One. Million. Dollars.
I sit, staring at the screen in front of me, my brain still scrambling to make sense of all those zeroes. Heart pounding, palms sweating, I click the refresh button just to see if it changes. To see if maybe Iâm hallucinating after all.
But if this is a hallucination, itâs a stubborn one, because the numbers donât change.
âHoly shit. Holy shit. Iâm a fucking millionaire.â
Letting out a whoop of laughter, I jump up from my bed and spin one tight circle in my cramped bedroom-slash-living-room. My apartment doesnât allow much room for dancing, but all that is about to change.
Because Iâm a goddamn millionaire.
Unfortunately, Iâm a millionaire who has to leave for work in about ten minutes. Iâm not naive enough to think those seven figures are going to last me very long, not in this economy. For the next few days at least, I need to go to work and pretend nothing has changed.
Pretend like I didnât just steal a million freaking dollars from one of the largest corporations in the country. Possibly the world.
Go to work, do my job, try not to draw any attention to myself. And figure out an escape plan while I pray it takes at least a few months for the discrepancies to be found. If Iâm really lucky, nobody will notice until the next quarterly audit in three months. The amounts I, ah, shifted around are small enough on their own not to be noticeable right away.
At least, thatâs what Iâm counting on.
My heart is still pounding as I hurry through my morning routine, throwing on the first clean outfit I come across so I can run out the door. I get another rush of adrenaline when I just barely squeeze myself onto the crowded subway before the doors close.
Even if I did just steal a considerable amount of money from Stone Industries, thereâs no reason to compound my sins by being late. I havenât been late to work a day in my life, and Iâm not about to start now. Not when Iâm so close to âretirementâ.
The thought of leaving the grind of Corporate America has me fighting back a grin as I step off the third and final train of my commute and speed walk toward the office building where Iâve spent the last two years of my life.
Stone Industries, owned by the obscenely wealthyâand obscenely gorgeousâMaxwell Stone. Iâve never actually seen him in person, mind you, but his face is plastered all over Manhattan. Staring down at us like some sort of villainous overlord with perfect hair, piercing blue eyes, and a jawline that could cut glass.
âMorning, Harold!â I call to the guard at the front desk. âGuardâ is a very generous term for a man who looks as though he was hired on when the building was erected in the early nineteen-hundreds. I have my doubts that if anything serious ever actually went down at Stone Industries heâd even be able to wield the taser strapped to his belt.
But Harold is as sweet as he is ancient, and just like every other day, he greets me with a smile. âMorning, Ms. Victoria.â He waits for the turnstile to register the scan of my badge and sends me off with a nod and a wave. âHave a good day, now.â
âItâs going to be the best day. Bye, Harold!â
If Harold finds my exuberance alarming, it doesnât show on his wizened face. I push through the turnstile and make a beeline for the elevators. More squeezing as I shuffle into the tiny metal box with what feels like a hundred other people but is, realistically, probably more like five. But Iâve never been a fan of small places, and even after two years of making this same commute every single working day, I still have to close my eyes and practice the breathing techniques I learned online to help regulate my nervous system.
Therapy would probably help more than a Google search, but the closest I can get to affording therapy is binge watching my favorite comfort shows on the streaming services I rotate through on a monthly basis. Who needs a therapist when you have the Gilmore Girls, anyway?
After three stops, the elevator empties, and I can finally breathe easily again. Just as Iâve worked up the courage to open my eyes, the elevator stops two floors too soon. The doors slide open, and I find myself face to face with none other than Maxwell Stone himself.
Holy shit.
Inside, Iâm panicking. My heart is doing its damndest to beat right out of my chest and those easy breaths Iâd been taking are a distant memory.
On the outside, Iâm cool as a cucumber. At least, I hope I am. I offer Mr. Stone a smile and nod of greeting, then fix my attention to the glowing red numbers above the door.
âGood morning, Ms. Finch.â
Oh god, oh god, oh god. Maxwell Stone knows my name. Scratch that. He doesnât just know my name, he knows my face.
