The Chicago Tycoon Who Could Buy Anything Except the Quiet He Needed-Tep

“No woman can satisfy me.”

The words hit the penthouse before the glass did.

The whiskey tumbler struck the marble with a clean, ugly crack, and amber liquor spread across the floor in a shining fan.

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For half a second, nobody moved.

Near the bed, one woman clutched a silk dress against her chest.

The other held her heels in both hands, as if shoes could make sense of a room that had stopped feeling safe.

At the wall of windows, Vincent Moretti stood barefoot on the marble, shirtless, breathing like every breath had to be taken by force.

Beyond him, Chicago glittered over the river.

The city looked calm because cities always do from high enough up.

That was one of the first lies Vincent had learned to love.

Distance makes ruin look expensive.

He was not angry at the women.

That was the part no one would have believed.

There had been no betrayal, no insult, no slap, no screaming argument that led cleanly into his rage.

There had only been another private night arranged with the kind of efficiency rich men paid for because they did not know how to ask for tenderness without turning it into a transaction.

There had been perfume, bourbon, the soft click of a suite door, practiced laughter, the whisper of fabric against skin, and then the same terrible ending he had been having for months.

The fire rose.

Then the emptiness came behind it.

“Get out,” Vincent said.

His voice was lower now.

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