Part 2: The Price of Blood
Julian smiled when he said it.
Fifty or sixty million.
He spoke those words the way a man asked to borrow an umbrella, not a fortune. His eyes slid over my office again, from the black marble floor to the original Rothko on the west wall, then to the silver model of my first shipping terminal sitting behind glass. He was calculating value. Not meaning. Never meaning.
For a moment, I simply looked at him.
The boy I had once believed I was saving had grown into a man with my father’s mouth and my mother’s appetite. His hair was too carefully styled, his watch too large, his smile too loose. He had the polished desperation of someone who had spent his whole life mistaking access for competence.
“Sixty million,” I repeated.
Julian shrugged. “Maybe less. Maybe more. Depends how fast you move.”
“How fast I move,” I said quietly.
Arthur cleared his throat. “Your brother is being informal. The amount is flexible.”
“My brother,” I said, letting the words rest between us like something dead on a table.
Clara flinched.
That was the first human movement I had seen since they entered.
She stood slightly behind Lydia, hands folded tightly over a leather handbag, her face pale beneath the warm office lights. She had my father’s blue eyes, but without his hardness. Or perhaps she had learned to hide it better. She had been five when they took her away from me. My last memory of her was a little girl in a red wool hat, pressing her face to the Mercedes window as I stood at St. Jude’s gate.
She had cried that day.
I remembered that.
Memory is cruel that way. It preserves the innocent details even when the people attached to them grow teeth.
Lydia recovered first, smoothing her pashmina as though dignity were fabric and could be arranged by hand. “Elias, darling, we are not here to fight. We are here because families support each other when times are difficult.”
“Families,” I said. “Yes. I’ve heard of them.”
Arthur’s jaw tightened. “You’ve made your point.”
“No,” I replied. “I haven’t begun.”
My office went still.
Outside the glass wall, Manhattan glittered under a pale winter morning. Helicopters carved through the distance. Tiny yellow taxis moved along the avenues like sparks in a wire. For years, I had looked at that view and understood it as proof: I had survived. I had climbed high enough that no one could reach through the bars anymore.
Then the Vances walked in, bringing the smell of rot into clean air.
Julian laughed under his breath. “Look, you can do the whole wounded-orphan routine if you want. We get it. You had a rough childhood. But we all suffered after the divorce.”
My fingers curled once against the armrest of my chair.
My legal counsel, Mara Ellison, had not yet arrived. Good. This first cut needed no witnesses.
“You suffered?” I asked.
Julian’s smile faded slightly, but arrogance held him upright. “Dad went bankrupt twice. Mom had to sell jewelry. Clara had anxiety. I had to transfer schools. So yes, Elias. We suffered.”
I rose slowly.
I was taller than Julian. I noticed him notice.
“When I was eight,” I said, “I learned to sleep with my shoes on because boys at St. Jude’s stole anything not attached to your body. When I was nine, I stopped telling the nuns my father was coming because pity is worse than hunger. When I was ten, I found out the Christmas gifts under the tree were donated by strangers, and I still searched every tag for my name in my mother’s handwriting.”
Lydia looked away.
Arthur did not.
“At eleven,” I continued, “I fought three older boys in the laundry room because one of them said my parents had thrown me away like spoiled meat. He was right, but I broke his nose anyway. At thirteen, I stopped standing at the gate on Sundays. At sixteen, I learned accounting from a retired bookkeeper who volunteered at the home because numbers did not lie to me. At eighteen, I walked out with two shirts, a scholarship, and the legal right to erase your name from mine.”
Clara’s eyes filled, though no tears fell.
Julian shifted his weight. “That’s very dramatic.”
“Yes,” I said. “Abandonment often is.”
Arthur stepped forward. His old authority returned to him like a badly fitted coat. “Enough. We did what had to be done. You were old enough to survive. Julian and Clara were babies.”
“No,” I said. “I was eight.”
He blinked.
“Do not promote me to adulthood to make your crime more comfortable.”
For the first time, Arthur’s face showed anger stripped of polish. “Crime? You ungrateful little—”
“Careful,” I said.
One word. Softly spoken.
It stopped him.
My father had once been a large man in my memory. Broad shoulders. Commanding voice. The kind of man who could turn a room with a glance. But time had reduced him. Not into weakness—Arthur Vance was not weak—but into concentration. The greed had remained while everything around it had shrunk.
“You came for money,” I said. “Say that plainly.”
Lydia drew a breath. “We came because your father is in trouble.”
