img A Debt in Red  /  Chapter 5 The Phantom Patron | 35.71%
Download App
Reading History

Chapter 5 The Phantom Patron

Word Count: 1146    |    Released on: 22/04/2026

Nadia's apartment three times i

reinforced glass door and took the stairs two at a time. By the time she reached the third floor landing, Nadia was alr

ed aside wi

arring contrast to the sterile, freezing oxygen of the sixty second floor. She didn't sit down. She reached into he

a dense, auth

he commanding resonance she had just weaponized in Caspian Vane's office

er to the table, staring down at the

ector of his cultural foundation. I have absolute curatorial control. And I am legally mandated to live in a highly secured residential suite on

d the edge of the contract. "Vivien

ty t

w while you ride the elevator down to the lobby," Nadia said, her voice dropping into a sh

kno

, "then Caspian Vane didn't buy Oliver's debt as a speculative asset. He didn't just stumble onto

skin. "Before I left, I asked him how he knew my tempo adjustments during the

did he

red. "He said he wasn't on the li

ipped open her laptop, and dragged her chair out. The screen illuminated he

e argued, though she moved to stand directly behind Nadia's

dia muttered, her fingers flying across the keyboard with rapid, agg

o highly sanitized digital archives. She pulled up standard biographical

Caspian Vane effectively drops off the face of the earth. No corporate registrations, no property taxes. Nothing. And then he surfaces

s and a reputation for absolute ruthlessness out of thin air. He had built his empire in total s

he had don

clarity. "He doesn't care about the financial press. If he spent the last two years building a cult

ence. "You're right. We don't look for t

digital archives of the New York classical music scene. She pulled up donor logs, guest lists for in

Nadia said, her eyes scanning thumbnails at lightning speed. "And if he's been

remembered the feeling of performing, the profound vulnerability of pouring her grief out to a sea of faceless strangers. The thou

ing," Nadia

pher's archive. It was a candid, wide angle shot taken at a post performance reception in an ornate h

rom the deep shadows near the heavy velvet

s Cas

ious to the glittering crowd. His dark gray eyes were fixed with a terrifying, unblinking intensity on the stage outside the frame. The

t on the desk, bracing herse

e bottom of the image, highlighti

. Meridian Chamber Se

ed breathing.

ttached to the gallery. She highlighted a single line of text with her cur

st: Vivienne

img

Contents

img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY