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Golden Eye Tycoon: Rise of the Billionaire Trader-Chapter 64: Echoes of The Climb
The atmosphere at the Highlands Lounge didn’t just cool after Jake and Catharine’s departure; it solidified into something jagged and uncomfortable.
Adrian Vale, who had watched the entire spectacle with the detached precision of an apex predator, adjusted the cuffs of his tailored shirt. He took one look at Marcus Crane—the man currently slumped over a laptop, looking like he’d been hollowed out from the inside—and felt a wave of profound boredom.
"I believe the entertainment for the evening has concluded," Adrian stated, his voice clipping through the low murmur of the terrace. He didn’t offer a word of comfort to Marcus; in his world, incompetence was a social contagion, and he had no intention of catching it. "Leon, thank you for the... enlightening demonstration. I have a prior engagement I’d rather not miss. Excused."
Without waiting for a response, Adrian turned on his heel and vanished toward the valet stand, his exit signaling the official death of the afternoon’s social cohesion.
Noah, however, seemed perfectly content to linger. He leaned back against the mahogany bar, a fresh glass of amber liquid in his hand, and turned his focus toward Chloe, Sofia, and Maya. They were more than happy to pivot their attention away from the wreckage of Marcus’s reputation and toward the man who had just casually wagered a seven-million-mark mansion.
"So," Noah said, a lazy, charming grin spreading across his face as the women circled closer. "Now that the heavy lifting is done, perhaps we can discuss something more interesting than gold futures. I hear the gallery opening on Tuesday is worth a look, Sofia?"
A few yards away, Julian—the real estate mogul who had arrived with Marcus Crane—finally stood up. He looked at his friend with a mixture of pity and pragmatism. He knew that after today, Marcus’s name would be a punchline in the upper tiers of Aurelia’s finance circles.
"Come on, Marcus," Julian said softly, placing a hand on the broken man’s shoulder. "Let’s get out of here before the sun goes down. The air is getting thin."
Marcus Crane didn’t speak. He allowed himself to be led away like a ghost, his footsteps heavy and uneven on the gravel path. Leon watched them leave, a strange knot of lament in his chest. He had genuinely enjoyed their company over the years, but the hierarchy of the city was a living thing—it shed old skin to make room for the new.
’I suppose I won’t be hearing from them for a while,’ Leon thought, a sigh escaping him. ’Pity. Marcus was a decent golfer, but he never did know when to fold a losing hand.’
"Leon," the Real Marcus barked, snapping the younger man out of his reverie. The CEO was already moving toward a clean table, looking remarkably unfazed by the ruin he’d just witnessed. "Assign some of the staff to clear this mess. The screens are distracting. And tell the kitchen to bring out the wagyu sliders and some truffle fries. I’m starving, and watching Jake work has given me an appetite for something substantial."
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While the lounge settled into its post-battle routine, Jake and Catharine were navigating a far more peaceful reality. They had stayed at the North Hills mansion long enough to watch the sky turn into a bruised palette of violet and deep orange.
They hadn’t done much after the initial tour; they had simply collapsed onto an oversized velvet couch in the living room, Catharine tucked into the curve of Jake’s arm as they watched the city lights begin to blink on below them.
"We should probably go," Jake whispered into her hair, though he made no move to get up. "The sun is almost down, and I don’t want to keep you out until midnight."
"Five more minutes," Catharine murmured, her eyes half-closed. "The silence up here is addictive, Jake. It’s like the rest of the world just... stopped."
Eventually, hunger won out. Jake suggested a quiet, upscale Italian restaurant nestled in the foothills, far enough from the golf estate to avoid any lingering drama but close enough to keep the mood intimate. Over plates of handmade pasta and a shared bottle of sparkling water, they talked about everything except the market.
They laughed about a stray cat they’d seen on campus and debated the merits of different internship placements. For those two hours, Jake wasn’t a trader who had just made thirty-seven thousand marks; he was just a guy having dinner with a girl he was rapidly falling for.
When he finally pulled the car up to her shared apartment, the mood shifted back to that familiar, electric tension.
"Thank you for today," Catharine said, turning in her seat to face him. Her eyes were bright, reflecting the soft glow of the dashboard. "Even the parts where you were being a terrifying financial genius."
"I’m glad you were there for it," Jake replied, his voice low.
They walked to the door, the cool night air a sharp contrast to the warmth of the car. There was a long, lingering hug—the kind that spoke of a growing reliance on one another—followed by a series of baby kisses that left Catharine breathless. When she finally pulled back to unlock her door, her face was a deep shade of crimson, a radiant blush that Jake could see even in the dim porch light.
