PROLOGUE

226 Words
The summons came on a Thursday, printed on paper so thick and creamy it felt like a fragment of another, more opulent world. Elara Vance. By appointment. 8:00 PM. Penthouse, Thorne Tower. No request. No explanation. Elara stared at it, her fingers leaving faint smudges on the pristine surface. She was a woman of ledgers and dust, of carefully preserved pasts, not of mysterious future appointments in skyscrapers that touched the clouds. As a junior archivist at the Caldwell City Museum, her world was one of quiet cataloging and gentle decay. Her own life mirrored it: a slow, genteel unraveling. Her mother’s MS diagnosis was a thief in the night, stealing vitality and savings with equal indifference. The mountain of medical debt was a constant, cold presence at the base of her spine. She almost didn’t go. Pride whispered to burn the letter. But desperation, that colder, sharper voice, told her to put on her one good dress—a simple black sheath—and take the subway to the financial district. The elevator to the penthouse was a silent, glass capsule hurtling upward. With each passing floor, the noisy, grimy city fell away, replaced by a dizzying panorama of glittering lights. It felt less like ascension and more like being swallowed by a realm of impossible power. The doors sighed open directly into his domain.
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