Urban God of Rebate: Infinite Returns Of Women And Powers
Chapter 49: Vivian Castellan
She wore a deep navy dress, simple, expensive in the way simple things were expensive. Her eyes, when they met his, were a pale gray that gave away absolutely nothing.
"Mr. Miller," she said. Her voice matched the one from the phone calls exactly, calm, unhurried, the voice of someone who had never once needed to raise it to be heard. "Please. Sit."
Sean sat across from her.
"Vivian Castellan," said Sean.
Something flickered behind her eyes, brief, controlled, but real. "You’ve been busy," she said. Not a question. Almost approval.
"You knew I would be," said Sean.
She studied him for a long moment, the kind of evaluation that felt like being measured down to the millimeter. "I did," she said finally. "Though I confess I expected it to take longer. My name doesn’t appear anywhere public. The fact that you found it in under two weeks tells me something useful about you."
"What does it tell you," said Sean.
"That you’re resourceful," said Vivian. "And that whoever is helping you is talented enough to be dangerous to people far more careful than Victor Hale." She took a slow sip of her wine. "I’d like to know who that is, eventually. Not tonight. Tonight I’d rather talk about you."
"I’m not here to talk about myself," said Sean. "I’m here to find out what you actually want."
Vivian set her glass down with deliberate precision. "Direct. Good. I respect that more than most people realize." She folded her hands on the table. "What I want, Mr. Miller, is quite simple. I run an organization that has operated quietly and effectively for twenty-five years. In that entire time, no one has disrupted one of my acquisitions the way you disrupted Victor’s operation on Clement Street. Not once. Not ever."
"Congratulations on the streak ending," said Sean.
The corner of her mouth moved, almost a smile. "I find I’m not entirely upset about it," she said. "Victor was a useful contractor, but not someone I particularly admired. What you did to him, the precision of it, the restraint, you could have destroyed him completely and chose not to. That tells me something about your judgment, not just your resources."
Sean said nothing, waiting.
"I have a proposition," said Vivian. "I’d like you to work for me. Not as an employee. As a partner, of sorts. Someone with your evident intelligence, your apparent wealth, and whatever resource allowed you to crack open Victor’s entire operation in two weeks, that’s valuable to an organization like mine. I don’t offer this lightly."
"And if I say no," said Sean.
"Then you say no," said Vivian simply. "I’m not interested in coercing you, Mr. Miller. Coercion is what amateurs use when they lack better options. I have better options. If you refuse, I’ll simply make sure you’re never in a position to disrupt my operations again, through entirely legal means. Better lawyers. Better leverage. More patience than you have, certainly more patience than that hacker of yours has before he makes a mistake that costs him everything."
The threat landed exactly where she intended it to, calm, precise, no theatrics required.
"You’re threatening Max," said Sean, his voice flat.
"I’m not threatening anyone," said Vivian. "I’m describing the natural consequence of continued conflict between us. I’d much rather avoid that consequence entirely. Hence this dinner, instead of something less civil."
Sean studied her for a long moment. He thought about Max’s exhaustion, about the law firm’s internal systems he’d risked everything to penetrate, about the personal transfer Max had found but not yet identified.
"You move money to someone every month," said Sean carefully, watching her face for any reaction. "Personal account. Not connected to any of your business entities. Has been for almost a decade."
For the first time since he’d sat down, something genuine crossed Vivian Castellan’s expression. Not fear, exactly. But surprise, sharp and real, quickly suppressed.
"That’s not public information," she said, her voice carefully even now.
"No," said Sean. "It isn’t."
She looked at him for a long moment, recalculating something behind those pale gray eyes. "You’re better than I gave you credit for," she said finally. "Most people in your position would have led with that information as a threat. You led with it as a demonstration."
"I’m not interested in threatening you over something I don’t understand yet," said Sean. "I’m interested in understanding what I’m actually negotiating with."
Vivian was quiet for a long moment, studying him with new attention. "That account belongs to my daughter," she said finally, her voice quieter than before. "She doesn’t know where the money comes from. She believes it’s from a trust her father set up before he died. She wants nothing to do with my business, has wanted nothing to do with it since she was seventeen years old and finally understood what I actually do for a living." She paused. "She is the only thing in twenty-five years I have never once used as leverage, Mr. Miller, and I would ask, professionally, that you extend me the same courtesy."
Sean held her gaze. He thought about Makima, about Danny, about everyone in his own life who’d become unexpectedly precious to him in less than two weeks of this second chance. He understood, with sudden clarity, exactly the kind of leverage Vivian was asking him not to use.
"I’m not interested in your daughter," said Sean. "I have no reason to be."
Something in Vivian’s posture eased, fractionally. "Good," she said. "Then perhaps we can have an honest conversation."
"I’m not interested in working for you," said Sean. "Or with you. I don’t know enough about what your organization actually does to decide that’s a relationship I want."
"Fair," said Vivian. "Then let me make the offer differently. Not employment. Information. I’ll tell you exactly what Lockhart Holdings does, exactly how it operates, in exchange for something equally honest from you. Who you really are. Because Mr. Miller, eighteen-year-old college freshmen do not casually crack twenty-five years of careful corporate camouflage in under two weeks. Something about you doesn’t add up, and I find that I genuinely want to know what."