's spectacular failure. Diego tried to focus on the perfect emerald stripes of the pitch, the smell of damp g
that were purely mechanical. His body moved, but
the whisky. And then, he remembered the dark eyes, the sha
was
viction when she spoke of her business, of Kaduna, but he could not picture her face clearly. He had sought auth
ation, as if she were still there. He had squinted into the glass,
eel, cut across the pitch. "Running dri
it that seemed impervious to the humidity. He looked fresh, alert, and entire
his breath hiss out. "C
Eduardo held up a sleek tablet, dismissing the matter with a wave of his hand. "We have a pre-recorded statement scheduled. A s
at the mention of his carefully managed pe
ego. And last night was an expensive indiscretion. You disappeared for n
pers. Security had a breach report, minor, regarding a staff key card. And there
ands, the leather digging into his palms. "I don't know
eeds into the public arena. The narrative of the heartbroken, dedicated star is valuable. The narrative of the star drunkenly sleeping with a sta
rity report. We pinned the missing card on a dismissed night guard. The cleaner who saw you disappear, a man named Javier, has bee
ut Javier's "generous tip"; the agent dealt in threats veiled as transactions. But what if the woman was a staff member? He had seen
nical voice of his fame-crushed self
ing the ash of the whisky and his shame. "It was
t. That's all I needed to hear. Now, go hit the showers. We have a meeting wi
se of inevitability. He was a product, a commodity, and Eduardo was the warehouse manag
fled thud. He hated himself for lying, and he hated Eduardo for making the lie necessary. His desire for authenticity had alr
his headache pounding a rhythm ag
old plaster and strong coffee, Nafisa Musa was methodically preparing for her day. She was n
her marketing final. The words swam slightly. She was running on th
red, like a fault line had opened in her carefully constructed routin
elebrity, she chastised herself, tapping a pen against
een through the star to the scared, damaged man underneath. That was the problem; she had felt empath
t of gray light touched the sky. She had walked for miles, shaking off th
hased an emergency contraceptive pill, paid for with the day's cleaning wages, and
ted, reciting the words like a business
eenager in economics via video conference. It was more money, slower money, but cleaner money. She needed to earn back
t from the floor caught her eye. It was small, sil
tadium doors, but a high-level access card, engraved with a small,
tes, the medical wing, and, most importantly, the private changing room corridor. Diego's private corrid
r a second, then a hot wav
ke. This was evidenc
y would not be difficult to verify. Her visa, her job, her entire, carefully constructed life in Spain could be
card. It was a t
; someone might find it. She couldn't mail it; that would le
into the highest security areas of
ked down at the card, then up at the faded pri
to mitigate the risk? Wha
was pregnant, her two years of careful planning would evaporate. Her dreams of Kaduna would become
of her wallet, the one she reserved for emergency cash. It f
le, drunken moment of recklessness had permanently derailed her life. The nine months ahead were a terrifying fiscal cliff,
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