As the private jet streaked through the sky toward Europe, Tristan put his life in order.
The jet had internet access through a satellite link, so he sipped a double shot of excellent, smoky scotch whiskey from a cut-glass tumbler and made minor tweaks to his will.
Material goods didn’t matter. Everything he owned would be liquidated and sucked into the hungry maw of Mary Varvara Bell’s promissory note. His yacht, his car, his stock portfolio, and most of all, his computer programs would all be consumed by Mary Varvara Bell’s holding company, White Holdings, Inc.
White Holdings, Inc.
It was weird that the company wasn’t called Bell Holdings, or Evil New Yorker Holdings, or Malefactor Holdings, or something. Back when Tristan was twenty-two, he’d signed the promissory note so fast that he hadn’t noticed Stanley Bell’s holding company’s name.
Not that it mattered.
And especially, not that it mattered now.
Putting together a few sentimental but monetarily worthless things into a list to mail to his friends Tuesday, things they might like to have as mementos, took just a few minutes.
He planned to send a skiing medal that they’d won together as a team in intramural sports at Le Rosey to Micah, because Micah was sentimental about items with a history.
Blaze had always admired Tristan’s Patek Philippe Celestial watch, and surely Mary Varvara Bell didn’t have an inventory of Tristan’s watches and cufflinks that she was going to check off when she took everything he owned.
For Logan, Tristan should find something personal. There was a non-zero chance that Logan Bell would inherit everything Tristan owned as part of the Malefactor’s sprawling business someday, if he could muster the spleen and muscle to fight Mary Varvara Bell for it.
Logan wasn’t the brawling type, in bars or in businesses. He was the laughing type, who charmed people and joked around. In high school, Logan had had a new girlfriend every week, sweet-talking another one of the girls into his arms and his bed.
But Logan might walk away from the Malefactor’s empire as his father had done, and Tristan wanted to give him something to remember their friendship by.
Tristan didn’t know any way that he could send Logan his gun collection stashed behind his desk in his computer den, especially across international borders. The Monegasque post office would refuse to ship it.
And the only person Tristan knew who was probably involved in smuggling guns was Mary Varvara Bell.
In some ways, Tristan knew Logan the least out of all his friends, like he was always one step removed from the other three of them, which was why Tristan was having so much damn trouble trying to figure out the perfect memento to give him.
If Tristan had time, he would’ve written Logan some Anti-Anonymity malware, a program to ensure Logan’s name was prominently displayed in every scanned picture of him.
That was the problem.
Tristan had thought he’d had time.
He’d have to figure something out.
And Colleen.
Tristan needed something to give Colleen to remember him by.
Something more than his heart and soul because she already had those.
Something that only he could give her.
He’d have to think about it.
Tristan had never found where his parents and his siblings had moved to after he’d returned to Iowa and discovered their family farm had been deserted, so he couldn’t send them anything.
Maybe he should’ve tried harder.
Maybe they didn’t want him to find them.
He’d talked to his friends—especially Micah, Logan, and Blaze—a lot over the years about that day, about walking into the decrepit farmhouse and finding nothing but dust and mice, and even the neighbors hadn’t known where his parents, brothers, and sisters had gone.
He’d talked to them about how sliced-off he’d felt.
His friends were all estranged from their families, too, and they’d agreed that they were a flock of black sheep, a tribe of scapegoats, but they were all outcasts together.
And that was why he’d been able to call the Scholarship Mafia guys when he’d needed rescuing from real mafia kidnappers or Cannes con artists, and why they’d called Tristan when they’d needed a couple hundred thousand dollars’ worth of a particular cryptocurrency with no questions asked, or when they’d found themselves hiding under the bed of a corrupt politician’s young wife and needed a distraction so they could jump out the window.
Good times.
Tristan should delete his few social media and messaging accounts or transition them to memorial sites on Wednesday, so hackers couldn’t phish his friends if they hadn’t heard about what was going to happen to him.
