Magnus bobbed his head so fast it blurred. “All right, I understand. I won't ask Cecilia for a cent.”
Denise studied him, worry clouding her fever-dulled eyes.
“You don't have to follow my compass,” she murmured. “Some people think leaning on family is natural. If the strain is too much, do what feels right. Just don't blame me later.”
“No, you're right,” he insisted. “I'm a grown man. Running to my sister every time I'm short looks pathetic. I promised I'd get my act together. Besides, I've already saved more than thirty thousand, haven't I?”
Those savings were the harvest of brutal weeks, involving nights of being drowned in liquor with clients and mornings woken by headaches that hammered like drums.
Only after joining the workforce did he grasp how merciless money could be.
He still couldn't fathom how he had squandered fortunes before. That sum he could never replicate across several lifetimes.
Seeing the determination in his eyes, Denise curved her lips into a small, genuine smile.
“Good.”
Conversation ebbed. She lay back, still weak.
The fever had broken, yet dizziness clung to her like fog after rain.
“Are you hungry?” Magnus asked, soft with concern. “I can run out and fetch food.”
Guilt pinched Denise's heart. Moments ago, she'd threatened to cut him off like a sulking child.
“A little,” she admitted.
“Then I'm on it. Tell me what you're craving, and it's yours.”
“Anything at all,” Denise said.
Denise had never been fussy about food. Filling her stomach ranked higher than flavor, so long as the meal put strength back into her slender frame.
With that small permission, Magnus practically skipped toward the cafeteria line, eager to earn her approving smile.
What he failed to notice were the searching eyes hidden behind pillars, glass panels, and idle phones, eyes hired to track his every step.
Before long, those watchers had already phoned Cecilia, reporting in hushed detail where Magnus stood and what he was doing.
Has he really fallen back into the same old habits? The thought pressed against Cecilia's ribs like a stone she could neither swallow nor spit out.
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