
The Billionaire's Lost Flame
The Billionaire's Lost Flame Chapter 1
The first stone hit the glass door with a sharp, sickening crack.
Katherine flinched, the sound vibrating through her teeth. She turned just in time to see a second rock strike the museum’s entrance, spiderwebbing the glass as a roar rose from the sidewalk.
“Give us our money back!”
“Scammer!”
“You stole from us!”
The first stone hit the glass door with a sharp, sickening crack.
Her heart slammed painfully against her ribs. Only minutes ago, she had been standing in the center of the exhibition hall; her parents’ legacy, the Anderson Museum of Fine Arts, welcoming guests in like any other day.
Now, she stood on the cold pavement, boxed in by a ring of angry faces, sweating uniformed men, and a bright red seal pasted across the glass double doors.
SOLD.
The word screamed at her in bold, red ink.
“No—no, this is wrong,” Katherine whispered in disbelief.
She surged forward, reaching for the door handle as if touching it might undo everything. Before her fingers could close around the wood, two men in tactical vests seized her arms and yanked her back.
“Stop it! Don’t do this!” Katherine cried, her voice cracking as she lunged for the door handle.
Her heels scraped uselessly against the pavement, the friction sending a jarring ache up her legs.
“You can’t shut this place down!” she screamed, struggling against their iron grip. “This museum belongs to me! I am the legal curator! Who authorized this?”
A short man, who she assumed was the leader sighed as if she were nothing more than an inconvenience. He handed her a thin stack of papers without even meeting her eyes.
“If you have an issue, take it up with the court,” he said flatly. “These are legal directives.”
Her fingers trembled as she grabbed the papers. She scanned it, the words blurring at first before they sharpened.
Property Transfer: Approved.
Seller: Robert Anderson.
Her uncle’s name stared back at her like a slap.
“No…” Katherine muttered, her knees weakened.
She staggered back, blinking rapidly, hoping the letters might disappear but it didn't.
And Robert, the man who had promised her father on his deathbed that he would protect Katherine and her legacy, had just sold the last property that was on her name like a piece of junk.
Before she could speak again, the papers were snatched from her hand. The men turned away, heading for their car.
“Wait!” Katherine rushed after them, her pride forgotten.
She grabbed the sleeve of the lead officer's sleeve.
“You can't just leave! This is fraud! My uncle doesn't have the right, he can't sell what isn't his!”
The man shook her off with a grunt, entering the SUV like nothing was said. The doors slammed shut with a finality that made her flinch and as the vehicle pulled away, leaving a cloud of acrid dust in its wake, Katherine felt the last of her protection vanish.
That was when the crowd turned fully against her.
“I knew it!” a woman in the front row hissed, pointing a finger at Katherine’s face. “She’s a scammer! She’s been taking our ticket money and donation funds while the building was not hers!”
“I paid two hundred dollars for a VIP membership this morning!” a man roared.
“Where’s my money, you thief?”
The word 'thief' echoed off the stone walls of the museum. It sliced through her, drawing blood.
“N-no, please...” Katherine lifted her shaky hands in a weak defensive gesture. “This is a misunderstanding. I didn't know... I swear, I thought the museum was—”
“This lady is a liar!” someone shouted from the back.
The circle drew tighter and while Katherine could smell the sweat and the raw aggression of the people, there was nothing she could do to remedy the situation.
She had used every dime of those ticket sales to pay the long overdue fees of the security guards and the janitorial staff this morning. She had zero dollars in her bank account and now a locked building behind her.
As a hand reached out to grab her shoulder, a sharp voice cut through the chaos like a blade.
“Enough!”
The mob froze, and she looked to see Tiffany shoved her way through the bodies, her face a mask of cold fury.
She stepped directly in front of Katherine, her heels clicking like a soldier's march and Katherine couldn't be any more grateful to see her.
“Every single one of you will be refunded by the end of the business day,” Tiffany snapped. “We have your transaction records. Now clear this sidewalk, or I call the police and report a riot.”
The mention of the police caused a ripple of hesitation among them. Slowly, the crowd began to disperse into grumbling clusters, moving toward the staff members who were still standing near the side entrance.
The moment the immediate threat faded, Katherine’s strength evaporated and she collapsed against Tiffany’s shoulder, her body racking with silent, violent sobs.
“Thank you,” she choked out, clutching her friend’s coat. “Tiffany, I didn't know! I swear I didn't know he would do this.”
“I know, Kat. I know,” Tiffany whispered, hugging her firmly. “But we need to move now. Before someone realizes we don't actually have the cash to refund them yet.”
****
The coffee shop three blocks away glowed with warm light, but Katherine felt hollow.
She stared out the window at the distant museum, the red seal still visible even from here.
“It was the last thing I had,” Katherine said quietly. “My parents life work is all behind that seal now.”
Tiffany squeezed her hands across the table, her expression grim. “Tell me exactly what those papers said.”
“My uncle sold it,” Katherine said, her eyes welling up again as bile filled her mouth. “He used the power of attorney my father gave him five years ago. He’s been waiting for the market to peak, and he pulled the final trigger.”
“That man is a parasite,” Tiffany snapped. “We’ll sue. we’ll find a lawyer who works on contingency.”
Katherine let out a dry, mirthless laugh. “With what evidence? My uncle has had five years to bury the trail. He owns the courts in this district, Tiff. I don’t even have enough money to pay for the coffee we’re drinking.”
Tiffany went silent, her jaw set. She stood up abruptly. “Wait here. I’m calling my cousin at the city planning office. If a sale went through this fast, there should be a paper trail.”
Katherine watched her friend pace outside the shop, phone pressed to her ear.
Minutes felt like hours, then Tiffany finally returned. But she didn't sit down, with a grim expression she slid her phone across the table.
“It’s worse than we thought,” Tiffany said quietly. “The buyer isn't a holding company. It’s Turner Development.”
Katherine felt the blood drain from her extremities. Turner Development a very aggressive land development company. The press called them 'The Architect of Ruin' because they didn't renovate history; they flattened it to make room for glass towers and massive corporations.
Turner Development was also notorious for moving so fast that by the time a lawsuit was filed, the building in question was already a pile of rubble.
“They plan to bring the machines in four days, Kat,” Tiffany continued, her voice trembling. “They’ve already pulled the demolition permits.”
“Four days?” Katherine gasped, her breath coming in shallow hitches. “They can’t. There are artifacts in there! Original paintings! If they tear it down, it’s all gone. There’s no coming back from that.”
“The contract says 'As-Is',” Tiffany whispered. “That means the contents belong to the buyer now.”
Katherine stared at the screen unmoving. Four days.... 96 hours until her parents’ legacy was turned into dust. The terror was overwhelming, but beneath it, a tiny, white-hot spark of desperation began to burn.
“There is one chance,” Tiffany said, leaning in close. “The CEO is the only one who can halt a demolition order once it’s been signed.”
Katherine looked at her friend deflated. “But he's been elusive... thats why most of these demolition goes through. He doesn't even take meetings with the Mayor.”
“Then don’t ask for a meeting,” Tiffany said firmly. “Find him and Intercept him. Then make him see reason."
Katherine's eyes flickered back out the window at the red seal. Her hands slowly curled into fists, her fingernails digging into her palms.
“I’ll find him,” Katherine said, her voice dropping to a cold, hard resolve. “Even if I have to burn my own life down to get his attention.”
Outside, the afternoon sun began to rise, casting a bright glare across the museum’s stone facade but Katherine could only hear the sound of ticking
The clock had started.
The Billionaire's Lost Flame of Contents
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