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Nathaniel Brooks’s name slowly disappeared from the glowing headlines that had once praised him. Markets shifted. Partners changed. A former associate he had trusted turned out to be far more ambitious than loyal, and a series of perfectly timed moves unraveled the company Nathaniel had spent his life building. Lawsuits followed. Assets froze. His health, already strained from years of stress and long hours, began to falter.
By the time he was sixty-six, Nathaniel found himself alone in a private hospital room overlooking the same city streets he had once ruled from the top floors of glass towers. The irony wasn’t lost on him. The view was beautiful, but he was no longer sure how much time he would have to appreciate it.
One evening, as rain streaked the window, a nurse stepped in softly. “Mr. Brooks,” she said, “the attending surgeon would like to speak with you.”
He nodded, bracing himself. When the door opened again, a young woman entered, confident but calm, her dark hair pulled back neatly, her eyes focused and alert. She wore surgical scrubs and carried a tablet under one arm.
The name hit him first, then the voice. Something about it tugged at a memory he hadn’t visited in years.
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