Home / Urban / The Trillionaire Son-in-Law / Chapter 7: The Hotel
Chapter 7: The Hotel
Author: Masira Salama
last update2026-03-06 22:04:27

The Imperial Suite sat sixty floors above the city, and from the terrace, Meridian looked exactly the way Damien remembered it — wide, lit, and completely unaware of what was coming.

He stood at the railing with a glass of water he hadn't touched, watching the traffic move far below like a slow river. The evening air was cool and sharp, and the city hummed under it, full of itself the way cities always are. He had stood on this same terrace once before, years ago, with his father, when the William family still owned everything in open daylight. Back then, it had felt like a birthright. Now it felt like a battlefield.

Behind him, the suite was quiet. Richard Sterling had personally prepared the floor, changed the linens twice, and replaced the flowers in the entrance hall with white orchids after remembering from an old file that Tristan William had always preferred them. The man was thorough, which was exactly why Damien had kept him on.

His phone had rung eleven times in the last two hours. All eleven calls were from Sophia.

He hadn't answered a single one.

Richard appeared at the terrace door, standing very straight. "Sir, will you be needing dinner this evening?"

"Not yet," Damien said without turning around. "Send Victor up when he arrives."

"Of course, Mr. William." Richard hesitated for a half second. "And sir, it is genuinely wonderful to have you here. The staff are very pleased."

Damien finally turned and looked at him. "Tell them to keep their excitement quiet, Richard. Nobody outside this building needs to know I'm here."

"Understood completely, sir."

Richard disappeared back inside, and Damien returned his attention to the city.

Victor arrived twenty minutes later, setting a slim leather folder on the terrace table and pulling out the chair across from Damien without being invited, the way a man does when he has known you long enough to skip the formalities.

"How bad is it?" Damien asked.

"Marcus Vaughn moved faster than we expected," Victor said, opening the folder. "He has hired a private investigator named Nolan Cross. Former detective, twelve years on the force before he went private. His reputation is for finding things that people have gone to great lengths to bury."

Damien picked up the photograph clipped to the first page. Nolan Cross was heavyset, somewhere in his mid-fifties, with the kind of flat eyes that came from years of watching people lie.

"He's already made contact with two nurses from Saint Clement's," Victor continued. "The hospital where you were admitted eight years ago."

"Which nurses?"

"A man named Porter, who we've confirmed received his payment and destroyed his records as instructed. He's clean." Victor tapped the second photograph. "And a woman named Ruth Albright. She was the night-shift charge nurse during your first three months of admission."

Damien looked at the photo of Ruth — a plain-faced woman in her late fifties with careful eyes. "She kept her records."

"She did," Victor said. "She was paid to destroy them, same as the others, but she kept them as personal insurance. She may not fully understand what she's sitting on, but Nolan Cross will. If he reaches her before we do, those documents become Marcus's property within forty-eight hours."

"Then we reach her first," Damien said simply. "Tonight."

Victor nodded and made a note. "I'll have someone at her door by nine o'clock."

"Not someone," Damien said. "Use the attorney. The offer should feel official and clean. She needs to feel safe, not pressured."

"Understood."

Damien stood and went inside, moving to the desk where his laptop was already open. He pulled up the surveillance footage Victor's team had compiled from the mall, skipping forward until he found the section he wanted. Elena Frost, dressed in black, standing on the pavement outside Rousseau and Company after he had walked away. The timestamp showed two minutes and forty-seven seconds of her standing completely still before she finally moved.

"Look at this," Damien said, turning the screen toward Victor.

Victor leaned in and watched it without speaking.

"She wasn't just reporting," Damien said. "She stood there for nearly three minutes. That is a woman working through a decision, not following an instruction."

"You think she's reconsidering her position with Raymond?"

"I think she's not as settled in it as Raymond believes she is." Damien closed the laptop. "Leave her alone for now. Don't approach her, don't pressure her, and don't let her know we're watching. If she's moving toward a decision, crowding her will push her the wrong way."

"And if she moves against you before she finishes deciding?"

"Then we deal with it when it happens." Damien sat down and reopened the laptop, navigating to a private financial portal. "What is the second supplier situation?"

Victor turned a page in the folder. "Caldwell Distribution is the more vulnerable of the two remaining Vaughn suppliers. Their silent investor — a man named Prescott — holds a thirty-one percent stake and has been looking for an exit for over a year. His financial position is uncomfortable."

"Buy Prescott's stake," Damien said, his fingers already moving across the keyboard. "Use the Henderson Holdings entity. Keep it quiet and keep it clean. I want the transfer completed before the end of the week."

