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Chapter 1: The Man Who Owned Everything
Kael Vance stood at the window of his corner office on the ninety-seventh floor of Vance Tower. The city sprawled beneath him, millions of lights flickering in the December darkness. He owned most of what he could see. Office buildings. Hotels. Technology firms. The very air in the lungs of everyone who worked in his properties.
He felt nothing.
His grandfather had built this company from nothing. A garage. A single patent. Decades of relentless work. Now the company was bleeding eight million dollars every quarter. The board wanted him gone by Christmas. They said he was too young when he took over. Too inexperienced. Too cold.
They were not wrong about the cold.
He turned from the window. His grandfather's portrait hung on the wall, watching him with stern, approving eyes. The same gray eyes Kael had inherited. The same sharp jaw. The same relentless drive.
What would his grandfather think of him now? The company failing. His father's ghost still haunting every corner of this building. A locked drawer in his desk containing a whiskey bottle he could not throw away and could not open.
A soft knock. Marcus Chen entered without waiting for permission. They had known each other too long for formalities.
Marcus placed a folder on the desk. His face was serious. He said there was one remaining option. Santos Engineering. A small firm in Queens. Antonio Santos held patents that could save Vance Holdings' next generation of technology. Without them, the company would not survive another year.
Kael asked what Santos wanted. Marcus hesitated. Antonio Santos was old school. He did not do hostile takeovers. He did not sell to strangers. But a son-in-law was not a stranger.
Kael stared at his friend. He asked if Marcus was suggesting what he thought he was suggesting.
Marcus opened the folder. A photograph lay inside. Dark curly hair. Green eyes. A warm, open smile. Lira Santos. Twenty-eight years old. Kindergarten teacher. Daughter of Antonio Santos. No business experience. No connection to their world.
Marcus said it was the only way.
Kael closed the folder. He told Marcus to find another option. Marcus said there was no other option. Kael said he would not trap an innocent woman in his mess. Marcus asked if he had a better idea.
Kael did not answer.
He dismissed Marcus and turned back to the window. The city glittered below him. Millions of people living their lives. Eating dinner. Laughing with friends. Holding the people they loved.
He had never learned how to do any of it.
His mother left when he was seven. He remembered her face but not her voice. He remembered waiting at the window for three hours, certain she would come back. She never came back.
His father was a quiet drunk. Not the loud, violent kind. The kind who disappeared into a bottle and never fully returned. He stopped coming to dinner. Stopped asking about Kael's day. Stopped looking at his son altogether.
Kael was nineteen when he found the body. His father on the floor of this very office, empty bottle still in his hand, eyes open and staring at nothing. Kael did not cry. He called the lawyers. He took over the company the next morning.
He had not cried since.
He opened the folder again. Lira Santos looked up at him with her warm smile and her green eyes. She looked happy. She looked like she had never been trapped in her life.
He wondered what it would feel like to smile like that.
He closed the folder. He put it in his drawer. He did not sleep that night.
---
Across the city, in a small apartment above a laundromat in Queens, Lira Santos sat beside her father's hospital bed.
Antonio Santos was sixty-seven years old but looked eighty. His lungs were failing. Years of working with industrial materials had finally caught up with him. The doctors said months. Maybe less.
His hand was thin and cold in hers. She held it gently, careful not to hurt him. His skin was papery. His veins were blue rivers beneath translucent flesh.
He told her not to let them tear apart his company. His voice was a whisper, each word costing him. He said her mother's name was on that door. He said her mother believed in that company. He said her mother believed in him.
Lira promised him. She did not know how she would keep that promise.
She was twenty-eight years old. She taught kindergarten. Her students loved her because she laughed easily and listened carefully and always had a bandage for scraped knees. She made forty-two thousand dollars a year and owed forty-seven thousand in student loans. Her savings account held eight hundred dollars.
Her father's medical bills were thirty thousand and climbing.
She kissed his forehead and told him to rest. She said she would figure it out. She always did.
She took the subway home to Queens. Her apartment was small and imperfect. Second-hand furniture she had rescued from sidewalks and restored with sandpaper and paint. Fresh flowers on the windowsill, yellow tulips she had bought instead of lunch. Her mother's photograph on the dresser, dusted weekly.
She sat at her kitchen table and tried to think of solutions. There were none.
A knock on her door. Late for visitors. She opened it to find a man in an expensive coat and handmade shoes. He was polite. Polished. He introduced himself as Marcus Chen, CFO of Vance Holdings. His employer would like to meet with her. He believed he could help her father.
She took his card. Her hands were steady. Her heart was not.
---
Two days later, Lira sat across from Kael Vance in a private restaurant that did not have prices on the menu.
He was younger than she expected. Colder. His face revealed nothing. His suit was perfect. His posture was rigid. He did not stand when she entered. He did not offer his hand.
She sat down without waiting for permission. She was afraid, but she would not show it.
He placed a stack of papers on the table. Fifty pages. He spoke in short, precise sentences. He needed her father's patents. Her father would not sell to a stranger. But a son-in-law was not a stranger.
He was proposing a contract. One year of marriage. She would live in his home. Accompany him to public events. Play the role of devoted wife.
In exchange, Vance Holdings would inject five million dollars into Santos Engineering. Her father's debt would be cleared. His medical bills would be paid in full. His company would stay in family hands.
She stared at him. She asked if he was asking her to marry him for business.
Yes, he said. That was exactly what he was doing.
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