Other People's Money Official
At first, Arthur felt like a ghost. He sat in leather-bound libraries and signed checks for amounts that would have bought his childhood home three times over. He was a conduit for , a silent guardian of a fortune he couldn't touch.
When the auditors arrived, Arthur sat in the cavernous Vane library, surrounded by objects he didn't own, bought with money he never had. He realized then that the most dangerous thing about other people’s money isn't the spending—it's the that the power it buys belongs to you. As the police took his statement, Arthur looked at the nautical map on the wall. He had charted a course through a sea of gold, only to find he was the one sinking. Other People's Money
The collapse came not with a bang, but with a satellite phone call. The nephew had emerged from the jungle, tired of the canopy and ready for his inheritance. At first, Arthur felt like a ghost