The check landed on the polished mahogany desk with a sound that was too sharp to be ignored, like a gunshot muffled by wealth. Arthur Sterling didn’t bother to look at me when he did it. He didn’t need to. In his world, eye contact was reserved for equals, and I had never been one of those. “You don’t belong in my son’s world,” he said calmly, as if stating a market forecast rather than dismantling a human life. “This amount is generous. Excessively so.
It will allow you to live comfortably for the rest of your life. All I require in return is your signature and your disappearance.” I stared at the number printed on the check, my brain struggling to process the weight of it. One hundred and twenty million dollars. Enough to buy entire neighborhoods. Enough to erase people. My hand drifted, almost involuntarily, to my stomach, where something small and secret was just beginning to exist. I said nothing. No protests, no tears, no dramatic pleas. I picked up the pen, signed my name with steady hands, folded the papers neatly, and stood.