Chapter Twenty-Five

SIN

The Next Day

The Chapel feels different when the mood turns cold.

This is the atmosphere you get when a room full of bikers has spent too long holding something back and finally decided they’re done waiting.

I stand at the head of the table, looking at my brothers, and I let the silence sit for one full beat before I speak, “Ghost,” I say. “Walk us through it. All of it. Start to finish.”

Ghost doesn’t look up from his laptop when he answers. He never does when he’s in the middle of something, his attention divided the same way it always is, one part of him here, in the room with us, and the other part already three moves ahead.

“The second ledger is the foundation,” he states.

“Jonas kept two sets of books. The official records, which are clean, and a shadow record he maintained himself, off-system, handwritten, and then transcribed. Every payment he made to the Alliance. Every amount, every date, going back three years…” He pauses.

“He was meticulous. Accountant-level documentation. He recorded the purpose of each payment, the account it was routed to, and the initials of the Alliance contact who confirmed receipt.”

The room is very still.

Bear, at my left, sets down his beer slowly.

“Three years,” Nitro says, not quite a question.

“Three years,” Ghost confirms.

I let that land where it needs to. I’ve already had time to sit with it, to process what that number really means, what it costs to hold something like that alone for three years and not break, not complain, not let anyone help. But my brothers haven’t had that time, and they need a moment.

Ghost continues, “The fabricated evidence they used to frame Will… it all came from Jonas’ records. The second ledger. Payment dates, amounts, account structure, everything. They didn’t invent anything. They just turned it.”

He shifts slightly, his voice tightening with precision. “Jonas was already paying them. Regular payments. At the same time, they were skimming off the mine, taking money they thought he didn’t know about…” There’s a pause. “He did know. That’s why he kept the records.”

Ghost exhales once, controlled. “They took that ledger, the record of both the payments and the skimming, and rerouted the digital trail. Made it look like Will was the one moving the money. Like he was skimming from the mine instead of them. They used proof of their own theft to build a case against him.”

Ghost finally looks up, and his eyes find mine. “It only worked because Jonas documented everything… every dollar, every movement. The more precise he was trying to be… the cleaner the frame job became.”

The room’s temperature drops another degree.

“They used their own records of the skim and the payments Jonas was making to build a case against Will, then swooped in trying to buy the mine out from under Millie when they realized Jonas was dying,” Koa says, voice flat.

“While still taking his money… and stealing from him on top of it at the same time.”

No one responds.

The sentence doesn’t need a response.

I let it sit for five more seconds, because five seconds is the right amount of time, and then I pull the room back.

“Here’s what we have,” I say. “Ghost’s forensic work on the digital trail…

original timestamps, server metadata, IP routing.

Every layer of the frame-up was mapped and documented.

Jonas’ second ledger, now in the hands of his lawyer along with the rest of the will, was sealed and timestamped before his most recent hospitalization.

The mine’s financial records, the shell accounts, the payment architecture…

” I pause. “What we have is the entire operational history of the Hidden Hand Alliance’s extortion of the McClane family, and proof they tried to weaponize it against this club. ”

“So, we give it to Moretti?” Koa states.

“No.”

The word comes out flat and without heat, because it doesn’t need either.

Koa frowns. “Sin—”

“We used that avenue,” I say. “We handed evidence to law enforcement, and we watched it play out the way it plays out. That’s not what this is. That’s not what Jonas built.” I pull the poker chip from my pocket. Let it move through my fingers.

“Jonas kept that ledger for three years because he understood something. He understood that the Alliance’s power isn’t money.

It isn’t violence, it is invisibility. They’ve stayed untouchable because they’ve stayed unseen.

They’re called The Hidden Hand for a reason.

” I look around the table. “So, we don’t arrest them.

We expose them, again. We take the thing that makes them powerful, and we burn it to the ground. ”

Ghost is already half-smiling when I look at him, the corner of his mouth tipped just enough to mean he’s two steps ahead of everyone else in the room.

“Walk them through it,” I say.

He doesn’t stand. Ghost never performs when he doesn’t have to. He leans forward, forearms on his knees, laptop already open, the glow of the screen carving his face into planes of shadow and light. “All right,” he says, his voice even. “Here’s how this goes.”

