
“It’s two o’clock! Time for breakfast!”
The instructor’s voice echoed from the entrance of the tunnel, loud through the microphone, bouncing against the hard walls and shaking the dust loose from the ceiling. At that moment one by one, the miners began to step out of the tunnel. Some dragged their feet. Some stretched their stiff backs as they walked. A few laughed weakly, already talking about food like hungry children that had been kept too long without eating. Their helmets looked dull under the weak afternoon light as they moved toward the exit. Inside the tunnel, Liam Gael did not move. The sound of metal striking rock continued from where he stood, deep inside the narrow path where the air felt tight and heavy. He swung his tool again, and the sharp sound cut through the silence that had followed after the others left. Sweat rolled down his face, cutting clean lines through the charcoal that covered his skin. It slipped past his jaw and dropped to the ground, mixing with dust and crushed stone. His chest rose and fell fast, but he did not slow down. At that moment, hunger pressed his stomach, but he ignored it. Then he paused only to adjust his helmet that had shifted forward, pushing it back firmly on his head before tightening the strap under his chin. Hearing the faint voices of the other miners outside, he gripped his tool harder and struck the wall again. The company had made it clear on the first day if they reached the target before two weeks, every one of them would receive double pay, including double overtime bonus. The promise had entered Liam’s ears like a lifeline. Double pay, that was the only thing sitting in his mind now. He worked harder than the others because he had no choice. His mother had been lying in the hospital bed for two weeks already. The doctors had spoken in low tones, using careful words, but he understood what they meant. If money stopped coming, treatment would stop too. More than once, fear had gripped his chest when he thought about it. She would have died by now if not for his wife who stayed at the hospital day and night, without complaining. She not only takes care of his mother, she also brings him breakfast everyday. He did not even know what he had done in this life to deserve a woman like that. In a world like this one, where E‑level citizens received nothing but dust and insult, people like him were not supposed to be loved like that. The world had changed into something cold and unfair. Every citizen was graded like goods in a market. A, B, C, D… and then E. E was the bottom. E citizens had no right to vote. No right to proper hospitals. No access to clean estates. No fair salary. Even the air in their areas smelled different, thick with smoke and neglect. When benefits were shared, their names never appeared. When decisions were made, their voices did not count. However Liam Gael belonged to that last line, but yet Emily chose him. Her family had warned her. They had shouted. They had begged her to think about her future. Some even mocked her openly, asking why she wanted to throw herself into a life of suffering. Still, she stood beside him, quiet but firm, her small hand holding his like she had already made peace with whatever would come. Two years had passed, and he still did not know how to repay a heart like that. She was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. Not only in face, but in spirit. Sometimes he would just look at her when she was not watching, and a soft smile would come to his lips. Every single day, he thanked his stars for her. At that moment the sound of metal against rock begins to slowed. Liam stopped working, the tunnel felt tighter as thoughts of Emily filled his head. He imagined her at the hospital, sitting beside his mother’s bed, adjusting the drip, speaking gently to the nurses even when they looked down on her. He knew the kind of struggle she was facing now. The bills. The long hours. The silent pressure. Then his jaw tightened again. Once his mother became stable, he would take her somewhere far from this dust and noise. A real vacation. They would explore places meant for the middle class, clean streets, bright lights, working elevators. Even if they had to pay extra because of their E status, he would pay it. He did not care. She deserved to see beauty without being chased away. Immediately he lifted his tool again and continued working with fresh strength, as if every strike was a promise he was making to her and his mother. Time passed without him noticing. When he finally stepped out of the tunnel, the sky had shifted color. It was exactly four o’clock, with only a few minutes left before the break would be over. Dust clung to his clothes. His hands were shaking slightly from stress, but his eyes remained steady. “Liam!!.” “Liam!!.” Everybody was calling Liam’s name. His voice carried weight among them now, not because he shouted the loudest or talk the most, but because his actions spoke before his mouth ever did. Many of the miners had begun to admire him not for his own gain, but because every strike of his hand gave them hope too. He did extra work not just for his benefit, but for theirs as well. Whenever their families came around, he would always bend low to greet the children, pat their heads, crack small jokes that made them giggle. He had become something like a big brother, even a father figure to some of them. When he spoke, people listened. When he smiled, they felt lighter, even inside the dark tunnel. Now, as he sat down on the rough wooden bench, wiping sweat from his forehead, the old man sitting among them turned toward him with a small grin. His face was wrinkled and tired, his voice deep and rough from years of breathing dust. “I don’t know how you do it, boy,” the old man said, shaking his head in slow wonder. “During my prime, I couldn’t even work as hard as you do.” A few of the men nearby chuckled quietly. The old man leaned back a little, still eyeing Liam with a mix of respect and disbelief. “In my time, we worked strong, yes but not like you. You carry this job like the ground offend you.”Latest Chapter
