Senator Adrian Whitmore had built his career on discipline, restraint, and a reputation for incorruptibility.

By Oliver Bennett • February 28, 2026 • Share

Representing Massachusetts for nearly a decade, he was known less for fiery speeches and more for meticulous policy work that rarely made headlines but quietly shaped legislation. His closest ally throughout those years had been Congressman Daniel Reeves, a charismatic strategist whose sharp instincts complemented Adrian’s steady seriousness.

When Adrian decided to introduce sweeping ethics reform legislation targeting undisclosed lobbying payments, Daniel stood beside him at every press conference. “We clean our own house first,” Daniel declared to reporters. “That’s leadership.”

But politics is rarely as pure as it appears beneath bright lights. Two weeks before the Senate vote, Adrian received an anonymous message containing leaked emails.

The subject line was simple: You should know.

The emails were between Daniel and a corporate lobbyist group that would be directly affected by Adrian’s proposed reforms. The tone was cautious but unmistakable. Adrian stared at the screen long after reading the final message.

He called Daniel immediately. “You want to explain this?”

There was a pause on the other end. Then Daniel sighed. “It’s not what you think.”

“Looks exactly like what I think,” Adrian replied, his voice dangerously calm.

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