The Bank Alert Hit While My Son Toasted the Company He Stole From Me-QuynhTranJP

The first bank alert reached Daniel at 4:19 p.m., while he was sitting beneath brass lights at Josephine with two investors and a plate of untouched steak in front of him.

His phone buzzed beside the linen napkin.

He glanced down, saw the first line, and turned the screen face-down so quickly the woman across from him stopped lifting her wineglass.

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“Everything all right?” she asked.

Daniel smiled with the same controlled mouth he had worn on the witness stand two years earlier.

“Routine banking review,” he said. “Nothing that affects the deal.”

The server returned with a black leather folder.

“Mr. Caldwell, I’m sorry. This card didn’t go through.”

Daniel’s jaw tightened. The room smelled of seared butter, lemon, and expensive perfume. Forks tapped softly against plates around them. Vanessa’s bracelet clicked against her champagne glass as she reached into her camel handbag.

“Use mine,” she said.

The server left again.

Thirty seconds later, she came back holding Vanessa’s card with two fingers.

“I’m sorry. This one was declined as well.”

The investor on Daniel’s left looked at his phone. Then at Daniel. Then at the entrance.

Daniel stood.

“Excuse me.”

He walked to the front vestibule, past the hostess stand, past the wall of framed reviews, and pressed the bank’s private-client number so hard his thumb left a smear on the glass.

The account manager answered on the first ring.

“Mr. Caldwell, I’m glad you called.”

That sentence did more damage than any accusation could have.

Daniel stared through the restaurant window at Nashville traffic sliding past in gold October light.

“What happened to the corporate accounts?”

“All Caldwell Home Healthcare accounts are frozen under emergency audit authority. Effective 2:06 p.m.”

“Whose authority?”

A pause.

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