Luca DeSantis was waiting downstairs in the black car when you finally stepped out of the Arlin.
He did not look impressed.
That was one of the reasons your father trusted him.
Men who were impressed by beauty became careless. Luca had spent his entire life surviving rooms where beauty was often a trap, a distraction, or the knife itself.
Still, when he saw you in the platinum silk dress, his eyes paused for half a second.
Only half.
But you saw it.
“You look like your grandmother,” he said.
You stopped beside the car door.
“That is the most dangerous compliment you could have chosen.”
“She was the most dangerous woman I ever met.”
“Careful, Luca.”
He opened the door.
“I said was.”
You stepped into the car without smiling, but something warm moved through your chest anyway.
The city outside was all black streets, white snow, and golden windows. Manhattan did what it always did in January: pretended the cold was glamorous because rich people had somewhere warm to go.
Tonight, everyone warm was at the Monte Verde.
And Ryan Caldwell believed you were not.
The car pulled away from the curb.
Matteo sat in the front passenger seat, silent as a locked church. Luca sat beside you in the back. His phone was still in his hand, the screen dark now.
“What were you reading?” you asked.
“Caldwell’s speech.”
You looked at him.
“He has a speech?”
“He thinks he does.”
Your mouth almost curved.
The Hartwell Foundation Gala was not just a charity event. It was a public altar for Manhattan’s powerful. Ryan had spent years trying to be invited, then years trying to be photographed in the right corner, with the right people, under the right chandelier.
Tonight, he was scheduled to announce a partnership between his company, Caldwell Nexus, and the Hartwell Foundation.
A philanthropic technology initiative, according to the press release.
A fraud pipeline, according to the documents your father’s people had collected.
Ryan had built his public image on clean language.
Innovation.
Impact.
Access.
Equity.
Underneath it, he had used investor money, charity grants, and shell vendors to inflate contracts, redirect funds, and hide losses before the Q1 earnings call.