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He frowned.
“This is not charity.”
She looked at him, her voice sharp despite her weak body.
“You cannot come back after all this time and try to fix things with money. Keep it.”
Mika said nothing, but inside, he felt the weight of something unfinished.
This woman was hiding a truth.
And he would not leave until he knew it.
Mika came back the next day.
Then the day after.
And the day after that.
Every afternoon after school, Hope found him near her stand with a smile, a storybook, or a snack.
At first she was shy, but soon they laughed together like old friends. She showed him her notebooks. He helped her with her homework.
“Why is English so hard?” she grumbled one day.
“Even rich people struggle with that,” he joked, making her laugh.
Sometimes he simply sat in silence while she ate roasted corn and he watched village life pass by—something he had not done in years.
In those moments, Mika felt something strange in his chest.
Not pride.
Not power.
Peace.
Real peace—the kind no villa or business deal had ever given him.
But peace comes at a price.
One afternoon, his assistant pulled him aside and whispered urgently.
“Sir, this is the third meeting you’ve missed.”
“I am taking care of something important,” Mika said calmly.