"It's confirmed," Knox said. "You are the biological son and sole heir of Garrett Reynolds."
Steve held the paper and felt the weight of it in a way that had nothing to do with grams or ounces. This single sheet of paper had just made him one of the wealthiest men in America. This single sheet of paper had answered twenty-four years of questions his mother took to her grave.
This single sheet of paper had also just made him the biggest threat to whoever killed his father.
"There will be a process," Knox continued, pulling a stack of documents from a drawer that seemed bottomless. "The trust fund is the most immediately accessible. Two hundred and forty million, held in a secured fiduciary account. I can authorize a release within seventy-two hours. The broader estate, the Reynolds Global shares, the real estate portfolio, the intellectual property holdings, those will require legal proceedings. Pierce Calvert has positioned himself as the de facto administrator of the estate, and he will contest your claim."
"Let him."
Knox studied Steve over the rim of his glasses. "You understand what you're walking into. Calvert is not a man who loses gracefully. He has political connections. Media influence. A legal team that bills more per hour than most people earn in a week."
"I understand."
"Do you? Because the boy who walked into this office with a cracked phone and eleven dollars is about to enter a world that eats people alive. Wealth at this level is not a gift. It is a weapon. And if you don't learn to wield it, someone will take it from you and beat you with it."
Steve set the paper down. "Who else knows?"
"Currently? Myself. My partner, Elise Whitfield. And now you. We've maintained absolute confidentiality for four years. The moment we file the claim, that confidentiality ends. Calvert will know. The media will know. Everyone who has ever been connected to Garrett Reynolds will come out of the woodwork."
"Including whoever helped Calvert."
"Yes."
"I want to meet my father's family. Did he have any?"
Knox hesitated, which was notable because Knox Ballantine did not seem like a man who hesitated often. "He had a sister. Marlow James. She was close to Garrett before his death. She's been... difficult to reach. Voluntarily removed herself from public life after the accident. Lives upstate. I can arrange contact."
"Arrange it."
Knox made a note. Then he opened another file, this one thicker, and slid it across the desk. "This is a preliminary breakdown of your father's holdings. I suggest you review it carefully, because what you're about to inherit is not just wealth. It is a machine. And machines require operators."
Steve opened the file. Pages of numbers, holdings, acquisitions. Reynolds Global Technologies owned patents in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and digital infrastructure that powered platforms used by hundreds of millions of people. They held real estate in Manhattan, London, Dubai, and Singapore. They had a venture capital arm that had invested in sixty-seven companies, eleven of which were now publicly traded.
And all of it, every last share and patent and property, was technically his.
He closed the file.
"I want to do something," he said.
"You'll need to be more specific."
"When I was broke, and I was broke three days ago so this isn't ancient history, the thing that killed me wasn't just the money. It was the feeling that nobody cared. That the system was designed to let people like me fall through the cracks and nobody would notice or lose sleep over it."
Knox listened without interrupting. This was clearly a man who understood the value of silence.
"I want to build something. A platform. Something that connects students who are struggling, really struggling, the ones working three jobs and skipping meals and choosing between textbooks and rent, with resources. Mentorship. Funding. Actual support. Not charity. Infrastructure."
"You want to build a company."
"I want to build a lifeline. I want to call it Ascend."
Knox was quiet for a moment. Then he nodded, slowly, with the expression of a man who had just reassessed someone's potential upward by several notches. "That's a considerable undertaking. But you have the resources now. And frankly, it would be strategically beneficial. A public-facing project that establishes you as a serious, mission-driven figure would counteract any narrative Calvert tries to spin when your claim goes public."
"I don't care about narratives. I care about the kid who's sitting in a dark apartment right now with eleven dollars, wondering if anybody gives a damn."
"Those aren't mutually exclusive, Steve. You can care and be strategic. In fact, at this level, you have to be both."
Knox pulled out his phone and made a call. Steve listened as the attorney arranged a meeting with a technology consultant, a brand strategist, and a nonprofit legal specialist, all for the following morning. In thirty seconds, Knox assembled a team that would have taken Steve months to even identify, let alone contact.
This was what money did. It compressed time. It turned obstacles into phone calls. It replaced "impossible" with "by Tuesday."
Steve left Knox's office and stepped onto the sidewalk. Manhattan hit him differently now. Not the city of a man trying to survive it. The city of a man who could, theoretically, buy significant portions of it.
His phone buzzed. Still cracked. Still functional.
A text from an unknown number.
"Steve. It's Campbell. From econ class. I got your number from the tutoring program directory, sorry if that's weird. I just wanted to check on you. You weren't in class today."
He stared at the message. Campbell Covington. The nursing student who had asked if he was okay when nobody else bothered. The one who didn't flinch when he was sharp with her.
He typed back: "I'm okay. Things are changing. I'll be back in class soon."
She replied almost immediately: "Good. Professor Maddox assigned a group project. We need a third member. I told him you were in."
"You told him I was in without asking me?"
"You needed a reason to come back to class. Now you have one."
Steve almost smiled. Almost. The muscles around his mouth had forgotten the motion over the past ten days, and the attempt felt rusty, unpracticed. But something warm moved through his chest, brief and unfamiliar, and he recognized it as the sensation of being thought about by someone who expected nothing in return.
"Fine," he typed. "What's the project?"
"Economic impact analysis of technology platforms on underserved communities. Right up your alley."
He read the message twice. Then a third time. An economic impact analysis of technology platforms on underserved communities. The exact conceptual framework of what he had just described to Knox.
The universe, it seemed, had a sense of timing.
"Who's the third member?" he asked.
"Briar Leighton. Journalism minor, econ major. She's intense but she's brilliant. You'll either love her or want to throw her out a window. Possibly both."
Steve put the phone in his pocket and walked toward the subway. Then he stopped. He could take a cab now. He could take a car service. He could, if he wanted, buy the subway.
He took the subway anyway.
Because the money was new but the man was not, and Steve Reynolds needed to remember where he came from before he figured out where he was going.