The gallery space was chaos wrapped in expensive lighting—crates stacked like drunk Jenga towers, bubble wrap exploding across the floor like someone had murdered a dozen giant condoms, and Celeste Dubois standing dead center of it all, fingers twitching toward the phantom pack of cigarettes she’d quit six months ago.
Three days until the opening. Three days until the auction that would either launch her or bury her in a market that ate unknowns for breakfast and spat out their bones with tasting notes of "derivative" and "overambitious."
Three days to prove a Miami girl with no last name pedigree deserved to breathe the same rarified air as people who’d been collecting since before she was born.
Except she wasn’t unknown in LA anymore.
Not after Peter had spent the last week pulling strings like a sadistic puppeteer on Red Bull. Madison’s father real-estate-mogul friends who collected art the way other people collected parking tickets.
Charlotte’s few tech contacts who’d suddenly decided original pieces made their glass-box offices look less like sterile operating theaters. Catherine Reynolds from Meridian Elite, whose client list read like Hollywood’s A-list obituary column.
Priya, who apparently knew every major collector on the West Coast because she’d once catered their divorces, their weddings, and their midlife-crisis yacht parties.
Patricia too was huge help.
Peter had leveraged more in ways only he could. Quietly. Systematically. Making sure that when Celeste Dubois opened her LA gallery, the right people knew about it before their assistants even finished their oat-milk lattes.
Invitations that arrived like velvet-wrapped threats. Whispers that started in group chats and ended in boardrooms.
He’d even commissioned a centerpiece piece—something he’d had been working on in five days and an artist whose name alone could make collectors cream their tailored pants had executed in three weeks.
All funded by Liberation Holdings and Quantum Tech. All orchestrated so smoothly Celeste probably thought half of it was luck.
But Celeste had her own audience too.
That was the beautiful, terrifying part. Her Miami gallery had built real credibility—collectors from South America, Europe, Asia who’d made actual money following her eye, who’d turned emerging artists into six-figure sales instead of Instagram thirst traps.
She wasn’t just riding Peter’s and her sister’s coattails. She had her own reputation. He’d just made sure all LA elites knew it existed.
Still. No pressure.
"The Rothko derivative goes on the east wall," she barked, pointing with one hand while doom-scrolling her tablet with the other.
"Natural light from the skylight will make the reds pop like arterial spray. The Basquiat-inspired piece—gods, I hate calling it that, it’s so reductive, but collectors need their fucking reference points—center stage. And the Serra sculptures—"
"Will crush someone if they’re not anchored properly," Helena Voss cut in from the entrance, voice flat as a gravestone. "Which is why I had engineers run load calculations yesterday. The floor can handle it. Barely."
Celeste looked up.
Helena stood in the doorway like she was deciding whether the space was worth defiling with her presence. Tall, sharp-featured, blonde hair pulled back with caliper precision. Black tactical pants, black fitted shirt, black boots that probably cost more than the sculptures they were discussing.
Shoulder holster visible under her jacket—not concealed carry, just carry, because apparently that’s how former CIA operatives dressed for gallery prep. Like art openings were potential war zones with better canapés.
"You’re early," Celeste said.
"You texted at 6 a.m." Helena stepped inside, gaze sweeping the room in that methodical ten-second threat assessment: exits, sightlines, structural weak points, potential improvised weapons (that crate over there looked suspiciously heavy). "The message said ’emergency.’ I assumed actual emergency, not ’I’m anxious about art placement.’"
"This is an emergency." Celeste gestured wildly at the organized apocalypse around them. "Do you have any idea what this auction means? This isn’t just showing paintings to rich people. This is my introduction to LA market gatekept by the same families for three generations. One wrong move—one piece in bad lighting, one sculpture that reads as derivative instead of inspired—and I’m done before I start.
"It’s not about good. It’s about right." Celeste followed, tablet clutched like a talisman. "Good gets you a polite smile and ’we’ll be in touch.’ Right gets you remembered. Right gets you invited back. Right gets your artists actual careers instead of one-show wonders who end up teaching community college because the LA art mafia decided they weren’t worth the investment."
Helena turned, gaze flat and assessing. "You’re catastrophizing."
"I’m being realistic."
"You’re creating problems that don’t exist yet." Helena moved to the next crate, pulled a box cutter from her pocket with the smooth efficiency of someone who’d opened more than cardboard with that blade. "The auction has buyers from fourteen countries. Half of them have never been to LA. They’re not insiders. They don’t care about your gallery’s pedigree—they care about what speaks to them."
"Will buy what the first half validates." Helena sliced through packing tape like she was performing surgery, peeled back bubble wrap with surgical calm. "Social proof. Herd behavior. Same psychology that drives every luxury market. You’re not selling to gatekeepers. You’re selling to people with money who want other people with money to think they have taste."
"I’ve run intelligence operations in forty-three countries." Helena lifted a thirty-pound abstract bronze like it was a feather duster. "Understanding human behavior is the job. Knowing what motivates people to act. What they want versus what they’ll admit they want. Art collectors aren’t different from arms dealers or politicians. They just have better lighting and worse taste in canapés."
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