By day, she audited corporate accounts, following money through shell companies and charitable fronts.
By night, she followed her mother.
Teresa thrived that year, using the insurance payout from the fire, which she had maneuvered into her own control months before under the guise of “protecting family assets,” to develop a luxury mixed-use property on the same block, a gleaming glass structure marketed as a symbol of rebirth, which she named Aurora Commons, smiling proudly as she explained to reporters that “even destruction can be transformed into opportunity with the right leadership.”
She never noticed the small inconsistencies, the misfiled permits, the contractor payments routed through an offshore account that didn’t quite align, the zoning variances approved too quickly, because Teresa had always believed herself untouchable.
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