Chapter 4
What Keeps Me Going
How childish.
No matter where you go, office life is always the same. Or maybe this world is just optimized for K-drama levels of misery.
Anyway, the situation right now is clear enoughā
Iāve been marked.
Theyāve taken a solid dislike to me. Maybe itās because of that customer incident. But what was I supposed to do then? My paycheckāand my futureāwere on the line.
Still, if they leave it alone, theyāll end up screwing themselves over too.
At least the manager didnāt chew me out. These people canāt even tell whether somethingās good or bad for them. Trying to make sense of them with logic is pointless.
Corneliaās family, at least, could read and write. They were once nobles, even if fallen ones. She said her parents had taught her themselves despite their poverty. Luckily, I could also read and write this worldās language as if it were my own. Thank God for thatābecause if I couldnāt⦠I donāt even want to imagine it.
āCoco, arenāt you going home?ā
Nicola appeared at the warehouse door, probably worried because I hadnāt come out.
āYou go ahead.ā
āWhy?ā
I pointed at the pile of boxes stacked in front of me. His brows furrowed.
āDonāt tell me⦠they told you to organize that?ā
āYeah. Something like that.ā
āGuess itās your turn this time.ā
āThis happens often?ā
āWhen they donāt like someone, they dump work right before closing and tell you to finish before they come back tomorrow. But whyād you get targeted, Coco? Even when you used to be late, this didnāt happen.ā
āHonestly, itād make more sense if they did it when I was late.ā
Nicolaās frown only deepened.
āThatās going to take forever. Iāll help. Iāll count the items; you just write them down.ā
I shook my head.
āNo, itās fine. Iām leaving.ā
āWhat? Youāre just going to go? But a senior told you toāā Nicolaās face turned pale, like he was afraid of what would happen next.
Once you start letting them walk all over you, it never ends.
If this were a one-time thing, Iād do it and move on. But people like thatāonce they step on you, they donāt stop until you canāt get back up. And thereās no such thing as overtime pay here. Better to cut my losses and bail.
āIf I mess something up, itāll just make things worse. Thatās full-time work anyway.ā
āMaybe, but the senior wonāt just let it goā¦ā
He looked genuinely worried. Maybe heād seen how this kind of thing usually ended. That āseniorā couldnāt be more than in their early twenties, but Iād been through enough corporate nonsense in my thirties not to care.
āCoco, then⦠Iāll do it. I can write numbers, so Iāll finish it and you can check it tomorrow!ā
āWhat?! Why would you do that?ā
My voice rose before I realized it. Nicola flinched, eyes trembling with panic.
āBut you just started getting on track, and I donāt want to see you get scolded again.ā
ā¦What kind of person is this? Volunteering to take on someone elseās work? An angel?
Still, I couldnāt let him actually do it. Iām not some moral saint, but thisāthis was too much.
āWhy are you going this far for me? Ugh⦠fine, Iāll do it.ā
The job itself wasnāt complicatedājust counting inventory and filling out the forms. Annoyed, I decided to finish it as fast as I could.
āWow, Coco! I didnāt know you could count that fast! Youāre writing so quickly tooāamazing!ā
Youāre just slow, I wanted to say, but I held my tongue. Most commoners here couldnāt even get basic education unless they were talented or rich.
Wait a second⦠maybe I can use that.
If literacy alone gave me an edgeāthen maybe, just maybe, independence wasnāt such a distant dream.
***
Even without overtime pay, I walked home with lighter steps, buoyed by the hope of a better future.
āIām home.ā
As soon as I opened the door, Julie came running toward me, panic in her eyes.
āSis! Something terrible happened!ā
Her tone made my stomach twist.
āWhat is it?ā
āItās RioāRioāsā¦!ā
Tears streamed down her cheeks.
āAnd Marcel?ā I asked, referring to her older brother, Rioās guardian.
āHeās not back yet. What should we do, sis? I want to call the doctor, but I was too scared to leave Rio alone. I was waiting for you to come home, but then you didnāt, and I started worrying that something happened to you too, andāh-hicāā
This kid⦠sheād been spinning all these thoughts in her little head?
Without another word, I pushed open Rioās door. His body was burning with fever, his breathing ragged and shallow. He looked like he could stop breathing any moment.