A few chairs scrape. Someone mutters something about finally getting to the point, and Ghost ignores it.

“I’ve bundled everything into one encrypted file.

Not a folder, not multiple drops… one payload.

” His fingers move across the keyboard, pulling up a diagram that looks like a spiderweb designed by a psychopath.

“Second ledger. Jonas’s payment records.

My forensic analysis. The shell account architecture.

The fabricated transaction trail tying Will to the siphoned funds.

Every timestamp. Every originating IP. Every discrepancy. ”

Nitro leans in, squinting at the screen. “In English.”

Ghost doesn’t miss a beat. “In English, it means they built a frame using Jonas’ own extortion payments as raw material, and I’ve now documented exactly how.”

Silence settles, heavy and focused.

“And that goes where?” Sin asks.

“Everywhere that matters.” Ghost taps a key, and new names appear on the screen. “Nevada Gaming Control Board. They’ve been chasing Alliance casino laundering for three years and hitting dead ends because of the shell structure. That structure is no longer theoretical. It’s mapped.”

Koa lets out a low whistle. “Jesus.”

“IRS Criminal Investigation Division,” Ghost continues, unbothered. “Because tax evasion always gets more traction than moral outrage. FBI financial crimes unit here in Vegas. They’ve got overlapping jurisdiction once the interstate transfer patterns are clear.”

Deek shifts in his chair. “And the press?”

Ghost’s half-smile deepens by a fraction. “Two journalists. One national, one regional. Both are already circling Alliance development influence in Nevada. They receive the same file at the same time.”

“Simultaneously?” Deek asks.

“Simultaneously,” Ghost confirms. “Scheduled auto-transmission. Midnight tonight… Sunday. Which means the story lands before anyone with Alliance connections is fully back at their desks Monday morning.”

“So, they can’t bury it,” Nitro says.

“They can try,” Ghost replies. “They just can’t do it quietly. One agency, you stall. Four agencies and two journalists, all holding identical documentation? That becomes momentum. Momentum becomes headlines. Headlines become subpoenas.”

Sin studies the screen for a long moment, then looks back at Ghost. “And the encryption?”

“Unbreakable in any timeframe that helps them,” Ghost says. “Time-release key embedded in the transmission sequence. Once it sends, it opens. Before that, it’s useless noise.”

I feel the room shift. The understanding is settling in—the scale of it.

“They won’t be able to run from all of it at once,” Ghost adds, almost conversational. “The architecture of this only works because it overwhelms their ability to control the narrative.”

I nod once. “And the auto-send.”

Ghost finally looks directly at me. “Only I can stop it,” Ghost confirms. “I have until eleven fifty-five. After that, it goes whether anyone interferes or not.”

Nitro looks at me. “And if the Alliance tries something between now and midnight?”

“That’s the other part,” I say. I pause to let the weight of what comes next settle properly. “We’re going to meet with them.”

The room reacts, not loudly, but with the shift of men recalibrating. Koa’s jaw tightens. Deek looks up sharply with brows drawn. Bear is completely still, which for Bear means he’s listening with everything he has.

“Not to negotiate,” I say, and continue before anyone can speak. “To make sure they understand exactly what’s coming. And why.”

Bear, who has been reserved this entire time, clears his throat. “When?”

“Tonight,” I say. “Before the file goes out. I want them to know it’s coming. I want them to know they can’t stop it. And I want them to understand…” I flip the chip once and catch it without looking, “… what they made possible when they put their hands on Jonas McClane’s records.”

Nitro leans forward and slams his fist on the table.

Not a vote, just an answer.

One by one, around the table, the rest of my brothers do the same.

***

The restaurant is on the eastern edge of the Strip, the kind of place that has been there long enough to have outlasted three different waves of Vegas reinvention and carries the architectural evidence of all of them.

Neutral ground.

Public enough that nothing stupid can happen. Private enough, in the booth I requested, that nothing said will travel.

I bring Nitro, Ghost, and Koa.

Five of the Alliance guards are waiting when we arrive.

Roman, the new head of the Alliance at the center, which tells me everything about the current state of his confidence.

He’s flanked by two men I recognize from the casino incident and two I don’t.

The ones I don’t recognize carry something that marks them as observers, here to watch and report back, not participate.

Good.

Let them watch.

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