A Few Moments Ago...
***
I found Charlotte parked on the marble balcony like it was her throne, Miami skyline blazing behind her like some stock photo labeled
"Wealth Porn."
She was scrolling her phone with surgical precisionâthe kind of laser focus that only meant two things: insider trading or world domination.
"Planning global conquest?" I asked, dropping into the chair across from her.
She looked up with that face she reserved for corporate kill shots. "Actually, yeah. Iâve been coordinating with our legal team about the auction."
Of course. Leave it to Charlotte to casually plot billion-dollar chess moves like she was ordering Uber Eats.
"Howâs it going?" I asked.
"Better than expected." She set her phone down like it had just lost a war. "I scheduled it for Thursday at the Heights Hotel back home. And Peterâ" her tone sharpened, "âthe response to our API announcement has been fucking insane."
I leaned forward. "Define insane."
"Microsoft, Google, Oracle, Amazonâthey all immediately agreed to attend. Some are even sending advance teams to evaluate the tech beforehand." Charlotteâs eyes were actually glowing now, the way normal peopleâs do when they see a puppy. "These are companies that usually ignore anything under a billion-dollar acquisition, and theyâre treating our little project like the next Apple."
Yeah. That tracked. What Iâd built wasnât just an API. It was the holy grail of business integration. Plug it in, and suddenly the ugliest corporate software in existence could talk to each other like Tinder matches at 2 AM. No wonder these tech dinosaurs were frothing at the mouth.
"What exactly did you tell them?" I asked, curious how sheâd packaged my genius.
"That weâd developed a universal integration solution that could connect any enterprise systemâCRM, ERP, accounting, project managementâthrough a single API layer," Charlotte said, warming up like she was pitching on Shark Tank. "No technical details, just enough to show them the scope."
"And they bought it?"
"Theyâre arrogant enough to be skeptical," she admitted, smirking, "but even if they think weâve only built the framework, thatâs enough for them to want it. Theyâll believe they can buy it, slap their logo on it, and finish the job."
That was the beauty of corporate hubris. These companies still thought innovation was something you could bully into existence by throwing money at Stanford grads and ping-pong tables. Cute.
Spoiler: what Iâd built wasnât human. It couldnât be replicated, reverse-engineered, or improved. If the API was an iPhone, they were still out here worshipping their Nokia bricks.
"Got any valuation estimates?" I asked.
Charlotteâs smile couldâve powered Miamiâs grid. "Thatâs the best part. Acquisition specialists think the API could sell for sixty million minimumâeven if buyers assume itâs still in early development."
Sixty. Million. For something I cobbled together in a few hours with system-enhanced brainpower. The ROI was so obscene it made Dogecoin look like a safe retirement plan.
Honestly? It felt less like selling software and more like robbing billionaires blindâwhile they thanked me for it.
Charlotte perched on the balcony like a queen hosting court, Miami skyline glowing behind her like some neon cathedral built for sin.
"Whereâs the auction happening?" I asked.
"Heights Hotel ballroom. Since itâs just me and the vultures who own Quantum Tech shares now, I donât need board approval for major decisions. I just booked the venue and sent invitations."
Of course. Corporate warfare boiled down to booking a ballroom and sending out Outlook invites. Somewhere, Jeff Bezos was crying into his rocket fuel.
"Whatâd you tell your employees?"
"That weâre exploring strategic partnerships and potential licensing deals. They donât need to know weâre basically selling the crown jewel of our intellectual property."
See, people always thought Charlotte was some spoiled heiress who bought her degrees. Cute myth. In reality? The girl was playing corporate politics like a surgeon with a scalpel. Nobody survived in a pit of venture capitalists without knowing exactly when to smile and when to slit throats.
"Youâve got this handled," I said honestly. "I trust you to manage every detail flawlessly while I focus on other priorities."
Her eyes narrowed. "What other priorities?"
"Taking care of Harvard and Stanford before someone weaponizes your academic history. And protecting your mother while Iâm out liberating Miamiâs unhappily married elite."
That earned me a look caught between gratitude and
Jesus, this man is insane.
"My girls are definitely going to win that hundred thousand dollars you bet against yourself," she said.
"Probably. Question is, who picked the right number?"
"Any favorites?"
"Nope. If I match someoneâs prediction, itâs coincidence. Iâm not playing favorites in my haremâs betting pool."
Charlotte laughed, shaking her head. "Your life has become absolutely surreal."
"Says the woman whose corporate salvation depends on an API built by a supernatural teenager."
"Fair point."
I checked my watchâ7:15. Showtime. Margaret Thompsonâs little gathering of Miamiâs neglected wives and trust-fund widows would be in full swing soon.
"Charlotte, start getting ready for the party," I said.
"Already ahead of you." She stood, stretching like a cat that knew exactly how expensive it was. "Picked something that says âsuccessful tech CEOâ without screaming âplease donât eat my company alive.â"
"Perfect. Tonightâs going to be interesting."
"For all of us." She hesitated, then added softly, "Peter, thank you. For everything. I know I hired you to save my company, but youâve done so much more than that."
"Weâre not done yet. Thursdayâs auction is when we really fuck over the vultures."
"And tonight?"
I looked at the skyline, Miami glittering like a hunting ground laid out just for me. That hunger was there againâthe system-edge coiled and ready.
"Tonight, I start collecting souvenirs."
She disappeared inside, leaving me with the skyline and my thoughts. Everything was aligning: the auction would bankroll Charlotteâs empire and bury her enemies, Harvard and Stanford would lose their teeth, and tonightâs party? That was fresh territoryâa buffet of Miamiâs finest untapped decadence.
My phone buzzed. Madison:
"Ready to watch your man work some Miami magic?"
I grinned, thumb flying.
"Ready to see how many sisters youâre about to gain."
The game wasnât just beginningâit was rigged. And Miami was about to learn what happens when a digital god decides to go hunting.