight," he says. "It’s archaeology."

The comparison makes me smile slightly. It captures something I couldn’t put into words myself.

Later, lying in bed, I don’t withdraw from his presence or cling desperately to it.

I place my palm against his chest and let myself feel the steady rhythm of his breathing, the simple confirmation that he’s here.

The corrupt system still exists.

But now it’s exposed to light.

And exposure is how every real dismantling begins.

I close my eyes, already knowing tomorrow won’t be peaceful.

And I’m prepared for whatever comes next.

Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter