Other People's Money Site
The room went quiet. He raised it again at twenty, then thirty. When the hammer fell at forty-five thousand dollars, Arthur didn't feel the panic of a debtor; he felt the of a god. He hadn't worked a day for that money. He hadn't bled for it or saved it. It was abstract, a series of numbers on a digital screen that belonged to a man who no longer existed.
Within a month, the lines blurred. Arthur began to view the Vane estate not as a trust to be guarded, but as a for his own lifestyle. He justified the silk suits as "necessary for representation" and the five-star dinners as "networking for the estate’s interests." He was living the dream of every gambler: playing with the house’s chips, knowing the house was empty. Other People's Money
The shift happened at a charity auction in Manhattan. Arthur was there to maintain the Vane family’s seat at the table. When a rare 19th-century nautical map went up for bid, Arthur felt a strange, electric hum in his chest. It wasn't his money on the line—it was Silas Vane’s ghost’s money. He raised the paddle. “Ten thousand,” Arthur whispered. The room went quiet