Chapter 23
In that instant, Penelope felt her thoughts scatter in every direction. Because the transfer record had not come from a neighboring district, a shell account, or even a hidden domestic source. It had come from **Vamora**For a second, she could only stare. Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, she breathed, “How is that even possible?” Everyone knew what Vamora was. It was not just another country on the world map. It was one of the pillars of global power, one of the most advanced and untouchable nations in existence. A country ranked at Level One Hundred so far above the rest that even speaking of it carried a certain reverence. Vamora was the kind of place people in lesser nations dreamed about without ever expecting to see. For most, it existed more as legend than reality a distant summit of wealth, influence, and civilization that ordinary countries could only admire from below. People did not simply go to Vamora. Many would count themselves lucky just to hear som
Chapter 22
For a long moment, Penelope said nothing. She simply stood there, staring at the iPad in her hand as though the screen had stopped being a device and become something else entirely something incomprehensible. That silence sent Liam’s heartbeat spiraling out of control. It pounded so hard in his chest that it almost hurt. The look on her face was not what he had expected. It was not anger. It was not triumph. It was not even the cold certainty of someone who had just confirmed a crime. It was something else, Something stranger. And that terrified him more, his mind raced wildly. "What is going on?""Why isn’t she saying anything?""Is the truth worse than I thought?" If it had been Victoria, Penelope would have said so by now...wouldn’t she? If it had been Benjamin, or some suspicious account, or even some incomplete transaction record, surely there would have been an immediate response. Something. Anything. But instead, she was standing there looking like someone who had
Chapter 21
Liam said nothing more. He knew, with a sick certainty, that there was nothing he could say right now that would make them leave him alone. Nothing he could say that would suddenly make them trust him, believe him, or even pause long enough to hear him out properly. At this point, any wrong word might only make things worse. So he made the only choice left to him. He lowered his head and followed. Inside, humiliation burned through him almost as fiercely as fear. He was exhausted, shaken, and painfully aware of how helpless he looked. And beneath all of it, one thought kept pounding through his mind with bitter clarity—"Victoria did this.""Victoria and Benjamin., It had to be them. Who else could have designed something this cruel? Who else could have set me up so perfectly and then vanished, leaving me standing alone in the center of the disaster?" The more he thought of it, the more convinced he became. This was not random. This was not an accident. This was a trap, carefu
Chapter 20
Even as the attendant kept her head respectfully lowered, a slow smile crept across her face where no one could see it. She could already feel it the promotion. The recognition. The elevation in status that came with doing something remarkable on the job. Because the woman now standing on the other side of the counter was not just any senior staff member. She was one of the most powerful figures in this entire institution a Senior Director, no less. A woman of top B-class citizen, respected, feared, and connected in ways most people could barely imagine. And the attendant had been the one to call her here. She had been the one to spot it. To flag it. To act. In her mind, the reward was already as good as hers. Because this was exactly the kind of thing the system celebrated catching a lower-level citizen attempting to game a world that was never built for them. A citizen of Liam's standing had no business having that kind of money. None whatsoever. And the fact that she had
Chapter 19
The moment the attendant finished speaking, something shifted in Liam's entire body. It was not just fear anymore. It was a deeper, more suffocating dread the kind that came from knowing he was already trapped, already sinking, and that no amount of struggling would pull him to the surface in time. He knew how this worked. He knew exactly how it would go the moment those higher authorities walked through that door. They would not come in looking for the truth. They would come in looking for a culprit. And a man of his level, standing inside a bank with five hundred million dollars suddenly sitting in his account, would need no further introduction as the suspect. They would not let him speak first. They would not even let him breathe before the accusations began. Questions would come like blows, fast and merciless, and none of his answers would matter because he had no answers. Not real ones. Not the kind that would satisfy anyone. He was just as confused as anyone else i
Chapter 18
Immediately Liam stared at the paper as though the numbers might rearrange themselves into something sensible if he looked long enough. But they did not. The figure remained exactly where it was. His mind reeled. "What the hell is this?""What the hell is happening?""How did five hundred million dollars get into my account?"He could barely breathe through the chaos rising in his chest. None of this made any sense. He had not been expecting money. He did not know anyone who could send such money. He did not even know where he would ever get five hundred thousand dollars from, let alone five hundred million. It was madness. Something was wrong—terribly wrong. At that moment a chilling thought struck him. Could this be Victoria? Could she and Benjamin be behind this somehow? Was this another trap? Another calculated scheme to bury him deeper? To make it appear as though he had stolen from them? To hand him over to the authorities with evidence they had planted themselve
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