
The Man I Made, The Debt He Owes
Chapter 2
The triple shot oat milk cortado burned my tongue, but I needed the caffeine more than I needed comfort. My Toteme blazer felt like armor as I stepped off the elevator into David's law firm—all marble and mahogany, the kind of place that charged by the minute just for breathing their air.
I'd calculated the numbers three times last night. $2,147,000 in principal. Eighteen percent compound interest over three years. The total Marcus owed me was $3,623,000. Enough to buy a house in the Hills. Enough to fund a startup. Enough to make him very, very sorry.
The contract felt heavy in my Bottega Veneta briefcase as I walked toward the waiting room. David had sounded surprised when I called—I'd never used the family attorney for anything more serious than reviewing lease agreements. But then again, I'd never been stupid enough to lend two million dollars to a cheating boyfriend before.
The waiting room door opened with a whisper, and I froze.
A man sat on the leather sofa with his back to me, black cashmere sweater stretched across shoulders I recognized from family photos. There was a small scar on the back of his neck, pale against tanned skin—a childhood accident involving a tree fort and my eight-year-old dare.
Ryker.
My stepbrother turned around, and four years collapsed into nothing. He was sharper now, more angular, like someone had taken the boy I remembered and carved away everything soft. His dark hair was shorter, pushed back in a way that made his cheekbones more prominent. But his eyes—those storm-gray eyes that had always seen too much—those hadn't changed.
"You're early," he said, his voice lower than I remembered, with an edge that hadn't been there before our father's funeral.
"So are you." I forced myself to walk normally, to sit in the chair across from him like this was a coincidence. But the way he looked at me—no surprise, just careful assessment—told me it wasn't.
The waiting room suddenly felt smaller. The air conditioning hummed too loudly. I could smell his cologne, something dark and expensive that definitely hadn't come from a department store.
"You have the nine o'clock appointment," he continued, checking his watch. "I have nine-fifteen. I came early."
"Why?" The question came out sharper than I intended.
Ryker reached for a manila folder on the coffee table and slid it toward me. "Because I thought you might want to see this."
I set my briefcase on my lap but didn't open it yet. Instead, I looked down at the papers he'd pushed across the polished wood. Corporate documents. Stock ownership charts. Red circles drawn around three names in careful handwriting.
One of the names was Marcus Chen.
"You're investigating him," I said. It wasn't a question.
"I'm acquiring him." Ryker's correction was precise, clinical. "His law firm handles venture capital for tech startups. Specifically, startups I want to own."
I studied the documents more carefully. Marcus's firm, Chen & Associates, had been circled in red. So had two other companies I didn't recognize. But there were arrows drawn between them, connections that formed a pattern I was starting to understand.
"You're buying his clients," I said slowly.
"I'm buying everything." Ryker leaned back in his chair, and I caught a glimpse of something predatory in his expression. "But there's a problem. Marcus has something I need. Something locked in his office safe."
My pulse quickened. "What kind of something?"
"A USB drive. Contains SEC filings that prove his business partner committed securities fraud during their Series A funding round. Without that evidence, my acquisition gets complicated."
The briefcase felt heavier on my lap. Because I knew exactly which USB drive he meant. Marcus had told me about it six months ago, drunk on expensive wine after a client dinner. He'd thought sharing secrets made us closer. He'd thought a lot of things.
"You want to destroy him," I said.
Ryker's smile was sharp enough to cut glass. "I want to own him. There's a difference."
I opened my briefcase with deliberate slowness, pulling out the loan agreement that had kept me awake all night. The pages felt crisp between my fingers as I set them on the coffee table next to his corporate charts.
"That USB drive," I said, watching his eyes move to the contract. "It contains evidence that Marcus's partner, James Liu, inflated user engagement numbers by forty percent to secure their Series A funding."
Ryker went very still. "How do you know that?"
"Because Marcus told me." I met his stare directly, noting for the first time that his eyes weren't black like I'd always thought, but the deep gray of storm clouds. "That night he drank too much Macallan and thought pillow talk was the same as attorney-client privilege."
His gaze dropped to the loan agreement, and I watched him process the numbers. The principal amount. The interest rate. The compound calculations that had kept me awake.
"Two point one million," he said quietly.
"Three point six, with interest."
Something shifted in his expression—not surprise, but recalibration. Like he was solving a puzzle and I'd just handed him a piece he hadn't expected.
"He's been cheating on you," Ryker said. It wasn't a question.
"For at least six months. Probably longer." I kept my voice steady, professional. "I have photos."
"And now you want your money back."
"Now I want everything back." I leaned forward slightly, close enough to catch the scent of his cologne again—Tom Ford Oud Wood, dark and complex and entirely too distracting. "But I need access to his office to make that happen."
Ryker was quiet for a long moment, studying the contract with the same intensity he'd once brought to chess games in our father's study. Finally, he looked up.
"You need that USB drive," he said.
"And you need to get into his office."
"I could have his firm's security codes by tonight," he said slowly. "But I'd need a reason to be there. Something that wouldn't raise questions."
I smiled, and for the first time since seeing that BeReal photo, it felt genuine. "Marcus is expecting me for dinner tomorrow night. He thinks he's going to apologize and charm his way out of trouble."
"And instead?"
"Instead, I'm going to keep him busy while you get what we both need."
Ryker leaned back in his chair, and something dangerous flickered in his storm-gray eyes. "You want to partner with me."
"I want to destroy him," I corrected. "You just happen to have the tools I need."
The corner of his mouth twitched—not quite a smile, but something sharper and more promising.
"Interesting," he said softly. "Very interesting."
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