Home / Urban / The Trillionaire Son-in-Law / The Billionaire's Desperation
The Billionaire's Desperation
Author: Masira Salama
last update2026-01-25 00:51:54

The morning light filtered through the kitchen window. Sophia was already awake when Damien came upstairs, sitting motionless on the table.

A cup of coffee that had gone cold sat between her hands, while her clothes remained rumpled and her hair uncombed.

"I am going out," Damien said, reaching into the fruit bowl to grab an apple. "I need to look for work."

Sophia did not look up from the table. "Okay."

"Sophia," he started, stepping toward her.

"I cannot do this right now." She finally met his eyes. "My mother is convinced you are a criminal. Tyler is talking about calling the police. Even Uncle Marcus is asking questions that I do not have the answers to. The truth is that I do not know what to believe anymore."

Damien set the apple back down on the wooden surface. "Do you want me to leave the house?"

"I do not know what I want." She turned her head away, staring back into her cold coffee. "Just go. Do whatever it is you are doing. I need time to think."

He left without another word.

The cab ride to the Grand Meridian Hotel lasted twenty minutes. The Grand Meridian was a sixty-story hotel.

He paid the driver and walked toward the grand entrance. The doorman stood up immediately, gazing at him with a smirk.

His name tag identified him as Russell. He appeared to be in his mid-thirties . His eyes swept over Damien’s poor jacket and scuffed shoes.

"I am sorry, pal," Russell said, stepping directly in Damien’s path with one hand raised. "This hotel is reserved for guests. We do not allow loiterers on the property."

Damien stopped a few feet away. "I have a meeting scheduled here."

Russell let out a short, mocking laugh. "I am sure you do. Who is it with? The president? The Queen of England? Move along before I am forced to call the security."

"I am meeting someone in the Imperial Suite," Damien replied.

"Of course you are." Russell crossed his arms over his chest, his posture aggressive. "And I am meeting Santa Claus in the penthouse later this evening. Keep moving, buddy. You are making the actual guests uncomfortable."

An affluent couple dressed in designer wool coats hurried past them. The woman pulled her leather handbag closer to her side as she passed Damien, a gesture that caused Russell’s smirk to widen.

"See that? You are bad for business. Now, leave on your own, or I will have security physically remove you. The choice is yours."

Damien pulled his phone from his pocket and dialed a number. Russell watched him with a look of contempt.

"Oh, look at this. He is making a phone call. Who are you calling? Your welfare officer? Or is it your parole officer?"

"Victor," Damien said as soon as the line connected. "I am at the main entrance. There is a minor obstacle."

"I will resolve the matter immediately, Master Damien," Victor replied.

Damien ended the call and returned the phone to his pocket. Russell remained in his way, still grinning.

"Let me know when your imaginary friend arrives. Until then, you need to clear the area."

Thirty seconds later, the heavy glass doors burst open, and a man came out. This was Richard Sterling, the manager of the hotel, and he looked absolutely terrified.

"Mr. William” Richard’s voice broke as he spoke. "Sir. I offer you my most sincere apologies"

He reached Damien and bowed. The action was so jarring that several guests stopped in their tracks to stare.

The grin on Russell’s face vanished, replaced by confusion. "Mr. Sterling? What are you doing?"

Richard turned toward the doorman with fury. "You are fired. Security, escort this man off the property this instant."

Two security guards appeared from the lobby as if they had been waiting for the signal. Russell stepped back. "What? Mr. Sterling, this man is just a—"

"I told you to get out!" Richard’s voice boomed through the entrance. "Do you have any concept of who you just insulted? This is Damien William. He is the owner of this hotel. He is the man who signs my paychecks and yours."

The blood drained from Russell’s face. A heavy silence fell over the lobby as the guards took the former doorman by the arms and led him away.

Damien raised a hand to calm the manager. "It is fine, Richard. Just escort me to the Imperial Suite."

"Certainly, sir. Right away." Richard began to move, gesturing frantically for Damien to follow. "Please, follow me. I am truly mortified that your visit was tarnished by such blatant incompetence."

They walked through the lobby together. Richard continued to offer small bows every few steps, talking in nervous bursts about the quality of the staff and how he intended to retrain every employee.

Damien barely acknowledged the rambling.

The elevator ride to the top floor was quiet, except for the sound of Richard’s heavy breathing. When the doors to the private corridor of the Imperial Suite opened, Richard hurried ahead to unlock the double doors.

"Your guest has been waiting for roughly ten minutes, sir. I have already ensured that refreshments were delivered. If there is anything else you require, please do not hesitate to ask."

"Thank you, Richard. You may go."

Richard bowed one last time and backed away toward the elevator. Damien stepped into the Imperial Suite.

Harrison Blackwell stood by the window, his hands clasped behind his back as he surveyed the city. He did not turn around when the door opened.

"I do not have an appreciation for games," Harrison said, his voice cold. "Your secretary informed me that this meeting was a matter of urgency. She claimed you had a proposal that could save Blackwell Industries. So, where is this mysterious investor?"

Damien sat down on the leather sofa, crossing his legs. "You are looking at him."

Harrison turned around, looking confused.

"Is this some kind of joke?" Harrison’s voice came out low. "You are the beggar who ruined my daughter’s dress with wine. You are the brain-damaged son-in-law of the Vaughns."

"I am also the individual who possesses the power to save Blackwell Industries," Damien said."Or I can choose to destroy it entirely. The decision belongs to you."