"Goodnight, Jake," she whispered, her voice a bit shaky.
"Goodnight, Cath. Dream of the view."
---
Jake watched her disappear inside before heading back to the car. He didn’t feel like going back to his own apartment. The silence of his solo place felt too clinical tonight after the sensory overload of the mansion and the warmth of the family discussion earlier. Instead, he steered the car toward a familiar neighborhood—the one with the older trees and the houses that smelled like home.
When he stepped through the front door of his parents’ house, the smell of roasted chicken and rosemary immediately hit him.
"Jake! You’re home!" Martha cried, rushing out of the kitchen with a wooden spoon still in her hand. She looked genuinely thrilled, her eyes lighting up as she pulled him into a fierce hug. "I wasn’t sure if you’d make it back tonight, so I made a little something extra just in case."
"I wouldn’t miss it, Mom," Jake lied easily, even though his stomach was still full of Italian pasta.
His father, Ryan, was sitting in his usual armchair with a newspaper, looking up with a proud, steady smile. "Graduation is behind you, and you’re still visiting the old folks. That’s a good sign. How’s the world of business treating you, son? Everything going well with the new firm?"
"It’s going great, Dad," Jake said, taking a seat on the edge of the sofa. "Lots of moving parts, but we’re making progress. It’s exciting."
Aliya, however, provided the necessary grounded balance to the family welcome. She was sprawled on the other end of the couch, her eyes glued to her phone as she scrolled through a social media feed with practiced indifference. She didn’t look up, didn’t wave, and didn’t acknowledge his existence beyond a faint, rhythmic tapping of her foot.
’She’s definitely seen me,’ Jake thought, amused. ’The more she ignores me, the more I know she was worried about how the board meeting went.’
Martha served the dinner, and true to his word, Jake sat down and finished a full plate of her special roasted chicken. He missed the simplicity of this food—the way it didn’t need a garnish or a fancy name to be perfect. As they ate, he listened to his father talk about the garden and his mother talk about the neighbors, the mundane details of their lives serving as a much-needed ballast to his own high-velocity world.
After the meal, Jake excused himself and headed up to his old bedroom. He pushed the door open, expecting to find the usual layer of dust and a few stray boxes, but he stopped short. The room was pristine. The bed was made with fresh linens, the desk was cleared of clutter, and even his old trophies had been wiped down.
’Aliya,’ he realized, a small smile forming. ’She acts like she doesn’t care, but she’s the only one with enough energy to scrub a room this thoroughly.’
After a long, hot shower that finally washed away the grit of the day, Jake lay back on the bed, feeling the weight of the day settle into his bones. His phone buzzed on the nightstand. It was a call from Alex.
"Tell me the legends are true," Alex’s voice boomed the moment Jake answered. "I heard a rumor that a certain someone caused a minor earthquake at a golf estate today."
"You know, you be acting broke all the time that I forgethow rich you actually are," Jake laughed, rolling onto his side. "But yeah, I did win a house. So there’s that."
"You know I want nothing to do with all that, but a house? Like, a real one? With walls?" Alex groaned in mock despair. "Man, I’m over here trying to figure out if I can afford the premium toppings on my pizza, and you’re collecting real estate like Pokémon cards. Listen, I’m free tomorrow. Are we still on for that catch-up?"
"You see, there you go acting broke again," Jake said whilst shaking his head. "I’ll make a reservation somewhere and send you the details in the morning. It’s been too long, man."
"Can’t wait. And Jake? Try not to buy the restaurant before I get there. I want to actually eat the food, not the equity." Alex ignored Jake’s comment about his financial status.
They traded a few more insults and jokes before hanging up, the familiarity of the friendship acting as a final tether to the person Jake used to be. As the room went dark, Jake stared up at the ceiling, his mind replaying the day’s highlights like a film reel.
He thought about the gate guard’s exclusionary gaze and how easily Silas had bypassed it. He thought about Marcus Crane’s arrogant lust and the way his face had crumbled when the final numbers hit the screen. He thought about the pulsing in his eye and the way the gold charts had whispered their secrets to him.
’My life is a different game now,’ he thought, his eyes slowly closing. ’The rules have changed, the stakes have tripled, and I’m standing on top of a hill I haven’t even finished climbing yet.’
As sleep finally claimed him, the last image in his mind wasn’t a candlestick chart or a silver membership card. It was the way Catharine had looked at him in the mansion—like he was a man who could change the world, provided he didn’t lose his way on the path down the mountain.
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