Home / Urban / The Trillionaire Son-in-Law / Chapter 2: The Black Card
Chapter 2: The Black Card
Author: Masira Salama
last update2026-01-24 21:38:06

Damien left the Vaughn mansion before sunrise, when the house was still quiet and the servants hadn't arrived yet. He moved through the kitchen like a shadow, grabbing a piece of bread that would serve as breakfast, and slipped out the side door before anyone could see him go.

He was halfway down the driveway when he heard footsteps behind him.

"Damien, wait."

Sophia stood on the porch, wrapped in a silk robe, her hair loose around her shoulders. She looked like she hadn't slept much.

He stopped, turned to face her. "You're up early."

"I couldn't sleep." She came down the steps, hugging herself against the cold. "About last night. Tyler shouldn't have hit you doing the meeting. That was wrong."

"It's fine."

"It's not fine." Her voice cracked slightly. "None of this is fine, and I know that. I just..." She trailed off, the words stuck somewhere between her thoughts and her mouth. "Where are you going?"

"To look for work. Part-time, anything I can find."

Sophia reached into her robe pocket and pulled out her wallet. She counted out two hundred dollars in crisp twenties. "Here. Take this."

Damien looked at the money but didn't move to take it.

"Please," Sophia said. "I'm sorry about what happened. Just... stay out of trouble, okay? Don't do anything that will make things worse."

He took the money, folding it into his pocket. "Thank you."

"Damien." She caught his arm as he turned to leave. "I know you probably think I'm a coward. For not standing up to my family. For letting them treat you the way they do."

"I don't think anything."

"Yes, you do. And you're right." Her hand dropped. "I just wanted you to know that I see it. Even if I don't do anything about it, I see it."

Damien nodded once, then walked away. Behind him, he heard Sophia go back inside, the door closing with a soft click.

The bus to downtown took forty minutes. Damien sat in the back.

He got down at Silverstone Mall. Silverstone Mall rose from the city center like a glass cathedral. Damien had been there years ago.

He entered through the main door.

Rousseau & Co. occupied a corner storefront on the third floor, its windows displaying jewelry under spotlights. Damien stopped outside, studying the pieces behind the glass.

He pushed open the door. Behind the main counter, two shop assistants watched him enter. The woman was in her mid-twenties, while the man beside her was older, maybe thirty, with styled hair and a smile that didn't reach his eyes.

The woman's expression shifted from professional welcome to barely concealed disgust in the time it took Damien to cross the threshold.

She moved to intercept him, her heels clicking on the floor. "Excuse me, sir. I think you're lost. The discount stores are on the lower floors."

Damien stopped. "I want to buy a necklace for my wife."

For a moment, she just stared. Then she laughed. "Do you have any idea where you are? Our cheapest piece is eighty thousand dollars. You look like you can't even afford eighty."

The male assistant joined them, his smile widening. "Melissa, be nice. Maybe he's here to window-shop." He turned to Damien with exaggerated sympathy. "Isn't that right, buddy? Just taking photos to show your wife what you wish you could buy?"

Other customers had stopped browsing to watch. A woman in a fur coat whispered something to her companion, and they both smirked.

"I'd like to see your best piece," Damien said. "Price is not an issue."

The silence lasted exactly three seconds. Then Melissa and the man, Brian according to his name tag, burst out laughing.

"Did you hear that?" Melissa clutched Brian's arm. "Price is not an issue! Oh my God, this is hilarious!"

"Maybe he won the lottery," Brian wheezed. "Or he's here to rob us. Should we call security?"

"No, no, let him stay." Melissa wiped tears from her eyes, careful not to smudge her mascara. "This is the most entertainment we've had all week."

Damien reached into his wallet. He pulled out a card and placed it on the counter between them.

The laughter died instantly.

The card was black, made of metal, with minimal markings. No numbers on the front. Just a small centurion symbol in the corner and a name: Damien Alexander William.

Melissa's smile froze on her face. "That's... that's a Centurion Card."

"Impossible," Brian said, but his voice had lost its confidence. "Those are only issued to people worth over a hundred million dollars."

"This has to be fake." Melissa picked up the card, studying it.. "There's no way a bum like you has an Amex Centurion."

“Swipe it."

Brian hesitated, looking between Damien and the card. "If this is fake, we're calling the police. Fraud is a serious crime."

"Swipe it," Damien repeated.

Brian took the card from Melissa, his hands not quite steady. He walked to the terminal, inserted the card, and waited. The store was completely silent now. Even the other customers had stopped pretending not to watch.

The terminal beeped.

Brian's face went white. He stared at the screen, then looked up at Damien, then back at the screen.

"What does it say?" Melissa demanded.

"Transaction approved." Brian's voice was barely a whisper. "Eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars."

Melissa grabbed his shoulder. "What?!"

