
They Set Her Up With a Broke Nobody — Not Knowing He Was the Hidden Hedge Fund Heir
Chapter 2
"Silas!"
He didn't stop. His boots crunched over the salt-stained pavement of the alley, shoulders hunched like he was trying to vanish into the brick. Kitchen staff from the bistro were slinging trash into a dumpster, the thuds echoing off the narrow walls.
"I'm not done with you," I said.
He turned, his face half in shadow. "The charity case is over, Calloway. Go back inside and order another bottle you can't finish."
"It wasn't charity." I pulled a small laminated square from my clutch. "It was an investment."
I stepped closer, ignoring the reek of grease and wet cardboard, and held the photo up against the flicker of a security lamp.
Silas went still. His eyes didn't just look at it. They locked onto it.
"This coat." My finger touched the man in the grainy, ten-year-old image. "The fraying at the cuffs. The collar that sits too high. It's bespoke. It's unique."
He didn't speak. He stared at the man in the photo — same broad build, same charcoal wool coat, same N.E.C. silk lining.
"I've been hunting the owner of that coat for ten years," I whispered.
The silence stretched taut. Silas reached out — not smooth, a jagged desperate snatch — and ripped the photo from my hand.
"Where did you get this?" he demanded.
The bored broke-guy edge was gone. His voice was sharp now. Lethal. He held the photo so tight the lamination crinkled under his thumb.
"I asked you a question, Wren. Where did you get this picture?"
"So you recognize him." My heart slammed. "You aren't wearing a thrift-store find. You know exactly whose skin you're walking around in."
"Where the hell did this come from?" He stepped into my space, his height blocking the dim light. He didn't look like a man who couldn't pay a tab. He looked like something cornered, deciding to bite.
"My father's library," I lied. It had actually been tucked in a hollowed-out book, but he didn't need that. "Next to a set of keys that don't fit any door in our house."
He looked back at the photo, jaw working. His thumb traced the man's half-shadowed face — much like his own was now.
"Who is he, Silas? Your father? Your brother?"
"He's nobody," Silas snapped, trying to pocket the photo.
"Give it back." I reached. He held it over his head. "That photo is my only lead. I've spent a decade trying to learn why that man was the last person to leave my father's office the night the Calloway accounts were drained."
He froze. He lowered his arm but didn't return the photo. His eyes searched my face with sudden, haunting focus.
"You think this man robbed your father."
"I think he vanished with fifty million dollars and a trail of ruined lives. And now, ten years later, you show up wearing his clothes." I stepped forward until my coat brushed his. "Tell me the truth. Is he dead?"
Silas looked down at the frayed cuff he'd guarded so hard at the table. He rubbed the fabric between his fingers. A bitter half-smile touched his mouth.
"Dead?" The word landed like lead.
"Is he?"
"For your sake, you'd better hope so."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only one you get tonight." He shoved the photo back into my hand, his touch cold. "Go home, Wren. Stop playing detective. This isn't a game where the rich girl gets a trophy."
"I'm not looking for a trophy. I'm looking for the truth."
"The truth is for people who can afford the bleeding. You paid for Rioja with a platinum card. You've got enough. Leave the ghosts alone."
He turned to go. I grabbed his sleeve and felt the thick embroidery through the wool. N.E.C.
"If he's alive, I want to find him," I said, my voice cracking. "If he's dead, I want to know where he's buried."
Silas leaned down, his face inches from mine, breath cold in the night. "Listen carefully. Don't check the records. Don't follow the money. Don't ask about the coat again. If you keep digging, people start dying. You'll be first."
"Are you threatening me?"
"I'm giving you a head start."
He pulled free and vanished into the dark at the end of the alley. I stood there a long time, the cold seeping through my boots, the photo pressed to my chest. He hadn't denied a thing. He hadn't said the man was a stranger.
He knew.
I ran to the mouth of the alley. The street was empty. A yellow cab cruised by through slush. Silas was gone.
***
My apartment felt too big and too quiet when I let myself in.
The Calloway name still bought a view of the skyline even if the accounts behind it were a hollow shell. I dropped my keys on the marble console and kicked off my heels. The blouse was ruined, the stain dried into a dark bruise over my heart.
I walked toward the kitchen for water, replaying the way he'd looked at the photo. He hadn't been surprised to see the man. He'd been surprised that I had him.
A flash of white at the base of the front door.
A folded sheet of paper lay on the dark hardwood. It hadn't been there when I walked in — or had I stepped over it in my rush to the sink?
I picked it up.
A photocopy. A grainy black-and-white reproduction of the exact photo I'd shown Silas in the alley. Poor quality, blurred edges, but the man in the coat was unmistakable.
I flipped it over.
A single sentence in thick black ink, the capital letters looped with sharp, aggressive pressure.
He's not dead. But you'd better wish he was.
I stared at the mark beneath it. Not a name — a flourish. A stylized signature I'd seen hundreds of times.
The exact signature from my father's final will. The one the lawyers swore was a forgery. The one that authorized the transfer of every cent the Calloways owned to an offshore account.
I yanked the door open. The hallway was empty. The elevator stood silent at the end of the corridor, its indicator glowing a steady, mocking blue.
Someone had been here. Someone who knew exactly what I was hunting.
I looked at the note again. The ink was fresh enough to smudge. I pressed my thumb to the signature; the black transferred to my skin like a brand.
The man in the coat wasn't just a ghost from the past.
He was in the building. And he was watching me.
I slammed the door, threw the deadbolt, and leaned my back against the wood. Then the cold truth hit me.
The handwriting on the note didn't match the man in the photo.
It matched the man I'd just had dinner with.
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