And for some reason, the sight made my heart drop.
I froze. Completely.
āSis?ā
Julieās voice sounded distant. Rioās pale face blurred into someone elseās.
āSis!ā
She grabbed my arm and shook me hard, snapping me back. I quickly lifted Rio onto my back.
āTake me to the doctor.ā
āOkay!ā
Julie ran ahead, and I followed, Rio limp on my shoulders. I mightāve bumped into someone on the way, but I couldnāt afford to stop.
We reached the doctorās house, both of us drenched in sweat.
āDoctor! Itās Julie!ā
The door opened.
āGood heavens, Rio! Bring him inside!ā
āPlease, doctorāsave him! Please, heās all I have!ā Julie sobbed as the doctor checked Rioās pulse and breathing.
āHeāll take care of him,ā I whispered, patting her trembling shoulders.
Julie burst into tears and clung to me.
āUnnie⦠sob⦠I was so scaredā¦ā
I hesitated, then hugged her back, mind spinning.
It had been fourteen years since Iād lost my own familyāmy parents, my brothers, my little oneāall gone in a car accident while I was away on a trip. A normal, happy family. People who loved each other.
Maybe thatās why Iād never been able to pretend this new family was mine. Acting like their real daughter felt like a betrayalāto both families.
But now⦠seeing Rio struggling to breatheāit was like watching my own brother again. Even though I knew they werenāt the same, my body wouldnāt move. Iād frozen in fear.
Fourteen years, and I was still like this.
I wiped my sweaty face with my sleeve and forced a smile.
āIām fine,ā I told Julie when she noticed my pale face. āGuess Iām out of shape. Havenāt run like that in years.ā
āRioās gotten so big, too. Heās heavy,ā I added with a light laugh.
A moment later, the doctor came out, wiping his brow. His expression wasnāt good.
āHow is he?ā I asked quietly.
The doctor sighed.
āRioās illness isnāt incurable. But heāll need to take medicine made from the Blue Frost Flower for a long time if heās to recover.ā
āThen we canāā
āBut his body runs unusually hot. If this had been caught when he was very young, it wouldāve been easy to treat. Now itās much harder. His bodyās exhausted from the constant fevers. Heās endured well so far, but if we miss this chance⦠I canāt promise anything.ā
āWhat should we do, then?ā
āAs I said, the medicine is key. But that herb is imported, and even at cost price, itās quite expensive. Iāve already used some tonight.ā
So in the end, it all came down to money.
If it werenāt for my useless track record at work, I couldāve covered this without a problem.
āHow much?ā
āFifty jenny per day.ā
My breath caught.
A weekās worth of normal medicine costs forty jenny⦠thatās more than seven times the price.
I silently thanked Nicola. If I lost my job tomorrow, Iād have no income at all.
I took a deep breath and asked something Iād never said in my entire life.
āWould you⦠let me pay later?ā
If I left Rio like this, I wouldnāt be able to live with myself.
āI wish I could,ā the doctor said softly, ābut Iām sorry.ā
Of course. Even if he sold the medicine at cost, he still had to buy it first. He had other patients to care for too.
āNo, I understand. Iām sorry for even asking. Iāll find a way to pay for tonightās treatment. You donāt have to tell the kids anything.ā
ā…All right. But take care. You can pay me later for this one.ā
He gave me a bittersweet smile.
I bowed deeply, unable to refuse his kindness.
Now⦠how can I get that money?
As I watched Julie and Rio sleeping peacefully, hand in hand, I racked my brain for an answer.
***
The next morning, Nicola arrived at the store early, relieved that Coco hadnāt gotten in trouble for yesterdayās work. He really didnāt want his new friend to get fired. She wasnāt the best employee, but she wasnāt bad either.
Sheās just⦠a bit naive, he thought, like a sheltered noble girl.
Still, lately, sheād been on time every dayāno lateness, no accidents. It was a miracle. Nicola was quietly proud of her progress.
āGood morning.ā
He turned at the familiar voice, ready to greet her with a smileā
And froze.
Coco stood there, short hair brushing just below her ears.
Her long, shining locks were gone.
She grinned. āIt was annoying, so I cut it.ā