Other People's Money -

Arthur Penhaligon did not have a bank account, at least not one with more than three digits. Instead, he had a for the estate of Silas Vane, a man who had been dead for six months and whose only living heir was a nephew currently lost in the Amazon. Arthur’s job was simple: manage the bleed. Pay the property taxes on the Newport mansion, settle the outstanding debts with the vintage car restorers, and keep the Vane legacy from evaporating into the ether of probate court.

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. Other People's Money

The room went quiet. He raised it again at twenty, then thirty. When the hammer fell at forty-five thousand dollars, Arthur didn't feel the panic of a debtor; he felt the of a god. He hadn't worked a day for that money. He hadn't bled for it or saved it. It was abstract, a series of numbers on a digital screen that belonged to a man who no longer existed. Arthur Penhaligon did not have a bank account,

The shift happened at a charity auction in Manhattan. Arthur was there to maintain the Vane family’s seat at the table. When a rare 19th-century nautical map went up for bid, Arthur felt a strange, electric hum in his chest. It wasn't his money on the line—it was Silas Vane’s ghost’s money. He raised the paddle. “Ten thousand,” Arthur whispered. Pay the property taxes on the Newport mansion,

This is a story about the weight and the whimsy of wealth when it doesn't belong to the one spending it. The Ledger of Lost Ambitions

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.