A Billionaire Heiress Gave a Single Dad Her Late Father’s Rusty Car as a Joke—It Was Worth $9M – Part 14

Part 14:

She looked back at the building. So am I. They went back inside. The formal announcement was 4 days later. The venue was the estate’s main reception room, which Isabella had cleared of its usual furniture and arranged with a long table, proper lighting, and enough space for the authentication team, and approximately 20 invited guests, representatives from major automotive institutions, two editors from specialist publications, a curator from a national automotive museum who had flown in from Detroit, and the legal representatives who had

been involved in documenting the authentication process. No press. Isabella had been firm about that and Patricia Crane, the cultural property attorney, had supported the decision. The controlled announcement would go out through proper channels afterward. What happened in this room today was for the record, not for the headlines.

Ethan arrived at 9:00 in the morning and helped Voss and Tobias set up the presentation materials, the photographic documentation, the dimensional analysis data, the commission file from the Stellarini archive, the paint analysis results that had come back from Stutgart 6 days earlier, confirming period appropriate composition, the notebook, and its contents.

The guests arrived between 9:30 and 10. Ethan stayed near the back of the room. He wasn’t presenting anything. That was Voss’s role and James’ and he was comfortable with that. He’d been the one to find it. What came after was other people’s work, but he watched the room carefully as it filled because the people coming through the door were people who understood what this was.

And watching the faces of experts confronted with something genuinely rare was its own specific thing. The curator from Detroit, a woman named Dr. Harriet Okafor had spent 40 years in automotive history and walked into the room with the focused skepticism of someone who had been disappointed before. She looked at the photographic documentation for 3 minutes without speaking, then turned to find Ethan standing behind her.

“You identified this,” she said, not accusatory, more like calibrating. “Initial identification?” “Yes.” “Based on what specifically?” He told her the bodywork geometry, the handformed aluminum, the specific proportions. She listened with her arms crossed and her eyes slightly narrowed. The expression of someone running an internal verification process.

The SE-pillar, she said. Yes. And you caught that in about 15 minutes under poor lighting conditions. She looked at him for a moment. Who are you? Ethan Walker. I run a repair shop on Clement Street. She blinked. A repair shop? Yes. You identified a lost Stellarini commission in 15 minutes while working a catering event. Vehicle support, he said.

Not catering. She stared at him for another second, then turned back to the photographs without another word. But something had shifted in her expression. The skepticism was still there, but underneath it, something else had opened up. a kind of alert attention that was different from what she’d walked in with.

James found Ethan 15 minutes later. Voss is ready. You should be up front. I’m fine back here. Ethan. James, you’re not doing the humble mechanic thing right now. Get up front. Ethan looked at him. I’m not doing anything. I just don’t need to be. The people in this room are about to hear about one of the most significant automotive discoveries in decades.

The person who made that discovery should be visible. James paused. Not for ego, for record, for what this means professionally. To you, for what you built before, for what this confirms about your expertise. Ethan was quiet. 6 years, James said more quietly. You spent 6 years on Clement Street being very good at something smaller than what you’re actually capable of.

Today matters. I didn’t do it for I know why you did it. I know it wasn’t for recognition. That doesn’t mean the recognition isn’t warranted. James paused. Come up front. He went. But Dr. Voss presented for 40 minutes. She was methodical and unshowy, which was exactly right, which was why she was the right person to be standing at the front of the room.

She took the gathered evidence piece by piece, laid it out in order, addressed the corroborating elements, acknowledged the areas where further research was ongoing, and arrived at her formal conclusion with the unhurried confidence of someone who had done the work and knew what it said. The 1968 Stellarini Caroseria Commission designation B-04, previously considered lost, had been located, authenticated through multiple independent lines of evidence, and confirmed as a surviving example of the coach builder’s work from that period.

The room was quiet when she finished. Then Dr. Aaphor from her seat near the front said, “Estimated value.” Voss looked at James who had done the market analysis in consultation with two auction specialists. Conservative estimate based on current market comparables for authenticated Stellarini work rarity classification and condition between 8 and 12 million.

James said with restoration to appropriate standard potentially higher. The room stayed quiet for a moment. Then several conversations started at once. the contained buzz of experts processing something significant and beginning to think about what it meant for their respective institutions and interests. At the back of the room near the door, Isabella Sterling was standing with her arms at her sides, which was different from her usual crossed posture, and Ethan noticed it because he’d been paying attention to the way she held

herself for weeks. She was listening to the number, to what it meant, to what her father had kept in a storage building for 20 years. After a moment, James said to the room, not just to Voss, the initial identification of this vehicle was made by Mr. Ethan Walker, who was present at this estate approximately 7 weeks ago in an unrelated capacity.

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