Washington, D.C.
The Maybourne Club ā Private Salon.
Five people occupied the room, gathered for a luncheon that was not listed on any official calendar.
Senator Howard Pierce sat at the head of the table.Across from him sat Representative Linda Cross, dressed in an elegant in a cream suit, with a thoughtful expression on her face.
To her left, Alan Brookner, lobbyist and defense contractor liaison. Beside him was Paul Danner from Treasury. Heās the groupās bridge to data, money, and influence. The fifth was Cynthia Reaves, corporate strategist and fixer, whose business was connecting power with profit.
Pierce poured himself a drink, swirling the amber liquid with quiet rhythm.
"So," he began softly, "our young friend continues to surprise."
Linda crossed her legs, with her posture poised, as she spoke, "Heās still in Dubai. My source from the embassy said he met the Crown Prince yesterday. Private audience. No press, no aides, just the two of them."
"That alone should tell us something," Brookner murmured. "You donāt get a private audience with that man unless you bring something to the table."
Pierce smiled faintly. "Or unless you are the table."
That earned a few quiet laughs.
Paul Danner slid a thin folder across the polished wood. "Our side of things hasnāt changed. The numbers still donāt add up. His accounts move like a sovereign fund. Multi-billion liquidity, zero institutional footprint. Every transaction passes cleanly through the private banking sector. There are no irregularities, no leverage positions and no risk trails. Itās as if he doesnāt exist in the system, yet controls parts of it."
"That alone should make him irresistible," Cynthia said.
Linda tapped her fingers lightly against her cup. "Irresistible, yes. But also unreachable. No known advisory team, no foundation, no political history. He doesnāt donate, doesnāt lobby, doesnāt owe favors. Heās completely disconnected."
Pierce spoke with a mild tone but sharp eyes, "No one is completely disconnected. Everyone runs through someone. We just havenāt found who yet."
Brookner spoke next, his voice pragmatic. "Then we should. Because if heās being courted by the Gulf states, that means their sovereign funds will follow. And if that happens, weāll have a man outside the network influencing capital flows we canāt regulate. Thatās a problem."
"Or," Cynthia countered smoothly, "an opportunity. It depends on who shakes his hand first."
Pierce nodded approvingly. "Exactly. Which brings us here."
They all fell silent and for a few moments, none of them spoke.
"Letās be honest," Brookner said finally, breaking the silence. "This isnāt about policy. Itās about preservation."
Pierceās gaze flicked toward him, but he didnāt disagree.
"You mean survival," Linda said softly, her tone almost wistful. "Every decade someone new shows upāsomeone younger, faster, richerāand the rest of us get pushed one step closer to irrelevance. The last thing I plan to be is a footnote."
"You want control," Cynthia smiled. "I just want access. Men like him open doors to things money canāt buy anymoreāenergy grids, defense patents, offshore channels that make Wall Street look provincial.
"I want a seat," Danner added quietly. "When someone rewrites the rules, I want to be in the room before it happens."
Pierce swirled the bourbon in his glass and added, "Call it what you want. Power, relevance, security. Itās all the same currency. The boyās an unaligned asset, and unaligned assets are dangerous. Better to claim him before someone else does."
"Heās young. That works in our favor. Ambition makes people predictable. If we can offer him accessāpolitical legitimacy, invitations to international circles, quiet introductions to people who shape policy and weāll make him dependent before he even realizes it," Linda said.
"You make it sound like grooming but we all itās not," Brookner smiled.
"Itās called guidance," Linda replied, unflinching.
Pierce chuckled under his breath. "Letās not pretend morality has ever built a fortune. We all have done things."
Paul Danner smiled as he flipped a page in the folder, speaking, "We could start with exposure. Have one of the economic think tanks reach out to him under the pretense of global innovation. A speaking invitation, perhaps. That would give us a direct line of communication. It would be discreet and professional."
"Good," Pierce said. "Once heās here, we keep him close. Every powerful man needs allies who understand Washington."
Cynthia tilted her head slightly. "You mean handlers."
