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I found them asleep on a marble bench inside my bank—an exhausted mother and a six-year-old girl holding a torn rabbit tightly. When I asked why they were not home, the woman looked at me with hollow eyes and whispered, “They took everything.” I thought she meant money. Then she showed me the apartment papers… and I realized the thieves had made one fatal mistake.
Arthur Vale stopped beneath the buzzing lights, his cane clicking once against the floor.
The girl opened her eyes first.
The woman startled awake and pulled the child behind her. Her face was thin, marked by exhaustion, but her voice remained steady.
“We’re leaving.”
“You sleep here often?”
“Tonight, then.”
Arthur’s driver was waiting outside with the engine running. The old man had stopped by to check the night deposit box after a charity dinner, wearing a black coat worth more than many people paid in rent. But his eyes did not carry the bored cruelty of wealthy men. They carried weight.
“What’s your name?”
“And the child?”
“Maya.”
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