What Remained in the Room

Part I — The Vault at the Gala

Robert Hayes did not look at the cameras when the vault was rolled into the ballroom.

He looked at Daniel.

That was what made Emily tighten her hand around her son’s shoulder.

The ballroom had gone quiet in the way expensive rooms go quiet—softly, politely, with crystal glasses lowering and conversations folding themselves away. A brass-and-steel vault stood beneath the chandeliers as if someone had dragged a bank into a charity dinner. Its polished wheel gleamed under the lights. Its hinges were thick as a man’s wrist. Its door looked too heavy for any room built for music.

Robert stood beside it in his formal dress uniform, silver hair cut close, shoulders rigid, medals arranged with almost painful precision.

At sixty-eight, he still looked like a man who expected rooms to obey him.

The donors loved him for that.

The officers respected him for it.

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