Her Blind Date Bragged About Money. Then a Bleeding Boss Sat Down-Tep

The night Genevieve Caldwell decided never to let her sister choose a man for her again, Richard Element was explaining marble.

Not art.

Not history.

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Marble.

He was leaning back in a booth at Le Bernardin with the pleased little tilt of a man who believed the room itself had agreed to admire him.

The candle between them kept throwing gold over the white tablecloth, and every time Richard lifted his wrist, the face of his Rolex Submariner caught the light.

Genevieve had noticed the watch the first time.

She noticed most things the first time.

It was part of why Cromwell and Hayes paid her what they did.

On paper, she was a senior appraiser for one of the quietest boutique auction houses on the Upper East Side.

That meant she spent her respectable hours looking at antique clocks, Renaissance panels, private jewelry collections, old porcelains, rare watches, and paintings whose owners preferred that nobody ask how long they had been off the market.

She wrote condition reports.

She checked chain-of-title notes.

She compared signatures against archived letters.

She knew the smell of old varnish, the feel of silk-lined cases, the hollow click of a lockbox that had been opened too many times by nervous hands.

What her sister knew was easier.

Genevieve had a good job.

Genevieve wore good shoes.

Genevieve was thirty-four, single, calm, and too practiced at saying she was fine.

So her sister had decided she needed help.

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