"The Midnight Tear." Brian pointed at the most expensive piece in the store, a diamond necklace displayed in a case. “He just bought it."

The door to the back office flew open with enough force to make everyone jump. A man in his sixties rushed out, his silver hair slightly disheveled, and his expensive suit rumpled like he'd dressed in a hurry. His eyes found Damien immediately.

"Sir." The word came out strangled. "I'm Gregory Rousseau, owner of this establishment. I just received an alert. That transaction triggered a VIP protocol I've never seen activated before."

He crossed the store in long strides, stopping in front of Damien. "Your card shows a Tier-0 Priority classification. There are only forty-seven people in the world with that designation. I am deeply, profoundly sorry for how my employees treated you."

Damien said nothing.

Gregory turned to Melissa and Brian. "You're both fired. Get out."

"Mr. Rousseau—" Melissa started.

"I said get out!" Gregory's voice cracked like a whip. "Do you have any idea who you just insulted? Who you laughed at? This man could buy this entire mall with his pocket change!"

"Please," Brian said. "It was a mistake. We didn't know—"

"You didn't know because you judged him by his clothes instead of listening when he told you exactly what he wanted." Gregory pointed at the door. "Out. Both of you. Now."

"Mr. Rousseau, I need this job. I have rent, I have bills—"

"You should have thought of that before you humiliated a Tier-0 client."

Damien watched them scramble for their belongings.

"That won't be necessary," he said quietly.

Gregory turned to him, confused. "Sir?"

"Don't fire them." Damien looked at Melissa and Brian, their faces frozen in hope. "Just have them apologize."

The hope died.

Gregory understood immediately. "You heard him. Apologize."

Melissa went first, her voice shaking. "I'm sorry, sir. I was wrong to judge you. It won't happen again."

Brian's apology was quieter, his eyes locked on the floor. "I'm deeply sorry for my behavior. Please forgive me."

The other customers watched in absolute silence.

"You can keep your jobs," Gregory said. "But this is your only warning. Ever."

They fled to the back of the store like animals released from a trap.

Gregory personally retrieved the Midnight Tear from its case, handling it with care. The necklace was stunning, a cascade of diamonds set in platinum, each stone perfectly cut to catch and reflect light in specific ways.

"I'll have this packaged for you," Gregory said. "And sir, please, allow me to offer you lifetime VIP status at all Rousseau & Co. locations worldwide. Priority service, private appointments, and anything you need."

Damien took the offered box, feeling its weight. Inside was a gift for a woman who'd saved his life eight years ago, even if she'd spent the following seven years regretting it.

"Thank you," he said.

Gregory escorted him to the door personally, bowing. "If there's anything else we can do for you, anything at all, please don't hesitate to call."

Damien stepped back into the mall, the jewelry box tucked under his arm. As he walked down a little, he noticed a woman watching him. The woman was sitting at a cafe table with an untouched coffee.

He kept walking, giving no sign he'd noticed her.

His phone buzzed. A text from Victor: "You're being followed by a woman in her early thirties. She's wearing a black cloth and she has been tracking you since you left the house."

Damien typed back: "I know."

"Should I intervene?"

"No. Let her watch."

He pocketed the phone and smiled.

Behind him, hidden among the afternoon shoppers, Elena Frost pulled out her phone and dialed.

"It's me," she said when the line connected. "He's here. The prodigal heir. It's definitely him."

The voice on the other end came out cold. "Are you certain?"

"He just spent eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars with a Centurion Card. Tier-0 classification. There's no doubt."

"Did he see you?"

Elena hesitated. "I don't think so."

"You don't think, or you know?"

"I know," she lied.

"Good. Keep watching. Raymond wants to know if he's regained his memories".

Elena watched Damien disappear into an elevator. "Based on what I just saw? I think he has."

The line went dead.

She set her phone down and stared at her cold coffee. Eight years ago, she'd been part of the team that orchestrated Damien William's accident. She'd watched from a distance as the car crashed, as the ambulance arrived, and as the heir to a trillion-dollar empire was reduced to a brain-damaged nobody with no memory and no future.

Raymond had paid her well for that job. Paid all of them well.

But looking at Damien now, the way he moved, and the cold intelligence in his eyes, Elena is feeling scared.

Because if Damien William had truly regained his memories, if he knew what they'd done to him, then everyone involved in that accident eight years ago was already dead.

