One hot summer day, there was a sudden power failure in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and a famous painting of Claudius Monet worth 100 million dollars on display in the museum was stolen by sophisticated thieves. Since the infrared monitoring system in the museum completely loses its function under the high temperature in summer, the mysterious perpetrators hardly left any traces of the crime at the scene. The mysterious thief who stole Monet's famous paintings was the billionaire Thomas Crowen, a corporate tycoon who owned a private jet, luxury yacht, and hundreds of servants, who lived in a mansion in Manhattan. Kraun's money can buy almost everything in the world that can be bought with money, but he is only interested in those things that cannot be bought with money. Kraun stole famous paintings in broad daylight, not for money, and not for art collections. The reason was that the museum repeatedly claimed that the paintings would not be sold to the public. What Kraun, who has a strong desire for conquest, likes to do most is those orders. He was deeply stimulating.
The insurance company that underwrites Monet's famous paintings sent a beautiful and intelligent female investigator Catherine Benning to deal with the theft with full authority. If the famous painting cannot be found or the perpetrator cannot be found, Benning's insurance company will lose 100 million U.S. dollars; if To successfully retrieve the famous painting, Benning will receive a prize of five million U.S. dollars. At the same time, the police also sent a savvy officer Michael McGann to investigate the case. Benning and McGhann coincidentally listed Kraun as the number one suspect, but it was difficult to find evidence of his crime.
When Benning met with Kraun, he frankly told him his identity. The women in Crowen's social circle could not adjust his appetite for a long time, and Benning seemed to be a different woman, so Crowne accepted Benning's request for investigation into the house with a grimace. Since then, the two began a cat-and-mouse psychological game. Kraun wanted to see how Benning would end up miserably, while Benning hoped that Kraun could sell a flaw to get her right.
In the end, Kraun became a captive of love and told the truth about the incident, but Benning began to hesitate at this time: he wondered whether to keep the secret or hand it to Officer McGhann for a bounty. Even worse, Benning realized that his heart had already belonged to this free and unrestrained man who once caused her a deep headache
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