Waitress Saved A Stranger With Her Blood—Then He Demanded Her Name-Teptep

She Gave Her Blood to Save a Dying Stranger—Then He Came Back as the Mafia Boss Who Wanted Her

A single act of kindness could be a death sentence or a coronation.

Clara Hayes had never had the luxury of believing kindness changed much.

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Kindness did not pay the rent on a cold little flat with a draught under the front door.

Kindness did not make Owen’s chest less tight at three in the morning, when she sat beside his bed counting the seconds between each breath.

Kindness did not stop the electricity bill from arriving in its thin white envelope, polite and threatening at the same time.

Still, Clara kept doing small kind things because they were the only riches she had.

She saved the heel of a loaf for Owen and called it toast.

She let rude customers have the last word because arguing cost energy she could not spare.

She carried extra napkins to tables where children had already made a mess, and she smiled when the parents did not look up.

By twenty-four, she had learnt to make herself useful before anyone could decide she was disposable.

At the Starlight Diner, usefulness was measured in refilled mugs, wiped tables, and how many times she could say ‘sorry’ in one hour without meaning any of it.

That day had been particularly cruel in its ordinary way.

The rain had started before breakfast and followed the customers in on their coats, spreading a damp smell across the tiled floor.

The coffee machine hissed all afternoon.

The grill spat grease.

Someone complained that her tea was too weak, then complained again when Clara brought a fresh one.

By the time a mug shattered near her shoes, Clara had been on her feet for ten hours.

The sound cracked through the diner, sharp as a slap.

She looked down at the broken ceramic, then at the man whose elbow had swept it from the counter.

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