Deborah goes very still.
Alejandro does not flinch. “No. I want to make sure you are not forced back into danger because you took a job with us.”
You cross your arms. “And what’s the catch?”
“There isn’t one.”
You almost laugh.
“There is always one.”
He studies you for a moment. “The only catch is that if we offer you temporary housing, transportation assistance, and legal referrals, you accept enough of it to stay alive.”
Something in your chest twists painfully.
You hate kindness when it arrives in a room like this. Kindness has always been followed by debt in your life. By favors repackaged as leverage. By men who helped until they decided your gratitude belonged to them permanently. Your stepfather fixed that lesson into you early. After your father died, every gift in that house came with a bruise hidden in it somewhere.
Deborah opens the folder.
“There’s a room reserved for seven nights at a business hotel three blocks from here,” she says. “Paid by the company. We can extend if needed while we connect you with a partner shelter and longer-term housing support. Transportation stipend starts today. Confidential counseling and legal advocacy are included if you want them. No deductions from your wages.”
You still don’t touch the folder.
“What do you want in return?”
Deborah answers this time. “Nothing except your consent to receive help.”
You look from her to Alejandro.
He says, “You were right this morning. Charity often comes with a bill. This isn’t charity. It’s a correction.”
That makes you angry in a different way.
A correction means there was an error in the system. You know better. For people like you, the system isn’t broken. It’s functioning exactly as designed. Still, beneath the anger, something more dangerous begins to stir.
Hope.
Hope is a liar with good posture.
You finally reach for the folder and open it.
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