They just didn't know it yet.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 133: Cross-Examining Brutus

    Damien stared at the microphone in front of him, the metal neck reflecting the harsh fluorescent lights. His tongue felt dry, like ash. Marcus Vance was leaning closer now, smelling faintly of expensive cologne and the metallic tang of old coins. He was waiting. The entire room was waiting."That login was for a scheduled server migration," Damien said, his voice sounding hollow in the cavernous room. "I was authorized by—""I didn't ask if you were authorized, Damien," Marcus interrupted, stepping back to let his voice echo off the wood-paneled walls. "I asked if you logged in. At three in the morning. From your bed.""Yes," Damien said.Marcus turned to the jury box, offering them a slow, theatrical shake of his head. "A young man, passed over for senior partner twice in three years, sitting in the dark with full administrative override codes. And three days later, five million dollars vanishes into a Caribbean account named after a shield. Aegis." He spun back toward the stand, his

  • Chapter 132: Exhibit 42

    The double doors of the courtroom didn't just close behind Damien; they seemed to seal the rest of the world out. The air inside was heavy with the smell of old wool and damp umbrellas. It was a suffocating kind of quiet, the sort that makes you acutely aware of your own breathing.Carver’s lead associate, a sharp-featured woman named Sarah, didn't offer a reassuring smile as they took their seats at the prosecution table. She was already arranging three separate highlighters in a perfect, parallel row."The defense is going to try to make this about family," she whispered, her breath smelling of peppermint and anxiety. "Marcus Vance doesn't win cases on logistics. He wins them on betrayal. He wants the jury to think you’re a bitter nephew trying to clear a path to the top of the firm."Damien didn't answer. He looked across the aisle. Julian looked smaller than he had in the office, his shoulders slightly rounded under his tailored jacket. For twenty years, that man had been the stan

  • Chapter 131: The Fourth Floor

    Thursday arrived with the sharp, clinical clarity of a winter sunrise.When Damien stepped out of the Grand Meridian’s revolving doors at seven in the morning, the cold air hit him like a physical reprimand. It was exactly what he needed to dispel the lingering, heavy stillness of the suite. The street layout of the financial district usually muffled sound, but today, a distinct, low roar echoed from three blocks away.The press had not just found the courthouse; they had besieged it.Evelyn Hartwell was already waiting in the back of the town car. Her laptop was open on her knees, the screen casting a pale blue glow over her meticulously tailored charcoal suit. She didn't look up when Damien closed the door behind him, her fingers flying across the keyboard with rhythmic precision."Carver’s team entered through the basement parking structure twenty minutes ago," Evelyn said, her voice entirely devoid of morning fatigue. "The front steps are impassable. I’ve routed our driver to the

  • Chapter 130: The Week Before Trial

    By Monday morning, the press had found the courthouse.Evelyn Hartwell had been tracking the wave since the previous Thursday, when two national outlets ran parallel features on the indictment's scope, and by the weekend she had a full press management plan on Carver's desk, a document that specified exactly which journalists would receive access to pre-trial briefings.She had given two press briefings by Tuesday.Victor called Damien on Tuesday evening to report that the final evidence review was done."Everything is in order," Victor said. "The exhibit chain is documented. The witness schedule is confirmed. Carver's team ran a full dry-run of the opening statement this afternoon and it holds. We are ready.""And Natalie?" Damien asked."She submitted the financial damage assessment to the civil proceedings team this morning," Victor replied. "The numbers are significant. The civil case will run parallel to the criminal proceedings, and Natalie's documentation covers every traceable

  • Chapter 129: Margaret's Atonement

    The lobby of the Grand Meridian had a sitting area near the east windows. Damien arrived at one-fifteen that day while Margaret arrived at one-twenty."Thank you for agreeing to this," she said, settling her coat across her lap."You asked," Damien replied simply. "I came."A server appeared and Margaret ordered tea without looking at the menu.Margaret looked at her hands for a brief moment before looking at him. "I am not going to dress this up," she said. "I asked to meet you because I needed to say certain things to your face rather than carry them into that courtroom unspoken.""I'm listening," Damien said."I knew something was wrong." She said it plainly. " I did not know about the suppression, the medical protocol or the extent of what Raymond had arranged." She paused.Damien looked at her steadily. "Yes," he said. "That is what happened."She folded her hands on the table. "So I am going to ask you directly, the way I should have spoken to you directly years ago. Can what I

  • Chapter 128: Margaret's Testimony Preparation

    The call from Carver came on a Friday morning while Damien was at the federal building reviewing exhibit documentation."Margaret Vaughn has volunteered to testify," Carver said.Damien set down the document he was holding. "Say that again.""She contacted the prosecutor's office on Wednesday evening through private counsel," Carver continued, her voice carrying the measured quality of someone who had already processed her own surprise and was now simply reporting facts. "She is prepared to provide a full account of the dinner conversation she documented in her letter, including everything she witnessed regarding Marcus's behavior during the period leading up to that evening. She is offering this as a voluntary cooperation, not in response to a subpoena. She came to us."Damien stood at the edge of the conference table and looked out at the hallway through the glass partition for a moment, watching a paralegal move past with a stack of folders."Margaret Vaughn," he said again."I kno

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App