

Forged in His Shadows
Chapter 1
The air in the underground gallery tasted of expensive cigars, spilled champagne, and desperation.
Clara Vance adjusted the collar of her thrifted black trench coat, pulling it tighter around her throat. She stood in the dimly lit corner of the subterranean ballroom, a stark contrast to the glittering chandeliers and the velvet-draped walls. The elite of the city’s criminal underbelly moved like sharks in bespoke suits and designer gowns, their laughter a sharp, metallic sound that set Clara’s teeth on edge.
She wasn't here to socialize. She was here to sell a lie.
Tucked securely under her arm was a leather portfolio containing a masterpiece. It was a supposedly lost charcoal sketch by Edgar Degas, depicting a ballerina adjusting her slipper. The paper was genuinely from the late nineteenth century, sourced from the blank endpapers of an antique novel. The charcoal was period-accurate. The strokes were flawless, possessing the exact weight, hesitation, and frantic energy of the French master.
It was utterly perfect. And Clara had drawn it three days ago on the floor of her freezing, water-damaged apartment.
"You're late," a gruff voice muttered.
Clara didn't flinch. She turned to face a heavy-set man with a scarred jaw and a suit that cost more than her life. This was Kovac, a mid-level buyer who fenced stolen and forged art for the syndicates.
"I'm precisely on time," Clara replied, her voice cool and practiced. "The traffic over the bridge was heavy. Do you have the money?"
"Show me the piece first, little girl," Kovac sneered, stepping closer. He smelled of garlic and expensive cologne. "I don't hand over fifty grand blind."
"It's twenty-five. We agreed on twenty-five," Clara corrected sharply, clutching the portfolio. The money was for Elara. It was always for Elara. Her fourteen-year-old sister's medical bills for her failing, unseeing eyes were piling up, and the cartel debt their father had left behind before he put a gun in his mouth was a ticking time bomb. Clara needed this cash tonight.
"Twenty-five, fifty, whatever. Show it to me."
Clara unzipped the portfolio just enough to reveal the edge of the aged paper. Kovac pulled a jeweler's loupe from his pocket and leaned in, his breathing heavy.
"Well, well, well," a slick, drawling voice echoed from behind them, cutting through the low hum of the ballroom. "I would recognize that pathetic, thrift-store silhouette anywhere. Clara Vance. Slumming it with the bottom feeders, I see."
Clara’s blood turned to ice. She closed her eyes for a fraction of a second, praying to a god she didn't believe in that she had misheard. But when she turned around, her worst nightmare was standing there, holding a crystal flute of champagne.
Marcus Sterling.
Her ex-fiancé looked exactly as he had the day he abandoned her: perfectly coiffed blonde hair, a condescending smirk, and an aura of unearned arrogance. He was flanked by two wealthy-looking socialites who were staring at Clara like she was a stain on the Persian rug.
"Marcus," Clara said, her voice dripping with venom. "I see you're still wearing suits you can't afford to impress people who don't care about you."
Marcus laughed, a loud, braying sound meant to draw attention. Several heads turned in their direction. "And I see you're still playing in the dirt. Ladies and gentlemen," Marcus announced, raising his glass and projecting his voice to the surrounding crowd. "Allow me to introduce Clara Vance. Former darling of the high-art restoration world, now reduced to peddling scraps in the dark."
Kovac looked up, his eyes narrowing. "You know her, Sterling?"
"Know her?" Marcus took a slow sip of his champagne, his eyes gleaming with spiteful delight. "I used to be engaged to her. Before her father stole millions from the wrong people and blew his brains out, leaving his daughters to foot the bill. She was a prodigy once, Kovac. Now? She's nothing but a disgraced beggar. What's in the bag, Clara? Stolen silverware? A pawn shop painting?"
"Mind your own business, Marcus," Clara snapped, her grip on the portfolio tightening. "Walk away."
"Or what?" Marcus taunted, stepping into her personal space. He looked her up and down, his lip curling in disgust. "Look at you. You look homeless. I hear your little sister went completely blind. What a tragedy. Maybe if your father hadn't been such a cowardly thief, she could have had the surgery."
A hot, blinding rage flared in Clara's chest. "Keep Elara's name out of your mouth," she whispered, her voice vibrating with a lethal edge.
Marcus merely smirked, turning to his audience. "You see this, everyone? The Vance legacy. A desperate little rat scurrying in the shadows. Tell me, Clara, do you still pretend you have talent? Because everyone in the real art world knows you were riding your father's coattails. You have no original vision. You're just a glorified copy machine."
"And you're a fraud," Clara shot back, her voice ringing out clear and sharp over the murmurs of the crowd. She wasn't going to cower. She never cowered. "You run that gallery on inherited money and stolen ideas. You wouldn't know a genuine brushstroke if the artist painted it directly across your face. How’s that fake Rolex treating you, Marcus? The gold plating is starting to chip on the clasp."