"Friends," Pierce corrected. "The kind who make sure the room stays favorable."
"And if he resists?" Linda asked with a softer voice.
"Then we create incentive," Pierce said. "A little pressure, a little curiosity. Let him feel the weight of attention. Youād be surprised how quickly isolation turns into cooperation."
Brookner rested his chin on his hand. "You plan to corner him."
"I plan to give him choices," Pierce replied evenly. "Just not too many."
The table fell quiet again. The only sound was the faint clink of ice in a glass.
Cynthia broke the silence, her tone low. "What about a profile piece? Something in the financial press. A feature that highlights his wealth, his mystery. People love prodigiesāand the moment they love you, they expect to own you."
Linda nodded slowly. "Control the narrative before he learns how to use it himself."
Danner gave a small smile. "Youāre suggesting a public stage."
"Exactly," Linda said. "We donāt have to touch him directly. We just build the myth. Then, when he needs stability, we offer it."
Cynthia spoke next, her voice steady. "Letās not forget, gentlemenāand ladyāthis isnāt just another tech kid or startup founder. Whoever he is, heās already moving in circles that money alone canāt buy. The Crown Prince doesnāt take casual meetings. That means heās being groomedāor heās grooming them."
"Which makes him even more valuable," Linda said. "If heās in the Gulfās ear, heās holding influence that could tilt markets. And if heās naĆÆve enough to think he can do it alone, weāll make sure he learns otherwise."
"You really do have a way with words, Congresswoman," Brookner nodded approvingly.
"Flattery gets you nowhere with me, Alan. Especially not between my legs," Linda smiled.
"What do you mean? Besides, Iāve been there more than a few times and you always love it," Brookner smiled mischievously.
"Iām married, Alan," Linda sighed.
"That never stopped you before. Also Iām not trying to flatter. Just appreciating shared ambition," Brookner smiled.
Pierce smiled at their interaction and continued, "A bit of orchestration never hurt anyone. Fine. Have your editors reach out quietly. Something tasteful. A profile without fingerprints."
"And if the Crown Prince decides to move first?" Cynthia asked, with a thoughtful expression on her face.
"They wonāt but if they do, then we remind our friends in the Gulf who guarantees their treasury assets in New York," Pierceās answer came without hesitation.
"Always the diplomat," Brookner gave a short laugh.
"Always the realist," Pierce corrected.
For a moment, no one spoke.
Linda finally said, "We should tread lightly. Thereās something about him that doesnāt fit the usual pattern. The more I read, the more it feels deliberate. Itās as if the gaps in his history were placed there."
"Good. That means he understands how the game works. I respect that," Pierce smiled.
"But it also means heās not naĆÆve," she added.
"Then weāll appeal to something better than naĆÆvetĆ©," Pierce said. "Greed. Vision. Ego. Take your pick."
Brookner finished his drink and set the glass down. "Whatās our first step?"
Pierce looked to Danner. "Find someone in Treasuryās outreach division who can draft an informal letter. It should be something about economic cooperation. Donāt send it. Just have it ready."
"Understood."
Then to Linda, heās said, "Get in touch with a few think tanks. The kind that know exactly how to make people feel important. If he bites, weāll host a dinner in his honor."
"Understood," she said.
"Cynthia," Pierce continued, "prepare a background brief. Every connection, every rumor. If we canāt verify it, we invent context. The press loves a mystery with edges."
"Done."
Pierce glanced toward Brookner last and said, "Youāll handle the defense angle. If heās dabbling in tech or infrastructure, find out where. If not, create the impression that he is."
"With pleasure," Brookner smiled.
Pierce rose slowly from his chair. The others followed, each knowing the meeting was over without him having to say so.
"Gentlemen. Lady. Whatever heās building out thereāletās make sure it passes through us before it reaches anyone else," Pierce smirked.
He reached for his glass, raised it slightly.
"To opportunity," he said.
Linda gave a small smile as she raised her own. "And to ownership."
The glasses touched softly.