Organizing the end of his life soothed him, turning it into an intellectual exercise instead of a looming gray void that he would enter on Wednesday night or Thursday at the latest.
He sipped the scotch, a mellow burn and smoke on his tongue and throat, and deleted everything off his phone’s calendar from Friday onward.
“What’cha doing?” Colleen asked as she leaned on the other side of the table from him.
Tristan slapped his laptop closed and tucked his phone in his pocket. “Just getting ready to set out the charcuterie trays for a snack, and then we might want to turn out the lights for a few hours to rest before we get to France in the morning.”
Anjali and Jian wandered toward the front of the plane, both looking fresher for the rest and food over the last few hours, though Jian still moved gingerly from his broken and bound ribs.
As the two of them encroached on the table where he’d been sitting and Colleen was already standing across from him, an itch started on the back of Tristen’s neck, the tingle of prey when it is cornered. “What’s going on?”
Colleen spun the chair and sat down directly across from him. Anjali took the chair beside her whilst Jian eased into the seat beside Tristan.
He looked at the three of them arrayed around him and lifted his highball glass of scotch. “This is literally my first one. I don’t need an intervention.”
Colleen leaned on her elbows and clasped her hands on the table. “Tristan, we need to talk.”
“No, we don’t.” Stupid instinctive response.
She said, “We need to talk about how we’re going to get the GameShack stock before the New York Stock Exchange closes on Wednesday night.”
“Can’t be done,” Tristan said, completely dismissing the nonsense. “I’ve done the math. The numbers don’t add up. There is no way to procure such an enormous amount of stock in that short of a time and also crash the price. Buying that much stock will move the price up when people see there’s a big purchase order that’s buying. A long squeeze can take weeks to set up, not to mention that it’s illegal to do it on purpose.”
Anjali and Colleen nodded because they were very knowledgeable about finance and knew a whole heck of a lot about the kinds of market manipulation that were not allowed on the Sherwood Forest forum. As moderators, they’d seen and squashed long squeezes, short squeezes, and trade rigging on the boards.
Most of those illegal plans had been hatched in the Killer Whale sub-forum, The Pequod, a private room that the admins moderated but most of the small fish didn’t know about.
Tristan continued, “I don’t have the money to buy three times as much stock as I need and then sell most of it in order to crash the price. That’s pretty much the only way to do what Mary Varvara Bell wants. And with the amount of stock she specified, I couldn’t do that. They want too big of a percentage of the total shares. There’s no way for me to do it. No one can do it. There’s no way out for me.”
Colleen was shaking her head at him. “You have friends who can help you. Going it alone is just always a bad idea. You have your school buddies, and you have online friends that you’ve made over the years, and you have us. We’re sitting right here, Tristan, asking how we can help you.”
Tristan set his jaw because there was no way, absolutely no way, he was going to endanger Colleen, Jian, or Anjali again. “Look, this is all me, okay? This is just something I have to do.”
“No, it’s not,” she argued.
“I don’t want you caught up in it. I will deal with it. It’s my fault, and it’s up to me to deal with the fallout.”
Anjali waved her hand in the air. “All I hear is I, I, I, one, one, one, me, me, me,” she said. “You sound like you are singing scales, me me ME me me. You have to think more of how to do things together.”
Colleen nodded and leaned back in her chair, a move to cede the proverbial floor. “Anjali is right.”
Anjali’s nod was a sharp jab of her chin. “I would have thought better of you because you sound like you are British, but Colleen has told me that you are an American by birth and raised in Iowa. That is why you think too much of everything being all about me-me-me. Even the most important things in your life, you think you have to do everything all alone, like finding someone to marry and being married. You think that you just marry a person. In India, we know that we marry the family and the friends and the whole community.”
Tristan shook his head. “How did we start talking about getting married?”
Anjali wagged a finger at him. “Because even in that most important decision in your life you think you are singular. You go and hunt through the people you know like a solitary tiger. But humans are not tigers. We live together in communities. In Indian families, if you don’t know who you want to marry, your aunties will know somebody who is good for you. You make the decision together, and then you have all the support of the aunties and all of your friends. This is why the divorce rate is so high in America, you know. It is because you are so singular. If Colleen doesn’t find someone to marry, my aunties are going to arrange her.”