Marcus’s face flushed a violent, ugly red. He instinctively covered his left wrist with his right hand before he could stop himself, drawing scattered snickers from the onlookers.
"You insolent little bitch," Marcus hissed, his cultured veneer shattering. He turned to Kovac, his eyes burning with malice. "Whatever she's selling you, it's a fake. I guarantee it. She doesn't have the connections to get real art anymore. She's a forger. A cheap, dirty little counterfeiter."
Kovac froze. The greed in his eyes was instantly replaced by a dark, violent suspicion. He looked from Marcus to Clara, his jaw tightening.
"Is that true?" Kovac demanded, his voice dropping an octave.
"He's lying," Clara said smoothly, though her heart was hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. "He's a bitter ex with a bruised ego. The Degas is real. You saw the paper yourself. You saw the charcoal."
"Let me see it," Marcus demanded, reaching for the portfolio.
"Don't touch me!" Clara shoved him back hard. Marcus stumbled, spilling his champagne down the front of his silk shirt.
"She's playing you, Kovac!" Marcus yelled, dabbing frantically at his shirt. "Look at her! Does she look like she’s holding a lost Degas? She made it in her slum apartment! She's making a fool out of you in front of the whole room!"
Kovac's face contorted with rage. In this world, reputation was currency, and being made a fool of was a death sentence. He lunged forward, ripping the portfolio from Clara's hands with brutal force.
"Hey!" Clara shouted, trying to grab it back, but Kovac shoved her hard in the chest. She stumbled backward, her heels catching on the rug, and crashed into a cocktail table, sending crystal glasses shattering to the floor.
Kovac ripped the sketch out of the leather case and held it up to the dim light. He stared at it, his breathing ragged. Then, he licked his thumb and aggressively rubbed it across the bottom corner of the paper. The charcoal smeared instantly, revealing a faint, microscopic modern watermark beneath the heavy shading—a deliberate flaw Clara had hidden to avoid the piece ever being sold in a legitimate museum.
"You lying whore," Kovac breathed, his voice a low, terrifying rumble. He threw the ruined sketch to the floor and crushed it beneath his heavy leather shoe.
The crowd around them suddenly backed away, sensing the imminent violence. Marcus took a cowardly step backward, a sickening smile of triumph spreading across his face as he watched Clara's downfall.
"Kovac, wait," Clara said, raising her hands, her mind racing for a way out. "I can get you something else. I can—"
"You're going to get me my pride back," Kovac snarled.
A switchblade snapped open in his hand, the metal catching the light of the chandeliers with a deadly glint. Clara’s breath caught in her throat. She scrambled backward against the wall, her hands frantically searching for a weapon, a bottle, anything. But there was nothing.
"You think you can scam me?" Kovac roared, raising the knife. "I'll carve that pretty face of yours so deep you'll never show it in public again!"
He lunged.
Clara braced herself, throwing her arms up to shield her face, squeezing her eyes shut as she prepared for the agony of the blade. She thought of Elara. *I'm sorry, Elara. I'm so sorry.*
*Phut.*
It was a strange, muted sound. Like a heavy book being dropped on a carpet.
A warm mist sprayed across Clara’s cheek.
Kovac stopped dead in his tracks. The knife hovered inches from Clara’s arm. For a second, nobody moved. The entire ballroom seemed to hold its collective breath.
Then, Kovac’s eyes rolled back into his head, and he collapsed forward like a felled tree, crashing heavily onto the shattered glass at Clara’s feet. A dark, rapidly expanding pool of crimson began to seep into the ornate Persian rug from a neat hole in the back of his skull.
Screams erupted from the far side of the room. The crowd scattered like cockroaches under a sudden light, scrambling for the exits, pushing and shoving in a blind panic. Marcus let out a high-pitched yelp, turned on his heel, and sprinted away, disappearing into the chaotic sea of bodies.
Clara remained frozen against the wall, her chest heaving, her wide eyes locked on the dead man bleeding out over her forged masterpiece.
"Such a waste of a perfectly good rug," a voice murmured.
The voice was low, smooth, and laced with a chilling, absolute authority. It didn't belong to the panicked crowd. It came from the shadows to her left.
Clara slowly turned her head.
A man stepped out of the darkness. He was tall, dressed in a charcoal-grey suit that moved with liquid grace. He held a suppressed handgun casually at his side, as if it were a mere accessory. But it was his face that made Clara’s breath stall completely. He possessed a sharp, aristocratic beauty, with high cheekbones and eyes as cold and dark as a winter ocean.
He didn't look at the fleeing crowd. He didn't look at the man he had just murdered.
His predatory, calculating gaze was fixed entirely on Clara.
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