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A Debt in Red Novel Cover

A Debt in Red

When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.
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Chapter 1

Vivienne Aurel held her bow perfectly still. The final, devastating chord of the Elgar Cello Concerto hung in the heavy, heated air of Carnegie Hall. The vibration hummed through the floorboards, traveled up the carbon fiber endpin, and settled deep into her chest.

Silence stretched. Two thousand people held their collective breath in the dark.

Then, the auditorium erupted.

The applause hit her like a physical wave. Vivienne lowered her bow, her lungs burning, her chest heaving against the dark, heavy silk of her performance gown. She stood, carefully balancing her 1740 Montagnana cello, and offered a single, deep bow to the sea of standing ovations. The stage lights burned blindingly white against her skin. This was the absolute pinnacle. A sold-out Tuesday night. Total, flawless perfection.

She turned and walked into the wings. The deafening roar of the crowd immediately dulled to a muffled thunder as the heavy velvet curtains swallowed her.

Nadia, her stage manager and closest friend, was waiting in the shadows of the brick corridor. But she wasn't holding out the usual towel or bottle of water. She was gripping Vivienne's phone, her face completely drained of color.

"It's Arthur," Nadia said. Her voice was tight, and she practically shoved the glowing screen into Vivienne's hand. "He bypassed my phone and called your personal number three times during the third movement. He says it's an absolute emergency."

Arthur Pendelton was her father's estate lawyer. He was a man of meticulous routine who communicated exclusively through scheduled emails and perfectly formatted letters. He did not make frantic, back to back phone calls during Carnegie Hall performances.

A cold prickle of unease started at the base of Vivienne's neck. She pressed the phone to her ear, the distant roar of the crowd still vibrating in her jaw. "Arthur. I just walked off stage."

"Vivienne." Arthur's voice cracked. The polished, corporate detachment he usually wore like armor was entirely gone. He sounded breathless, raw, and frantic. "I am so sorry to call you like this. I tried to reach your father all afternoon."

The unease crystallized into a sharp spike of adrenaline, piercing straight through her post performance high. "What happened?"

"It's Oliver. He... Vivienne, he passed away this morning. A massive cardiac event in his office. I am so incredibly sorry."

The backstage corridor suddenly tilted. Vivienne leaned heavily, pressing her shoulder against the cool, painted brick wall to stay upright. The Montagnana in her left hand suddenly felt like it weighed a hundred pounds. Her father was dead. The words hit her, but they felt foreign, completely impossible to process over the lingering, electric adrenaline of the concerto.

"I'll pack up," Vivienne managed to say, her voice sounding hollow, as if coming from a great distance. "I'll come to your office right now. We need to handle the arrangements..."

"No, listen to me," Arthur interrupted. The panic in his voice didn't settle; it escalated. "There is no time for arrangements right now. You need to listen to me very carefully. I spent the last four hours tearing through his private ledgers. Oliver was hiding things, Vivienne. Massive things."

She tightened her grip on the neck of her cello. "What are you talking about?"

"The estate is completely underwater. He took out unregulated secondary loans against everything. The brownstone, the offshore accounts, his pension." Arthur paused, the silence stretching taut and terrifying over the line. "And the syndicate shares of your instrument."

Vivienne stopped breathing. "He leveraged the Montagnana?"

"He leveraged your entire life," Arthur said bleakly. "The debt is four point two million dollars, and he defaulted. The secondary lenders were preparing to seize the assets this morning."

"Four million..." Vivienne choked on the catastrophic number. The blood roared in her ears. "Sell the brownstone. Liquidate his pension. We can cover it in probate."

"You don't understand," Arthur pushed back, the raw terror in his voice finally spilling over into the open. "The lenders didn't seize it. Someone else stepped in. The entire debt portfolio was acquired three hours ago by a single private equity firm. They bought the breach. They hold the primary lien on absolutely everything."

"Who?" Vivienne demanded, her fingers turning white around the casing of the phone.

"Vane Capital," Arthur whispered, the name dropping into the conversation like a stone. "Caspian Vane."

Vivienne closed her eyes. Even isolated in the insular, artistic world of classical music, the name Caspian Vane carried a heavy, terrifying weight. He was a phantom of the financial district, a billionaire who specialized in ruthless, hostile takeovers. He didn't negotiate. He didn't settle. He cornered failing assets, stripped them down to the studs, and liquidated the pieces with zero collateral damage to his own firm.

And now, he owned the roof over her head and the centuries old wood beneath her fingers.

"Call him," Vivienne said, her voice turning to absolute ice. The shock of grief was instantly swallowed by a fierce, desperate need to survive. "Tell his legal department we are filing an emergency injunction. Tell them I need thirty days to restructure the debt..."

"He doesn't want to hear from me," Arthur interrupted, entirely defeated. "His office called my direct line ten minutes ago. They aren't filing paperwork, Vivienne. Caspian Vane bypassed the legal teams entirely. He issued a direct summons."

Vivienne pulled the phone away from her ear for a fraction of a second, staring blindly at the brick wall. "A summons?"

"He wants you in his office on the sixty second floor tomorrow morning at exactly nine," Arthur said. "His assistant said he won't speak to anyone else. Only you."

"And if I don't go?"

"Then he executes the default," Arthur said quietly. "And you lose the cello."

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