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The letter arrived on a Tuesday morning. Clara Weston read it three times before she allowed herself to understand what it meant. It was not a long letter. The most consequential things rarely are. Written on ivory paper, sealed with dark wax and stamped with the initials E.H.V. — letters that half of New York recognized without needing to see the man's face — it contained exactly forty-seven words. Clara counted them. She counted them because she needed something to hold onto, some fragment of order inside a moment that felt like the floor giving way beneath her feet. Miss Weston. Your father's debt to Harlan Voss Industries stands at one hundred and twelve thousand dollars. Repayment is due in full by the fourteenth of October. In the absence of payment, all assets, including the Weston family estate at Cherrywood, will be transferred immediately. There is, however, an alternative. I suggest we meet. She folded the letter along its original crease and set it on the windowsill of her father's study. The study smelled like old tobacco and slow ruin. Papers stacked in unstable towers. Ledgers with numbers that told stories no one in this family wanted to read aloud. A portrait of her grandfather, Edmund Weston, hung above the fireplace — a man who had built a respectable name in the textile trade, who had worn his dignity like armor, who had died before watching everything quietly fall apart. Clara was twenty-four years old. She had no husband, no inheritance, no allies with real influence. What she had was a mind that worked faster than most people expected, a name that still carried a thin veneer of social respectability, and a secret she had been protecting for the better part of two years — a secret she understood, even then, was the most dangerous thing she owned. Her father was in the parlor. He did not ask about the letter. He had not asked about anything important in months. Arthur Weston sat in his armchair like a man waiting for a verdict he already knew, his hands folded in his lap, his eyes fixed on something no one else in the room could see. The industry had broken him slowly, the way water breaks stone. Not in a single dramatic moment, but through years of compounding pressure, of bad partnerships and worse timing, of trusting men who smiled while they maneuvered. "He wants to meet," Clara said. Her father said nothing. "Papa." "I heard you." A pause. "What kind of meeting." "The letter doesn't say. But men like Elias Harlan Voss don't write letters unless the meeting is already decided." Arthur Weston turned to look at his daughter for the first time in what felt like days. His eyes were tired in a way that sleep could not fix. "You don't have to go." Clara looked at him steadily. "Yes," she said. "I do."