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 The Billionaire Crisis Writer Novel Cover

The Billionaire Crisis Writer

Mara Kade fixes scandals for powerful men. She writes the apologies that make the public forgive. She stays invisible while reputations survive. When twenty-nine-year-old billionaire CEO Elias Voss goes viral for the wrong reasons, his board hires Mara to control the fallout. Sponsors freeze deals. Staff leak documents. The internet chooses a villain. Mara expects lies. She expects ego. She does not expect private evidence that could put Elias in prison. Every statement she writes protects him. Every truth she hides reshapes her. And the closer she gets, the harder it becomes to tell where her job ends and her conscience begins. This job will either make her untouchable or cost her everything.
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Chapter 4

I arrived at the conference room feeling the familiar weight of anticipation pressing down on my shoulders. Today wasn't about discovery. Today was about action. Containment. Strategy. Making sure that what had started as a minor leak didn't spiral into a global disaster. And the room was already buzzing before I sat down, screens flickering with news updates, phones pinging, and a silent hum of tension that seemed to seep into my bones.

Elias was at the head of the table, staring at a tablet, jaw tight. I could feel him measuring the room, calculating, always calculating. I had worked with plenty of CEOs who were all charm and panic in equal measure, but Elias... he was different. Everything about him suggested precision, control, and a touch of quiet danger. I had learned yesterday that trying to guess what he was thinking was a waste of time. You either followed the facts or got left behind.

I opened my laptop and spread the files across the table, arranging them in a way that would make sense to someone who didn't have the time, or the patience, to dig. It was all part of the strategy: clarity. Visual simplicity. Every statement, every number, every email linked to a clear narrative.

"We have a lot to cover," I said, my voice calm but firm. "First, we need to control the narrative before it controls us. The board and media will interpret the leak in seconds. Every word we release matters."

Julian Cross raised an eyebrow from across the table, his signature smirk in place. "And how exactly do you propose we do that? Spin the story, I assume?"

I ignored the jab. "No. We present facts. Carefully selected, verified, and timed. The public will see an accurate narrative, but that protects the company and its executives. Our job isn't to spin. It's to survive. And that requires discipline."

He didn't respond immediately. He was probably calculating how to use my words against me. Boards did that a lot. They were trained to find weakness and exploit it. I didn't care. I had survived worse than that.

Elias finally spoke, voice low and even. "I want honesty. No sugarcoating. No half-truths. If we fail to control this, the story writes itself, and there's no coming back."

I nodded. I knew he meant it. And I also knew honesty could be dangerous. In a corporate crisis, honesty wasn't always the best policy. It was a weapon, yes, but also a trap. Timing mattered more than truth. Timing could save someone. Too soon, and it could destroy them.

We started outlining the public statement. I drafted the first paragraph on the spot: clear, concise, factual, and neutral. No admissions. No finger-pointing. Nothing that could be misinterpreted as guilt. The board members watched as I typed, some leaning forward, some skeptical, some impatient.

"This is too bland," Julian said after a moment, scanning the screen. "We need impact. Make it strong. Defend the company aggressively."

I didn't flinch. "Aggression is reckless. The public is already suspicious. Strong doesn't mean defensive. Strong means precise, factual, and credible. Anything else is a gamble."

He frowned but didn't push further. Elias, on the other hand, nodded slightly. That small acknowledgment was enough for me. Sometimes, in these rooms, small nods mattered more than words.

We went line by line. Every sentence had to be weighed for risk and clarity. Every statistic is cross-checked. Every reference verified. My fingers moved quickly, my mind racing, tracing outcomes, predicting interpretations, imagining headlines before they were written.

The first real test came when a reporter from a major outlet called. Live. And they wanted answers.

I took a deep breath. "We aren't releasing statements live yet. We are reviewing the facts to ensure accuracy."

Julian shifted in his seat, clearly annoyed. "We can't ignore them. We need to manage exposure now."

I leaned back slightly, keeping my tone even. "Managing exposure doesn't mean answering every call immediately. It means controlling what information is released. Otherwise, we react to their narrative, not ours. That's how mistakes happen."

Elias glanced at me, gray eyes sharp. "She's right," he said softly, but enough for the room to hear. "We control this. Not the reporters."

I caught his eye briefly. There it was again, the acknowledgment, quiet but deliberate. That didn't mean trust yet. That meant respect. And in this room, respect was hard-earned.

The rest of the morning blurred into strategy sessions. We drafted statements, rehearsed responses, and simulated press interactions. Every move was calculated. Every decision carried weight. The board wanted rapid action, Elias demanded honesty, and I had to navigate both without triggering disaster.

Lunch was silent. I sat with my laptop, drafting contingency plans, cross-checking facts, and monitoring online chatter. Social media was already alive with speculation, and every false assumption, every partial truth was a potential fire waiting to explode. I had to be ready.

After lunch, Julian returned with another demand. "We need a timeline. Every step, every action. The public needs to see movement."

I exhaled slowly. "Movement without a plan is chaos. I can provide a timeline, but it will be precise and controlled. We will move deliberately, not reactively."

He leaned back, clearly considering whether to challenge me. He didn't. For now, that was enough.

As the afternoon progressed, I could see the stress on Elias growing. He was a master of control, but even he couldn't anticipate every outcome, every leak, every public interpretation. And he was counting on me to navigate that.

I glanced at him as he reviewed statements, the tension in his shoulders visible despite the calm mask he always wore. He trusted me with this, whether he admitted it or not. And that trust... it was heavy, almost suffocating. But I was good at carrying weight. I had to be.

By the time the board left for the day, we had a plan. A statement ready, contingencies in place, and the first moves of our media strategy set. I felt the familiar rush of accomplishment mixed with dread. This was only the start. The leak wasn't fully contained. More complications were waiting, and whoever had orchestrated this wasn't finished yet.

I closed my laptop and rubbed my eyes. Elias watched silently, leaning against the table.

"You did well today," he said quietly. "I... don't usually rely on anyone this directly, but you handled it."

I nodded, shrugging. "I do what I do. The company survives, you survive, the story survives. That's enough."

He didn't smile. He rarely did. But the slight shift in his posture, the way he seemed to relax just a little, told me he was relieved. And that, in itself, was a victory.

I left the conference room knowing that the real battle had just begun. Containing the leak, controlling the narrative, and navigating board politics were one thing. But the deeper truth, the hidden manipulations, the moral compromises, the human cost, was a storm yet to come. And I was standing right in its center, armed only with logic, facts, and a mind that refused to break.

The first day of containment was over, but the crisis had only just begun. And I wasn't going anywhere.

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