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The girl glanced at her mother before nodding.
“Good,” Arthur said. “I don’t carry any.”
Something in his voice made her truly look at him.
Lena gave one sharp, broken laugh. “Because this is where I paid for the apartment. Every month. Twelve years of double shifts, cleaning offices, sewing uniforms, skipping meals. I signed the final papers last week.”
“And now?”
“They took it.”
“My landlord. His lawyer. His niece from the bank. They said I missed a payment years ago. They said the contract had a penalty clause. They said the apartment was never really mine.”
Lena swallowed hard. “When I asked about the apartment I paid my whole life for, they laughed.”
Arthur’s cane stopped tapping.
Lena looked beyond him, toward the glass doors, toward the city that had swallowed her whole.
“They said, ‘They took everything? Good. Poor people should read before they sign.’”
For the first time that night, he smiled.
“Lena,” he said, “show me the papers.”
Part 2
By sunrise, Lena was sitting in Arthur Vale’s penthouse kitchen, wrapped in a wool blanket while Maya ate pancakes larger than her face. The apartment had windows like movie screens. Below them, the city sparkled, innocent and expensive.
Lena handed Arthur a plastic folder.
He read quietly. Every page. Every signature. Every stamped receipt.
His housekeeper brought coffee. His driver retrieved Lena’s suitcase from the alley. Maya fell asleep on the sofa with syrup on her sleeve.
At last, Arthur removed his glasses.
“Your landlord is Victor Kroll?”
Lena nodded. “He owns half the block.”
“And the lawyer?”
“Daniel Voss.”
Arthur’s mouth barely moved. “Of course.”
“You know them?”
“I know their type.”
That afternoon, Victor Kroll arrived at the building in a white suit and snakeskin shoes, laughing into his phone. His lawyer walked beside him, slim and polished, carrying a leather briefcase. Behind them came Marina Bell, the bank manager’s niece, wearing red lipstick and a smile made of knives.
Lena stood outside the lobby with Arthur.
Victor saw her and spread his arms. “Still here? That’s touching.”
Marina smirked. “You should try a shelter. They take mothers.”
Daniel Voss looked from Arthur to Lena. “Sir, this woman is trespassing emotionally. We have already completed a lawful transfer.”
Arthur said nothing.
Victor leaned closer to Lena. “You should thank me. I let you stay cheap for years.”
“I paid the full price,” Lena said.
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