The Heiress They Threw Out Had the One Signature That Could Crack the Vance Empire-quetran123

The silence on Richard Dalton’s speakerphone lasted long enough for his assistant to lower the receiver from her ear.

Richard did not blink. He kept one hand near the sealed folder and the other flat on the mahogany desk, as if holding the entire room in place.

“Marcus,” he said, “you heard me.”

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A breath scraped through the speaker.

Then a man’s voice answered, low and controlled.

“Put her on.”

Richard looked at me. He did not nod. He did not tell me what to do. The choice sat between us like a loaded key.

My knee stung beneath my jeans. Dried blood had stiffened the denim. The office smelled like leather chairs, dust from old files, and the bitter coffee his assistant had abandoned on the credenza. Somewhere beyond the glass wall, a printer started and stopped, started and stopped, as if the building itself was having trouble breathing.

I leaned toward the speaker.

“This is Sophia.”

There was no greeting from the other end. No apology. No question about my mother. No mention of the guards who had just dragged me out of his tower.

Only one sentence.

“How much did Elena tell you?”

My mother’s name in his mouth made my fingers curl against the folder.

Richard slid a notepad toward me. On it, in blue ink, he had written: Do not answer his questions. Ask yours.

So I did.

“Why did your wife sign my mother’s papers?”

The phone line clicked softly. I pictured a billionaire in a private office pressing a button, locking a door, hiding his face from people paid to admire him.

“That is complicated,” Marcus said.

Richard’s mouth moved almost too slightly to see.

No.

I looked down at the third page. Rebecca Sterling’s signature was sharp and slanted, like a blade dragged across the paper. Under it sat another signature. Marcus Vance.

“It looks simple,” I said. “Both of you knew.”

The glass door opened behind me.

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