I pause, considering the careful dance required in this paragraph. The information must be damning enough to capture attention, but presented in a way that protects my sources, which, in this case, is The Raven, whose sophisticated hacking of encrypted servers provided everything we needed. The “financial records obtained by theTribune” technically existed on my hard drive before being provided to my editor.
This is the delicate balance I maintain every day now: investigative journalist by day, member of The Shadows by night. The two roles feed each other in a perfect symbiosis that still surprises me with its effectiveness.
“Thorne! How’s that draft coming?” Brian appears at my half-wall, coffee mug in hand. I’m starting to think he was born with that thing attached. His tie is slightly askew, and the bags under his eyes suggest another late night piecing together a breaking story.
“Almost there,” I respond, turning my screen slightly so he can see the progress. “Just finishing the section on the financial connections before moving to the victim interviews.”
He nods approvingly, leaning against the partition. “This is dynamite stuff, Eve. Best work you’ve done yet.” He takes a sip of coffee, studying me over the rim of his mug. “Though I’m still curious how you connected these dots when three federal agencies couldn’t.”
I offer a modest smile, keeping my expression neutral despite the thrill that runs through me. Little does he know that while those agencies were following bureaucratic protocols and jumping through legal hoops, The Shadows bypassed those constraints entirely, accessing information through channels that don’t officially exist.
“Just following the money, Brian. And listening to people no one else bothered to hear.”
This has become my standard explanation—one that is simple, believable, and technically true, though incomplete. I don’t mention The Raven’s advanced access to financial systems, The Heiress’ international connections, or The Phantom’s network of informants who feed me information impossible to obtain through conventional journalism.
“Well, whatever your secret sauce is, keep it coming.” He taps the partition with his knuckles, a rare display of approval from my normally gruff editor. “Pulitzer material right here. I need your draft by five for legal review.”
As he walks away, I allow myself a small, private smile. Six months ago, I was writing obituaries in a cramped cubicle, documenting lives already ended. Now, I’m theTribune’srising star investigative journalist, with three major exposés already published and this fourth poised to cement my reputation as a fearless pursuer of truth.
The perfect cover for my real work.
I return to writing, the words flowing easily now. My fingers move across the keyboard with confident precision, weaving together threads of evidence that will expose a network of exploitation while simultaneously setting the stage for The Shadows’ more direct intervention.
This particular investigation began three months ago when I noticed peculiar financial movements through Chicago-based investment firms while researching an unrelated story. A series of offshore transfers caught my attention—amounts too precise, timings too regular, beneficiaries too obscured. It was a pattern I’d seen before in my work with Damien: the telltale fingerprints of something deliberately hidden.
I take a sip of my now-cold coffee, grimacing at the bitterness. The newsroom hums with activity around me as reporters chase deadlines, editors bark instructions, and phones ring with potential leads. None of them know that sitting among them is someone with access to information that would make their most ambitious investigations look like amateur hour.
Following that thread led me into darkness I’d suspected but never fully documented: a human trafficking operation moving people through seemingly legitimate businesses, hiding victims in plain sight as “contract workers” in restaurants, hotels, and private homes across the city. The victims’ stories haunt me—young women and men lured with promises of legitimate work, only to find themselves trapped in invisible chains of debt and fear.
I type faster, channeling that righteous anger into precise, factual reporting. This is what drives me now: not just exposing the truth, but setting the stage for actual justice. Justice that the legal system too often fails to deliver but that The Shadows ensures with ruthless efficiency.
TheTribuneinvestigation gave me a legitimate reason to ask questions, review documents, and interview witnesses. But where traditional journalism would hit walls, sealed records, frightened sources, and official stonewalling, The Shadows provided paths forward. Information appeared in my inbox from anonymous sources. Witnesses suddenly became willing to speak when I approached them in just the right way. Digital records that should have been inaccessible somehow became available.
All while maintaining the perfect illusion of conventional investigative journalism.
I scroll back through my draft, checking for any phrases that might hint too strongly at methods beyond normal reporting. It’s a balancing act I’ve perfected over these months: creating articles that appear to be the result of persistent, skilled journalism while actually being carefully constructed using information no journalist should be able to access.
“Evidence suggests at least seventeen individuals were transported through Chicago by Archer in the first quarter of this year alone, with financial documentation indicating payments of approximately $300,000 moving through Archer’s subsidiary accounts during this period.”
I tweak the wording slightly. The actual number we’ve identified is twenty-three, but revealing that precise figure might raise questions about how I obtained such specific data. The Shadows’ information must be diluted slightly to maintain the veil of conventional reporting.
The faces of those victims flash through my mind—people I’ve interviewed, whose stories have seeped into my soul. Six months ago, all I could have offered them was sympathy and perhaps a well-written story that might generate temporary outrage before being forgotten. Now, I can offer something far more valuable: actual consequences for those responsible.
I finish the draft with twenty minutes to spare before Brian’s deadline, reading it over one final time to ensure no hints of my additional resources show through. The story is powerful, comprehensive, and damning—exactly what the public needs to see. But it’s also carefully constructed to direct attention precisely where The Shadows needs it focused for tonight’s operation.
When theTribunepublishes the exposé tomorrow morning, The Shadows will already be delivering a more immediate form of justice to those responsible.
I save the document, feeling that familiar rush of satisfaction mixed with dark anticipation. This dual role I’ve carved out—public crusader and shadow operative—fits me better than I ever could have imagined. The moral boundaries I once thought immutable have proven surprisingly flexible, adjusting to accommodate a more nuanced understanding of justice than I’d previously held.
After submitting the draft to Brian, I pack up my laptop and notepad, nodding goodbye to colleagues as I head for the elevator. My mind is already shifting gears, transitioning from journalist Eve to Shadow Eve, running through the details of tonight’s operation.
“Heading out early?” Ingrid asks, catching me at the elevator. Her eyebrows rise slightly—she’s noticed the change in my patterns over these months, though she’d never guess the true reason.
“Meeting a source,” I explain with the easy casualness I’ve perfected. My pulse remains steady, no telltale signs of deception in my voice or posture. “Final fact check before the story breaks.”
“The trafficking piece?” Her eyes widen slightly, concern flashing across her features. “Be careful, Eve. Those aren’t people you want to anger.”
Oh, Ingrid. If you only knew who they should really fear.