“Your father,” Arthur snapped.
I looked at him. “No. My father died at a gate in 1999. You’re the man who drove away.”
His mouth tightened.
Julian threw up his hands. “Fine. You want plain? We need liquidity. Vance Developments has assets. Real assets. Land, commercial projects, permits. The banks are being unreasonable because of some short-term covenant pressure.”
“Some short-term covenant pressure,” I repeated.
I walked to my desk, opened the top drawer, and removed a thin black folder.
The room changed.
Arthur saw it first. His eyes flicked to the folder, then to my face. A good predator recognizes when another predator has already found the trail.
I placed the folder on the desk and opened it.
“Vance Developments has missed three senior debt payments in two quarters. You have twenty-eight million in unpaid contractor invoices, eleven active liens, two environmental claims, and a pending fraud complaint from Halberd Capital regarding misrepresented pre-sales on the Ellery Square project.”
Julian’s face went slack.
Lydia whispered, “How did you—”
“You also moved seven point four million dollars from restricted construction accounts into a family holding company three weeks before your auditors resigned.”
Arthur’s nostrils flared. “Those are internal matters.”
“Not anymore.”
He stepped closer to the desk. “You had no right to investigate my company.”
“You came to me asking for sixty million dollars. I make a habit of investigating beggars who arrive in Italian shoes.”
Julian flushed. “You arrogant bastard.”
“Accurate,” I said. “But not relevant.”
The office doors opened behind them.
Mara Ellison entered with two associates. She was small, silver-haired, and lethal in the way only a litigation attorney with thirty years of courtroom victories could be lethal. She carried no folder. Mara never carried folders when she wanted men to know the information was already inside her head.
“Mr. Sterling,” she said.
“Mara. Please meet Arthur Vance, Lydia Vance, Julian Vance, and Clara Vance.”
Her expression did not change. “I know who they are.”
Arthur looked her over. “And you are?”
“The reason you should stop speaking.”
Julian scoffed. “Is that supposed to scare us?”
Mara glanced at him once. “No. It was meant to educate you. Fear is optional.”
I sat again.
“Here are my terms,” I said.
Arthur’s face sharpened with reluctant hope.
Hope is useful. It makes the fall feel personal.
“I will not give Vance Developments a bridge loan. I will not guarantee your debt. I will not rescue your family holding company. I will not pay your creditors to preserve your illusion of importance.”
Arthur’s jaw worked. “Then what terms?”
“I will purchase the senior debt from your lenders at market discount. I will place Vance Developments into controlled restructuring. All executive authority will be removed from you, Julian, and Lydia immediately. Contractor invoices will be paid before family distributions. Employees will retain wages and benefits. Projects with valid permits will continue under independent oversight. Fraud claims will be referred to counsel. Personal expenditures disguised as business costs will be clawed back.”
Julian stared at me. “You’re insane.”
“No,” Mara said. “He’s precise.”
Arthur’s voice dropped. “You want my company.”
“I want the company’s employees protected from you.”
“You want revenge.”
“Yes,” I said.
The honesty landed harder than any denial could have.
I leaned forward.
“But unlike you, I know the difference between revenge and waste. I won’t burn a building while workers are still inside.”
Lydia’s mouth trembled into something meant to resemble maternal sorrow. “Elias, how can you speak this way to your own father?”
I turned to her.
My mother.
She was still beautiful in the brittle way expensive porcelain remains beautiful after hairline cracks spread beneath the glaze. Her perfume was the same kind she had worn when I was a child. For years at St. Jude’s, I would catch a hint of jasmine on a passing volunteer and feel my chest split open. Then I would turn and see a stranger.
“You have said my name more times in the last fifteen minutes,” I told her, “than you did in the ten years after you left me.”
Her eyes shone. “I was ashamed.”
“No. You were comfortable.”
She recoiled as if struck.
Arthur slammed his palm onto my desk. The sound echoed through the office.
“You will not sit there and judge us,” he said. “Everything you have came from what we did. If we hadn’t left you there, you would never have become this. You should be grateful.”
There it was.
The philosophy of the abuser, polished into a family crest.
I smiled.
Not warmly.
“Grateful,” I said.
Mara closed her eyes for half a second. She knew that smile.
“Arthur,” I said, “when I was twelve, a man named Brother Samuel taught me chess. He told me bad players think sacrifice means throwing pieces away. Good players know sacrifice only matters when it gains position.”
I closed the folder.
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