A series by Luc Herrant

The Delacroix
Series

Financial Crime · Literary Fiction

She builds cases the way some people build correspondence with the truth — slow, procedural, expecting delay.

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Financial crime fiction written at literary fiction's pace.
Where the money trail leads somewhere human.

Inspector Sophie Delacroix works financial crimes. She does not chase suspects through alleyways or fire weapons at rooftops. She reads documents. She waits for beneficial ownership responses. She builds the case — not because the system demands it, but because precision is the only form of honesty she trusts.

Each book in the series places her at the center of a different financial crime — a different shade of moral complexity, a different city, a different kind of person who believed their reasons were sufficient.

"She separates what she can prove from what she knows. This is not caution — it is discipline. The distinction matters."

I

Literary Crime

The genre of crime. The register of literary fiction. Readers who stay with silence and trust accumulation.

II

Financial Crimes

Art fraud. Market manipulation. The infrastructure of white collar crime — rendered in procedural, grounded detail.

III

Moral Complexity

Each crime is committed by someone with a reason. The reason is never sufficient. It is never without weight.

IV

Self Published

Independently produced. No publisher between the writing and the reader. Available to order as a softcover edition.

Inspector Sophie Delacroix

Inspector Sophie Delacroix · Financial Crimes

Age

44

Unit

Financial Crimes

Prior

12 yrs, Commercial Fraud

Son

Théo, 13

Inspector
Sophie Delacroix

"She pours the coffee, gets absorbed, picks it up cold, drinks it anyway. A small private commitment to finishing what she started." — The Valuation

She is not warm in the way readers expect their investigators to be warm. She does not confide, does not explain herself, does not perform the emotions the case produces in her. What she does instead is notice, with the kind of precision that makes you feel the room tilting slightly every time she enters it.

Twelve years in commercial fraud before the transfer to financial crimes. She built the Steiner case over nine months, by her own reckoning the best case of her career. She prosecuted a man she had come to respect and did not look away from either fact.

Her second case takes her across European financial centers, where a structure that appeared clean on paper reveals something else entirely. Her third brings her further still, through institutions whose public face the documents do not support, and to a question she has been approaching since Geneva: whether the cases she has been building are, in the end, separate at all.

She has a son named Théo who is largely happy. She does not know this yet.

She keeps a notebook. The questions she writes in it are not the questions she asks aloud. The gap between those two lists is where the case lives.

Follow her cases →

The Books

Each book in the series is a standalone investigation. Delacroix carries between them; the crimes do not.

Available Now
The Valuation cover

Book I

The Valuation

A Delacroix Investigation

Luc Herrant

Art Fraud · Geneva · Book One

Marc Steiner is good at his job. Twelve years building a practice on word of mouth, on the slow accumulation of trust. By thirty-two he manages €180 million in private assets for eleven clients who would follow him anywhere.

Then a case lands on Inspector Sophie Delacroix's desk. Art sales. A paper trail. A name that keeps appearing: Camille Arnoux, the artist, the fiancée, the woman who says she didn't know.

She didn't expect the truth to be what it was.

Available Now
GILT cover

Book II

GILT

A Delacroix Investigation

Luc Herrant

Financial Crime · Book Two

A man is dead. His estate is in order. The firm that managed his money is no longer taking new clients.

Delacroix works financial crimes. She arrives by seven. She drinks her coffee cold. She does not speculate about what happened. She builds from the documents outward, and the documents have started to speak.

She is not interested in what they needed to hear. She is interested in the Cayman account, the September valuation, and whether the failure was the plan.

Coming Soon
The Foundation cover

Book III

The Foundation

A Delacroix Investigation

Luc Herrant

Financial Crime · Book Three

A Swiss bank has flagged an anomalous payment chain. The source: Fondazione Europea per l'Integrazione, one of Europe's most respected humanitarian charities. The trail leads to London, Milan, Madrid, and a social rehabilitation programme in Southern Italy that barely exists on paper. Inspector Sophie Delacroix has untangled complex financial fraud before. She has never untangled twenty years of it.

What looks like embezzlement is not embezzlement. What looks like a money-laundering network is not quite that either. The documents are real. The audits passed. The people who built this system are mostly dead or retired, and the people now operating it simply never asked why it existed. That question, the one nobody asked, turns out to be the only one that matters.

The third and final novel in the Delacroix series is its darkest. Not because anyone intended harm. Because nobody had to.


Get The Valuation

The Valuation is available as a softcover edition, self published and available to order online. Click below to go to the order page.

Softcover · English · Self published by Luc Herrant

Order Softcover: The Valuation →

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Luc Herrant

Twenty years in finance. The Delacroix series is drawn from that world — not from imagination alone, but from the texture of real institutions, real instruments, and real people who believed their reasons were sufficient.

What drives Herrant's writing is the gap between what people claim and what they are. The shame kept quiet. The greed dressed as ambition. The guilt folded into routine. These are not aberrations — they are the ordinary architecture of human behaviour, and they shape every decision in ways the person making them rarely admits, even to themselves. The Delacroix series is built in that gap.

Sophie Delacroix does not look at what people say. She looks at what the documents confirm. Between those two things is where the truth lives.

Impressum

Luc Herrant · Kettenstr. 29 · 54294 Trier · Germany · 147lsr@gmail.com