Part Two: The Debt
Two hours later, Laura found herself sitting in a chair that cost more than her family’s car.
She was in Ethan’s private office at the top of a glass skyscraper in Manhattan. Her mother sat beside her, looking absolutely terrified and overwhelmed.
Ethan had sent a car to fetch her the moment the tarmac was cleared.
The ice boss was sitting behind a massive oak desk, but he wasn’t looking at reports or counting money.
He was staring out the floor-to-ceiling windows at the city below.
He looked exhausted.
But for the first time in ten years, he looked awake.
He remembered being a poor boy in Brooklyn, invisible to everyone who mattered. That boy had built an empire to never feel invisible again. Yet here he was, saved by a child who had no empire at all.
“I owe your daughter my life,” he said to Laura’s mother, his voice firm but no longer cold. “And I realized that ‘thank you’ is a very small word for what she did.”
Laura’s mother squeezed her hand.
“She’s a good girl, sir. She’s always been brave. But we don’t want any trouble. We just want to go home.”
Ethan turned around and leaned forward.
“There will be no trouble. But you aren’t going back to that home.”
Laura’s mother gasped.
Ethan continued.
“My people have already secured a new apartment for you in the safest part of the city. It’s yours, fully paid for.”
Laura’s mother opened her mouth to protest, but Ethan raised a hand.
“I have also set up a trust fund for Laura. She will go to the best schools, the best universities. Whatever she wants to be—a linguist like her father, a doctor, a leader—she will have the resources to do it.”
He looked directly at Laura.
“She saved my life. But more than that, she saved my soul. She reminded me that people matter.”
Laura looked at the man she had been so afraid of just a few hours ago.
He still had the dragon tattoos and the sharp suit.
But the ice boss was melting.
He looked at her and smiled. A real, genuine smile that reached his eyes.
“I spent a long time thinking that trust was a weakness,” he said to her. “But you showed me that trust is the only thing that actually keeps us safe.”
Laura smiled back, feeling a warmth spread through her that had nothing to do with her pink hoodie.