Mystery & Suspense

A Letter From Nova City: Chapter 6

4 min read · Original fiction · Chapter 1

Thao Nguyen knew the official story was false when an encrypted file appeared on her computer before sunrise.

For years, the most influential technology family in Cedar Heights had controlled every version of the truth. Their account appeared in interviews, research papers, contracts, and carefully repeated conversations.

Thao Nguyen began to question that account when she discovered a hidden research archive. The evidence pointed toward Long Ngo, the person who had promised never to deceive her.

Long Ngo admitted that he knew part of the truth, but claimed his silence had protected her. His explanation weakened when the name Hai Duong appeared in the earliest project records.

Hai Duong offered money, privacy, and a quiet departure from Cedar Heights. The offer sounded generous, but it was really the price of silence.

Thao Nguyen refused. She compared source files, recovered archived messages, and found a former engineer who remembered a private meeting held after midnight.

The engineer had kept one backup because the instructions had seemed improper. That backup connected every important person to the same decision.

When Thao Nguyen confronted Long Ngo, he admitted that his family had benefited. She told him that trust without honesty had only made the betrayal easier to hide.

The final confrontation happened during a public technology event intended to celebrate the family's success. Instead, Thao Nguyen presented the records, the witness, and a recording no one knew existed.

Hai Duong tried to portray her as confused and emotional. The attempt failed because the evidence was precise, dated, and independently verified.

By sunrise, investors had withdrawn and relatives had changed their stories. People who had ignored Thao Nguyen for years suddenly wanted private meetings.

Long Ngo remained beside her, but she did not confuse one courageous act with forgiveness. Trust would have to be rebuilt without secrecy.

Months later, Thao Nguyen had recovered control of her future. The victory did not erase the past, but it ended the lie that had defined her life.

Then another encrypted message arrived: “The first secret began in Cedar Heights. The last one did not.”

This story is fictional. Any resemblance to real people or events is coincidental.