The words echoed through the vast marble lobby.

Employees froze mid-conversation. A receptionist nearly dropped her phone. The building was used to powerful executives and wealthy investors—but not a thin boy wearing worn sneakers wrapped with strips of duct tape.

Security noticed him immediately.

“Hold on there, kid,” said Daniel Ruiz, the head of security, stepping forward. “This is a private building. You can’t just walk in here.”

Noah stopped but didn’t step back. His green eyes lifted calmly.

“I need to see Charles Harrington,” he said. “It’s about my inheritance.”

The word inheritance rippled through the lobby like a shockwave.

Daniel frowned. “You’re claiming what now?”

With trembling fingers, Noah pulled a slightly crumpled envelope from his jacket.

“My mom left this letter. She said if anything happened to her, I should bring it here.”

Daniel took the envelope cautiously and opened it. As he read the contents, the color slowly drained from his face.

“Where did you get this?” he asked.

“My mom,” Noah replied softly. “She passed away three weeks ago.”

He swallowed hard before continuing.

“I found the letter and a photograph in her things.”

From his pocket he pulled out the photo—a faded picture of a young woman standing beside a tall man in an expensive suit.

“The letter says his name is William Harrington,” Noah said. “It says he was my father.”

A wave of whispers spread through the lobby.

“William Harrington?”

“That can’t be right…”

“He died years ago!”

Everyone knew the name. William Harrington had been the younger brother of the company’s CEO and heir to a fortune worth hundreds of millions.

But he had died in a car accident fifteen years earlier.

And as far as the public knew, he had never had children.

Daniel pressed his radio, his voice suddenly tense.

“Mr. Harrington, we need you in the lobby immediately. This involves your brother.”

The reply crackled back with irritation.

“I’m in the middle of a board meeting, Daniel.”

“I understand, sir. But you’ll want to see this.”

A long pause followed.

Then: “I’m coming.”

Thirty seconds later, the private elevator opened.

Charles Harrington stepped out.

Tall, confident, dressed in a perfectly tailored suit, he carried himself like a man used to power. The crowd parted instinctively as he approached.

“What’s so urgent?” he asked coldly.

Daniel handed him the letter.

Charles skimmed the page—and then burst out laughing.