Harrison let out a sharp, bitter laugh. "What is the objective here? Did the Vaughns send you to play this part? Is this some variety of pathetic prank?"

Damien reached into his jacket, pulled out a manila folder, and slid it across the marble coffee table. "Open the file."

"I am not interested in—"

"Open it."

The authority in Damien’s voice caused Harrison to hesitate. He walked across the room slowly, picked up the folder and flipped it open.

He became stunned.

The folder contained internal financial documents, wire transfer records, and official ownership certificates. They were detailed, verified, and entirely catastrophic for his interests. The papers proved that a shell company named Titan Global Holdings now controlled forty-eight percent of Harrison's primary overseas assets.

"This is not possible," Harrison whispered, his hands beginning to shake. "How did you manage this?"

"The deal that collapsed yesterday?" Damien leaned back into the sofa cushions, watching Harrison’s reaction. "I am the reason it failed. The five hundred million dollars you lost did not vanish into thin air. I orchestrated it. At this moment, I can return those assets to you, or I can finish the job and leave you in bankruptcy court by Monday morning."

Harrison collapsed into a nearby chair, the folder slipping from his numb fingers and hitting the carpet. "Who are you?"

"Does that detail truly matter?"

"Yes, it matters. Yesterday, you were a nobody. You were a charity case living on the scraps provided by the Vaughns. Now you are claiming to control half of my empire?"

Damien picked up the folder and turned to a specific page, pointing to the figures. "This is your offshore account in the Cayman Islands, currently holding two hundred and thirty million dollars. I can freeze those funds with a single phone call. This is your yacht in Monaco, valued at forty million. I can have it seized by the authorities within the hour. This is the trust fund for your daughter, Natalie. It contains one hundred and twenty million. Would you like me to keep going?"

"What are your demands?"

"I want Blackwell Industries to sever all business relationships with Vaughn Enterprises. You will do so immediately."

"But I have not even signed an agreement with them yet."

Damien offered a small, gentle smile. "You were planning to do so. After the dinner last night ended in a disaster, Marcus Vaughn contacted you this morning. He offered you a lifeline. He suggested that if you invested in Vaughn Enterprises, he would use his legal influence to help you recover your recent losses. Am I correct?"

Harrison’s mouth opened, but he failed to produce a sound.

"I am aware of everything, Mr. Blackwell. I know about every phone call, every email, and every conversation you have had in the last forty-eight hours. Marcus Vaughn believes he is offering you a way out. In reality, he is asking you to board a sinking ship."

"How is it possible for you to know these things?"

"The method is irrelevant. What matters is the sequence of events that follows." Damien stood up and walked to the window, looking out at the city. "This is how the situation will unfold. You will formally reject the offer from Marcus. Furthermore, you will actively work to undermine the Vaughns. You will sabotage their future deals and spread reports of their financial instability. You will ensure that any potential investor views them as a liability."

Harrison found his voice again, though it sounded strained. "And if I refuse to comply?"

Damien turned to face him, his expression unreadable. "Then by the time the markets open on Monday, Blackwell Industries will no longer exist. Your daughter will lose her inheritance. Your wife will receive a detailed report regarding your mistress in Paris. Your investors will be notified of the creative accounting methods you have used to inflate your earnings. Shall I continue?"

The silence that filled the suite was heavy.

"You have trapped me," Harrison said at last.

"Yes."

"So this is a matter of blackmail."

"This is a matter of business." Damien walked back toward the sofa. "I am presenting you with a choice. If you work with me, you will find yourself wealthier than you ever imagined. If you oppose me, you will lose everything you have built. It is a simple calculation."

Harrison stared down at his own hands. "If I agree to these terms, you will return my assets?"

"I will do more than that. I intend to invest eight hundred million dollars into Blackwell Industries. It will be new capital for expansion and growth. You will enter the markets you have been eyeing for years. Within six months, your company will be worth three times its current valuation."

"And the price is my loyalty?"

"The price is that you remember who your true allies are." Damien’s voice turned cold. "When I instruct you to move against a target, you move. When I require information, you provide it. When I need your resources, you give it to me. Is that understood?"

Harrison looked up. "Understood."

"Good." Damien stood to leave, pausing as he reached the door. "One more thing, Mr. Blackwell. Regarding your daughter, Natalie. Since I ruined her dress that day, I will be sending her a formal apology gift. Perhaps a necklace."

Harrison looked confused. "I do not understand the point of that."

"You will understand soon enough."

Damien exited the suite and took the elevator back to the lobby. Richard Sterling was waiting near the gold-trimmed doors, still looking anxious.

"Was the meeting satisfactory, Mr. William?"

"It was perfect, Richard. Continue with your duties."

Damien walked away from the Grand Meridian. His phone buzzed in his pocket. It was a text from Victor.

"Marcus Vaughn has engaged a private investigator to look into your history. He suspects something is wrong."

Damien smiled and typed a reply: "Good. Let him investigate. He will only find what we want him to find."

Across the city, Marcus Vaughn sat on his mahogany desk. He was staring at a file provided by his investigator. It was a thin collection of data. There were hospital records from eight years ago and a marriage certificate. There was nothing at all prior to the accident.

"Eight years ago, you were a vegetable in a hospital bed," Marcus whispered to the empty room. "Now you are purchasing necklaces worth eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars? The math does not work."

He picked up the phone and redialed the investigator.

"I need a deeper search. Find the hospital staff from that period. Find the paramedics. I need to know exactly who this man is before he becomes a problem. I want him dead."

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