"The Vaughns will lose their priority contract with Caldwell within ten days of that transfer," Victor said.

"I know." Damien didn't look up from the screen. "They won't understand why, and that's the point. Let them spend their energy chasing a reason that isn't there."

Victor watched him work for a moment. "You're not sleeping, are you, sir."

It wasn't really a question.

"I'll sleep when this is finished," Damien said.

"Your father used to say the same thing," Victor said quietly, and then he picked up his folder and said nothing else about it.

Back at the Vaughn mansion, things were coming apart at the seams, though nobody would say so out loud.

Margaret sat in the front sitting room with her phone pressed to her ear, leaving her fourth message for Marcus in two hours. Her voice carried the particular sharpness of a woman who was frightened but refused to admit it, even to herself.

"Marcus, call me back immediately. Tyler is at the police station doing God knows what, Gerald has locked himself in his study and won't speak to anyone, and Sophia has disappeared. Call me back."

She hung up and sat rigidly on the edge of the sofa, her hands folded in her lap, her jaw set.

Gerald sat at his study desk with the lights on and a glass of untouched brandy beside his hand. He had been sitting like that for two hours, staring at the framed photograph on his desk — a family portrait taken seven years ago, the same year Sophia had brought Damien home from the hospital. In the photo, Damien was standing at the far right edge of the frame, thin and quiet, looking at nothing in particular, while the rest of the family leaned toward each other. Gerald had never noticed that detail before. Now he couldn't stop seeing it.

A man who scrubs floors and sleeps in a basement and buys an eight-hundred-and-fifty-thousand-dollar necklace in the same week doesn't add up. Gerald had spent thirty years doing business, and he understood, in the slow and sickening way that guilty men understand things, that they had made a very serious mistake. He just didn't yet know the full size of it.

Tyler was not at the police station anymore. He had gone, filed his report with great energy and confidence, and had then received a very quiet phone call from the duty sergeant forty minutes later informing him that the fraud complaint he had filed had been reviewed and declined for insufficient grounds. Tyler had stood outside the station in the cold for a full five minutes before he got back into his car and drove home without telling anyone.

He went straight to his room and sat on the edge of his bed, staring at his phone, trying to think of the next move.

He couldn't think of one.

Sophia had tried Damien's number eleven times before she accepted that he wasn't going to answer, and then she sat with the phone in her lap for a long time, turning the same thought over and over. She had watched the lobby staff at the Grand Meridian bow when he was brought up the previous evening. She had seen Richard Sterling move around him like a man in the presence of someone he both feared and respected deeply. She had watched Damien stand in her family's living room and give her a necklace that cost more than most people earned in ten years, and he hadn't blinked once.

She put on her coat, called a cab, and told the driver the address of the Grand Meridian.

She didn't know exactly what she was going to say. She only knew she needed to be in the same room as the truth for once.

The lobby of the Grand Meridian was exactly the kind of place that made you feel like you should be quieter and stand straighter. Sophia walked through the main entrance and crossed the marble floor to the front desk, where a young woman in a charcoal uniform looked up with a polished smile.

"Good evening. How can I help you?"

"I'm looking for a guest," Sophia said. "His name is Damien William."

The receptionist's expression shifted — barely, just a small tightening around the eyes — and she picked up the desk phone and dialed.

She waited. Then she said, very carefully, "Sir, there is a guest in the lobby asking for you. She says her name is Sophia." A pause. Then: "Of course, sir. Right away."

The receptionist set the phone down and smiled again, and this time the smile was slightly different, more careful, as though she had just been reminded of something important.

"He's expecting you," the receptionist said. "The elevator to your left, then press the P button. Someone will meet you at the top."

Sophia crossed to the elevator and stepped inside as the doors opened. She pressed the button marked P and turned to face the lobby as the doors began to close.

And then she saw it.

The lobby staff, three of them standing at different points across the floor, had turned toward the elevator. Not one of them was looking at her face with the polite indifference that hotel staff usually offered guests. They were standing straight, and their expressions carried something she couldn't immediately name. It took her until the doors were halfway closed before she placed it.

They were bowing.

Not dramatically, not deeply, but the slight, respectful tilt of people who had been trained to show deference to someone specific. And the someone they were showing it to was not her.

It was whoever she was going to see.

The elevator doors closed with a soft sound, and Sophia stood alone in the mirrored box as it began to rise, and she looked at her own reflection looking back at her, and she thought: who exactly is this man I married?

The floor numbers climbed silently, and she had no answer.

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