"I nearly walked into a wall I couldnât see," Kyle muttered to himself, shaking his head slowly.
The elevator reached the lobby. The doors opened.
He stepped out into the cool marble foyer and kept walking, hands in his pockets, mind still turning over the same thought.
Stan Harrison was deliberately invisible.
A man with that kind of connection, keeping himself that quiet, that wasnât modesty.
That was something else entirely.
Something Kyle didnât yet have a word for, but recognized instinctively as the kind of thing that should be left well alone.
Just as he was about to head for the exit, two hotel guards stepped into his path, the same ones who had ignored him earlier, dismissing him as just another customer.
Kyleâs expression shifted slightly. âOf course... I wouldnât get off that easily...â
One of the guards spoke, his tone flat and cold, completely different from before.
"Sir, you caused structural damage to a private suite door and disrupted an ongoing meeting."
The second guard continued without pause, as if reciting a prepared line.
"The total compensation required is ten times the assessed damage cost, in addition to a fifty-thousand-dollar penalty for interfering with a reserved executive meeting."
A brief silence followed.
Then the first guard added, almost as an afterthought.
"You should consider yourself fortunate. Mr. Davies recognized you. Otherwise, the consequences would have been... less negotiable."
Kyleâs jaw tightened.
For a moment, it looked like he might say something.
But he didnât.
He simply took out his phone, completed the transfer, and lowered his hand slowly.
"...Understood."
The guards stepped aside immediately, as if nothing had happened.
Kyle walked past them without another word, the men in black with him followed without a word.
He stepped through the hotelâs front doors and into the night air, he let out a long exasperated sigh, his heart in pain... He had suffered much losses the past few days that he can count...
But still, he shook his head.
"I got lucky tonight," he said quietly, to no one in particular. "Luckier than I deserved."
âItâs a good thing I got away with only paying this much...â
....
Meanwhile back then when the door clicked shut behind Kyle Jennings, and a brief silence settled over the room.
Grayson Davies lifted his tea, took a measured sip, and set it down. Then he looked across the table at Stan Harrison with an expression that was carefully composed, the face of a man about to ask something that mattered a great deal to him while pretending that it didnât.
"Young Master Harrison," he began, "you now hold forty percent of the companyâs shares." A pause. "Iâve been wondering, what are your intentions going forward?"
It was a reasonable question. It was also, for Grayson Davies, an extremely loaded one. Forty percent was not a passive stake. In the wrong hands, or with the wrong ambitions behind it, it was enough to make his life very complicated.
He kept his expression neutral. He kept his hands still. But beneath the table, his fingers were pressed flat against his knee.
Stan Harrison glanced up from the last of his food, looking faintly puzzled by the gravity in the older manâs tone.
"Intentions?" He set down his chopsticks and reached for his glass. "I donât really have any. I saw an opportunity and bought in. Honestly, I wasnât thinking much further than that."
He said it the way someone might describe impulse-buying a book they hadnât yet read.
Grayson Davies blinked.
The breath he released was slow and controlled, but the relief behind it was immense. A weight he had been carrying since the moment heâd first learned about the share transfer quietly dissolved from his shoulders.
âBought it for fun.â
He turned the phrase over once in his mind. Forty percent of the Wanhai Group, one of the most coveted equity positions in the entire Inksea region, acquired on a whim, the way a person might pick up something interesting at a market stall.
âWho is this young man?â
Grayson had spent decades in the business world. He knew wealth, and he knew power, and he knew how to read people who possessed both. But Stan Harrison was something he couldnât quite place, no entourage, no performance of status, no apparent interest in leverage. Just a young man eating dinner and occasionally upending the natural order of things without seeming to notice.
Whatever the answer was, Grayson decided, it was not his business to dig for it. What mattered was that they were, as far as he could tell, not in conflict.
And that made Stan Harrison someone worth keeping close.
"In that case," Grayson said, his tone warming noticeably, "weâre on the same side, Young Master Harrison. Whatever you need while youâre in Inksea, donât hesitate. I mean that."
Stan Harrison nodded, and for a moment seemed to genuinely consider the offer rather than dismiss it politely.
"Actually," he said, "there is something."
Grayson straightened slightly. "Name it."
"Four Seasons Garden. Iâm looking to buy a place there." Stan leaned back in his chair, relaxed as ever. "Is it difficult to get into?"
Grayson Davies nearly smiled.
Four Seasons Garden was the most sought-after residential development in the city, a rare convergence of prime location, exceptional design, and ruthlessly limited supply. Demand had outpaced availability from the day the sales office opened its doors. Getting a good unit wasnât simply a matter of money, it was a matter of who you knew, and how well they were willing to pick up the phone on your behalf.
It was, in short, exactly the kind of problem that Grayson Davies was positioned to solve.
"Leave it with me," he said, already reaching for his phone.
The call lasted less than five minutes. Grayson spoke in the measured, familiar tone of two men who had done business together long enough to skip the pleasantries. By the time he set the phone down, it was done.
"Go to the Four Seasons Garden sales office whenever youâre ready," Grayson said. "Mention my name at the front desk. Theyâll take care of everything from there."
"Appreciated." Stan Harrison rose from the table, unhurried.