The Feared Billionaire Who Found Noah Alone at Grand Central-Tep

At 7:42 that night, Noah Preston still believed his father was coming back.

That belief was the only warm thing he had left.

The boy sat on a bench inside Grand Central Terminal with a one-eyed teddy bear clamped against his chest and an orthopedic brace locked around his left leg.

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The brace made a small clicking sound whenever he moved.

He hated that sound because strangers noticed it.

They noticed, then looked away.

Outside, November had gone mean and cold.

The doors opened and closed with waves of wind that carried snow, taxi exhaust, damp wool, and roasted nuts from a cart on the sidewalk.

Noah’s jacket zipper would not close.

His fingers had turned red by the time the big clock moved toward 7:43.

He had been sitting there since 3:18 p.m.

That was when Garrett Preston, his father, had crouched in front of him with expensive shoes, a perfect coat, and breath that smelled wrong.

‘Stay right here, champ,’ Garrett had said.

Noah remembered the pressure of his father’s hand on his shoulder.

Too hard.

Grown-ups often thought children forgot pressure.

They do not.

‘I’m getting tickets,’ Garrett told him. ‘We’re going somewhere warm. Florida, maybe.’

Noah had nodded.

He liked sunshine because sunshine did not ask him to walk faster than his brace allowed.

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