Why the fuck does Maxwell Stone know my face?
âOh, um, hi.â My voice is barely a squeak, and despite my best efforts to remain calm and collected, I can feel the heat rising to my cheeks. âI mean, good morning, Mr. Stone.â
A soft chuckle fills the elevator cab as it begins its ascent once more, and I risk a quick peek up at him through my lashes. Only to find him looking down at me, the corner of his mouth kicked up in an odd little smirk.
Maybe itâs not actually that odd. Maybe itâs just the fact that Iâve only ever seen him looking exactly like his last nameâcold, hard, and immovable. Not once have I ever seen a picture of him smiling.
And because that smirk does look so foreign on his face, I find it far more disconcerting than if heâd marched onto the elevator and told me he knew all about my embezzling and the police were on their way to haul me to jail.
I jerk my gaze away from him, back to the numbers above the door, and again I hear that soft laugh. If I wasnât on the verge of a panic attack, I might die of humiliation.
Finally, after what seems like an eternity, the elevator stops on my floor. Itâs another interminable wait for the doors to actually open, and when they do I make a break for it.
âHave a good day, Ms. Finch,â he calls after me, that stupid smirk still on his face as I spin around to stare at him. âI will be seeing you around.â
Then the doors slide shut with a soft whisper of sound, and heâs gone.
What the actual hell just happened?
Maxwell
Such a skittish little thing. As she should be, considering sheâs in possession of over a million dollars of my money.
Iâd planned to wait a bit longer to confront her. But when Iâd gotten the notification on my phone that she was in the building, courtesy of the next-level facial recognition software Stone Industries is currently bidding out to several governments, I couldnât resist the urge to go to her. To see how she would react, coming face to face with the man sheâd stolen from.
And she didnât disappoint. Sweet little Victoria Finch, with her wide brown eyes in that perfect heart-shaped face surrounded by a mass of unruly dark curls, had gone white as a sheet the moment she saw me waiting for the elevator. White, and then fire-engine red after Iâd greeted her by name.
Would she blush so prettily for me the first time she called me Daddy? Would her delightfully round bottom turn that same shade of crimson when I spanked her?
I look forward to finding out.
Settling in at my desk, I pull up the file I have on naughty little Victoria. The only child of a single mother, who she tragically lost a little over two years ago after a prolonged and debilitating illness that left Victoria with a pile of debt the size of Mount Everest. Which is why, despite making a decent salary as a systems analyst here at Stone Industries, she still struggles to make ends meet.
No family to speak of, as her mother had also been the only child of her now-deceased grandparents and her father was never in the picture. A few close friends, but not nearly the social butterfly one might expect of a pretty girl her age living in one of the largest cities in the world.
She is, to the world around her, rather invisible. The kind of girl who could disappear without making too many waves.
But she isnât invisible to me.
It wasnât a mistake that she received that file with everything she needed to begin her little scheme. Account numbers, transfer schedules, all of the nitty-gritty accounting details someone at her level never should have had access to. Hell, the file itself shouldnât even exist. I created it especially for her.
My little thief.
It had taken a couple of months for her to actually act on the information Iâd dropped in her lap, and I had to admit I was impressed by her self-restraint. But a sudden increase on the rent for her dilapidated little apartment, a little price gouging at her favorite local grocery store, and some very urgent calls about the credit cards sheâd let lapse finally persuaded her to act.
Sheâd started slowly, again impressing me with how smart she was being about the whole thing. Just a few dollars here and there. Nothing anybody would miss, insignificant amounts that could be written off during an audit.
Until now.
Iâm still not sure exactly what that final straw was that pushed her to go big or go home, as they say. But go big she had, at least for someone in her financial situation. For Stone Industries, a million dollars was pocket change. I could spend thatâand hadâin a single day without blinking.
But for my little thief, that sum of money would be life changing.
She just doesnât know yet exactly how much her life is about to change.