The offer was made casually, almost playfully, tossed into the air like a harmless joke meant to lighten the mood of another long executive meeting. Except it wasn’t a joke, and everyone in the room knew it, even if they pretended otherwise. On the forty-first floor of a glass tower overlooking downtown Chicago, billionaire Arthur Caldwell leaned back in his custom Italian leather chair, the city sprawled beneath him like a personal trophy. He clapped his hands once, sharply, the sound echoing against steel, glass, and polished wood. “One hundred million dollars,” he announced, smiling as if he were offering candy.
“All yours, if you can open that safe.” The men around him erupted in laughter—too loud, too eager. These were men who laughed not because something was funny, but because laughing showed loyalty. Five of them stood near the wall, all in tailored suits that probably cost more than the yearly rent of most families in the city below. Someone bent over, wiping tears from his eyes. Another slapped his knee, shaking his head as if this were the most absurd thing he had ever heard. In front of them stood an eleven-year-old boy.