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“But what Iamnow… that’s complicated.”

She snorts. “Of course it is.”

“Kai,” I say, gently.

She sighs, but walks over. Sits beside me. Not close. Not far.

Just enough.

“I kept the family alive when I got out,” I begin. “Barely. Riehl tried to take the docks. The syndicate from the Spiral was bleeding our freighters dry. I came home to a broken empire and ghosts in every hallway.”

“And you rebuilt it?”

“I’mrebuildingit,” I correct. “But not the way my father would’ve wanted.”

She gives me a sideways look. “How wouldyouwant it?”

I tilt my head toward the sky. The stars are dim from all the city haze, but one or two poke through. Silent. Distant. Untouchable.

“I want a business that doesn’t bury people.”

She blinks.

“Come again?”

“I’m shifting our assets,” I say. “Pulling us out of trafficking. Cutting ties with arms smuggling. Redirecting into tech infrastructure, education, and community defense.”

“Community defense.That’s a very elegant euphemism.”

“It’s real,” I say. “We’ve started grants. For alien orphanages. Refugee pods. Trauma therapy for war-born kids. We’re building shelters on moons where the Alliance won’t even send drones.”

She stares at me.

“And the credits just magically reassign themselves?”

I smile. It’s bitter.

“No. It’s slow. Messy. People don’t like change. Especially when that change means fewer zeroes in their cut.”

She leans forward, resting her elbows on her knees. Her voice drops.

“Jav… you’re a mob prince trying to turn into a philanthropist. That’s not redemption. That’s schizophrenia.”

I bark out a laugh.

She doesn’t.

I run a hand over my horns. The edges are duller now. Less flash. More function.

“I’m not looking for redemption, Kai.”

“Oh no?”

“No. I don’t need to beforgiven.”

She turns toward me, eyes blazing.

“Then what the helldoyou want?”