The scotch hit the back of Tristan’s throat and stuck there, and he sputtered. He asked Colleen, “You’re going to let Anjali’s aunts stick you in an arranged marriage?”
Colleen shrugged, but her lively eyes that were always amused at everything were crinkled and laughing. “Well, Anjali hasn’t taught me how to make Kashmiri dum aloo, so I guess it isn’t going to happen yet.”
Anjali grumped, “I will teach you to make Kashmiri dum aloo. I can have you married in a month.”
The sheer and utter wrongness of that incensed Tristan. “You can’t do that. Colleen, you wouldn’t let her do that.”
Colleen shrugged again, still laughing with her eyes. “I don’t know, man. If you aren’t around, I don’t know what choices I’ll have. Who knows what I might do?”
“That isn’t funny. You wouldn’t really do that, right? You wouldn’t get married to someone else?”
Colleen leaned on her arms on the table, all amusement gone from her features. The grim set of her jaw was the angriest that Tristan had ever seen her. She asked, “What, if you aren’t around anymore?”
The magnitude of it slammed Tristan.
He wasn’t going to be around anymore.
He wasn’t going to be there when another guy wanted to date Colleen.
He wasn’t going to be there if her father showed up and tried to take her back to run his feed store and then cast her aside.
He wasn’t going to be there when Colleen was beating herself up and needed someone to tell her that she was a good girl.
That was the job of a Dom in a Big/little dynamic. The Dom was supposed to be there when the little needed them. They were supposed to adore and spoil and show their little the world, and they were supposed to help their little become everything.
Tristan needed to be there.
Need rushed through him with the ferocity of the determination to cling to the side of a cliff rather than fall.
“Then what can we do?” he asked them.
Anjali’s grimace turned to a prim smile, and she batted her eyes at Colleen. “I told you I could talk him around.”
But Colleen was staring at Tristan, a smile playing around her lips. “Yeah, let’s form a plan. All of us, let’s figure out what we’re going to do.”
The plan took three hours, at least twenty napkins because nobody had any notebook paper, and several rounds of drinks to explore and then decide.
By the end, they were all exhausted, laughing, and a little bit drunk, but each of them had a list of tasks and times.
Before they started, Tristan needed to know one thing. “You guys know this is highly illegal, right?”
“Oh, yeah,” Colleen said. “Absolutely. This is market manipulation and collusion and five other kinds of illegal. If we actually went somewhere and did it, it would be a heist. We’re like Ocean’s Eleven, but on the internet.”
Anjali nodded. “Oh, yeah. Completely illegal. It is not unethical, like a politician getting a briefing about a coming deadly pandemic and selling all their manufacturing stocks and buying shares in healthcare companies. Or a rich guy buying a small generic pharmaceutical company and jacking up the price of insulin or EpiPens a thousand-fold so that regular people can’t afford their medications and die. Or oil companies knowing from their own research that gasoline cars and oil-based plastic are destroying the planet that we live on but paying politicians to stomp out research and innovation in electric cars and other materials. Yeah, that’s all perfectly fine, but this is illegal. Yeah. Sure.”
“Just so we’re clear.” Tristan was shaking his head and staring at his list of action items. They started with misinformation in the Killer Whales’ Pequod chat room and ended with nerves of steel whilst catching the proverbial falling knife. “It’s going to come right down to the wire. The last couple of trades are going to have to slide right in at seconds before four o’clock Eastern time.”
Colleen noted, “At least this Friday is the week that options expire. That’ll make a lot of traders a whole lot more nervous, and they might dump stocks faster than they normally would.”
Tristan glanced at his watch, the Patek Philippe timepiece that, hopefully, Blaze was not going to inherit anytime soon. “It’s eight o’clock at night in New York. Colleen and I have a bit of code to write, and then Jian, you’re up next.”