rvasive, acrid stench of industrial disinfectant failing to mask the underlying smells of sweat and despair, and the echoing, soul-jarring clang of steel
ly overworked and underpaid, had somehow pulled strings to post her bail. The look in Clara's eyes-a
the crushing weight of a four-million-dollar accusation. It was an astronomical sum, a figure so ludicrously beyond her means that it felt like a sick joke. Her personal effects, returned to her in a clear, sterile pla
you?" she hissed, the words tearing from her raw throat. "How could you do this to me? I have emails, Grant! Voicemail
-girlfriend, the finance manager with sole access to the accounts? It's a sad story, but it writes itself." He let the cruel logic of his betrayal sink in before he twisted the knife, aiming for the one place he knew she was utterly defenseless. "Four million dollars. T
t woman who had raised her, was the one piece of her heart that liv
stard?" she choked out, t
iness. But I'll keep you. I'll set you up in a nice little apartment in the West Village. No one has to know. You say yes, and I'll call the District Attorney and tell them my grief over our breakup clouded my judgment, that it was all
intances. Her finger hovered, then stopped on a name: Gus Kowalski. An Ivy League alumnus, a few years her senior, now a junior partner at a mid-tier Wall Street firm. She remembered him from campus networking events-ambitious, a bit of a smarmy glad-hander, but he was undeniably connected. He understood this wor
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