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They Set Her Up With a Broke Nobody — Not Knowing He Was the Hidden Hedge Fund Heir Novel Cover

They Set Her Up With a Broke Nobody — Not Knowing He Was the Hidden Hedge Fund Heir

Dumped by her family onto a humiliating blind date with a man who shows up in a dead man's coat and can't cover the bar tab, a discarded sommelier walks in already knowing more than anyone at the table. The "loser" is the buried heir to a collapsed hedge fund dynasty. She isn't there for love—she's there for a forged death certificate with her father's name on it, and the man who signed it. As she plays the doting fiancee and funnels his hidden accounts into shells of her own, the family that threw them both away starts to circle back. By the time they understand who the castoff bride really is, the fund is already hers. The only thing she didn't plan for was him.
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Chapter 1

"Are we keeping the table?" the hostess asked, hovering near the mahogany bar.

"Give him two more minutes." I checked my watch.

Forty minutes late. My family had sworn this blind date was the most important meeting of my year. They promised Silas Thorne was a man of substance.

Right now he was a man of absence.

The glass door swung open. Cold street air rushed into the warm bistro. A man stepped inside, shaking the chill off a broad frame.

"Never mind," I said, sliding off the barstool. "He's here."

Silas Thorne. I recognized the hard jaw from the profile my uncle had shoved across my desk yesterday. I walked toward the dining room and let him follow the hostess to the corner booth.

He didn't look like a man of substance. He looked like he'd slept on a subway grate.

His dark wool coat hung loose, the fabric pilled and exhausted. The cuffs were frayed, loose threads dangling over his knuckles. Beneath it, a gray shirt that hadn't met an iron in weeks.

He dropped into the chair across from me. "Traffic."

"Friday nights are usually packed," I agreed, taking my seat.

He grabbed the wine list immediately. He didn't ask how my evening was. He didn't apologize for the hour he'd left me waiting at the bar. His eyes ran down the right side of the menu, tracking only the numbers.

"House red," he told the waiter, tossing the menu flat. "One glass. Cheapest one."

The waiter blinked. "Sir, our house red tonight is a basic blend. Boxed, actually. We use it for cooking, but we'll pour it if you—"

"The '19 Rioja. The bottle," I cut in. I reached across and pulled his menu away, closing it. "Keep the tab with me."

Silas frowned. "I can pay for my own drinks."

"I used to be a sommelier," I lied. I needed to own this table, and the bill was the fastest way to do it. "Low tolerance for boxed wine. Professional defect. My treat."

He didn't argue. He leaned back into the leather and studied my face. His eyes were sharp, calculating — completely at odds with the rags he wore.

"Your family sent you," he finally said.

"They did."

"They didn't tell you I was broke."

"They told me you were interesting." I picked up my water. "Are you?"

"Not really."

"I find that hard to believe."

"Believe what you want." He crossed his arms. "I don't belong in a place like this. You look like you live here."

"I prefer good food to bad food. Simple philosophy."

"Expensive one."

"Money's meant to be spent."

The waiter returned with the bottle, poured a taste, waited for my nod, then filled both glasses and vanished into the dining crowd.

Silas reached for his wine. His hand shot forward, fast and clumsy. The heavy crystal base clipped the bread plate.

Splash.

Dark wine arced across the table and hit my chest, soaking instantly into the front of my pale silk blouse. The cold seeped through to my collarbone.

He didn't apologize. He didn't grab a napkin. He simply watched my face.

Testing me.

He wanted the polished Calloway girl to scream. He wanted me to demand the manager, throw a fit, storm out — end this miserable date so he could go home.

I picked up a cloth napkin and dabbed at my collarbone. A short, dry laugh slipped out of me. It clearly threw him.

"Careful," I said, pointing a wine-stained finger at his wrist. "You'll get it on those cuffs. Old wool never gives the stain back."

His jaw clamped. A muscle jumped in his cheek.

His hand snatched off the table. He covered the frayed edge of his sleeve with his opposite palm and tucked his arm against his ribs — shielding the worn fabric like I'd threatened to set it on fire.

"I'll survive," he muttered.

"Good. This blouse won't." I signaled the waiter. "Check, please."

Silas pulled out a cracked leather wallet and dropped a plastic card on the tray. "I'm paying."

"You really don't have to. I ordered the bottle."

"Run it," he told the waiter, ignoring me.

We sat in silence. Silas kept his arm pinned to his ribs, fingers still guarding that cuff. The tension off him was thick enough to chew.

The waiter came back, cleared his throat, looked anywhere but at Silas. "Sir. The card was declined."

Silas stared at the tray. "Try it again."

"I did, sir. Twice."

I pulled my platinum card from my purse and dropped it over his. "Put it on this. Thank you."

The waiter vanished again.

Silas looked at my card on the tray. He didn't make an excuse. He didn't flush. He just pocketed his dead plastic when the receipt came back.

"Ready?" I asked, signing with a quick flourish.

"Yeah."

We threaded through the dining floor toward the exit. The street air was knife-cold after the heat inside.

Silas pushed the heavy door open for me. As he stepped over the metal threshold, his boot caught the raised edge. He pitched forward toward the sidewalk.

I grabbed his arm to steady him. My fingers slipped inside the open front of his coat, brushing the inner lining near his chest.

Thick raised embroidery dragged under my fingertips.

Letters.

Three of them, stitched deep into the heavy silk.

Not S.T.

My thumb traced the shapes before he pulled away. N. E. C.

The exact letters monogrammed into the handkerchiefs my father left behind in his locked desk drawer. The initials I'd memorized over ten years of grief.

My polite smile died. The muscles in my neck locked.

"You okay?" Silas asked, finally looking at me with something close to concern.

"Fine." My voice came out flat. "Lost my balance."

There it is.

Why was he wearing a dead man's coat? Why did a man who couldn't cover a twenty-dollar tab guard a frayed sleeve with his life?

Target confirmed. The broke act was exactly that — an act.

"Need a ride?" he asked, pulling the collar up against the wind.

"No." I stepped back into the cold. "I'll see you around, Silas."

He turned and walked down the block, shoulders hunched. I watched him go, my hand still tingling with the ghost weight of those three letters.

The plan could finally begin.

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