Aliya changed outfits three tis.
Jake sat on the couch in the living room of his apartnt, one arm stretched along the backrest, and watched the process with the kind of patience he rarely gave anything. Every few minutes she would step out of the bedroom, pause in front of the mirror near the wall, study herself from two angles, then disappear inside again with a dissatisfied expression and a muttered comnt he was pretty sure he wasn’t ant to hear.
He didn’t rush her. He didn’t comnt either.
Normally, he would have. Normally, he would have told her to just pick sothing and move on, especially if they had sowhere to be. But tonight wasn’t about efficiency. He hadn’t brought her here just to feed her and take her back ho. The dinner ant sothing, even if he had no intention of making a speech about it.
So he let her take her ti.
When she finally ca out for the fourth ti, she stopped in front of him and turned slowly, almost as if presenting the result of serious work. She had settled on dark jeans and a soft cream top, with light makeup that she had clearly spent more effort on than usual. It wasn’t flashy, and that was probably why it suited her. She looked polished without trying too hard.
"Well?" she asked.
Jake looked up properly, took a second, then nodded once. "Good."
Aliya narrowed her eyes imdiately. "Just good?"
"Yes."
She stared at him in disbelief, then let out a dramatic sigh. "You are actually impossible."
But she was smiling when she said it, and Jake could tell she approved of the outfit enough to forgive his lack of poetic praise.
A few minutes later, they were downstairs and on the way.
The restaurant Jake had chosen sat on one of the quieter streets in the central district, tucked between two modern office buildings and just far enough from the busiest nightlife areas to avoid the usual noise. It was elegant without being theatrical, the kind of place people chose when they wanted a night to feel morable without making a performance out of it. Warm lighting spilled through the large glass windows, reflecting softly across polished floors and neatly arranged tables inside.
Jake parked across the street and stepped out.
Aliya stood beside him and looked up at the building for a mont before turning slowly toward him. "This looks expensive."
"It’s reasonable," Jake said.
She gave him a long look. "Your definition of reasonable is evolving."
That got the faintest reaction from him, sothing close to a smile but gone too quickly for her to fully enjoy it.
They crossed the street together and stepped inside.
The hostess greeted them with a practiced warmth and led them to a table near the window. Soft music played sowhere in the background, low enough to disappear under the quiet murmur of conversation. No loud laughter, no plates crashing, no chaotic energy from too many people trying to be noticed at once. The entire place felt composed.
Aliya sat carefully, taking in the room with open curiosity that she made no attempt to hide.
"This," she whispered, leaning forward slightly, "is definitely rich-people atmosphere."
Jake picked up his nu. "Relax. Just eat."
She opened hers, and a second later her eyes widened. "Jake."
He looked up. "What?"
"These prices."
"Pick what you want, don’t worry about the price."
Aliya stared at him for a mont, clearly trying to work out whether he was being serious or just pretending confidence. When she realized he ant it, her expression shifted, and she looked back down at the nu with new concentration, like the decision had suddenly beco more important.
Dinner settled into an easy rhythm almost without effort.
At first they talked about ordinary things. Her classes. A lecturer she was convinced had made it his life mission to torture students through unnecessary assignnts. The latest campus gossip she claid not to care about and then described in suspicious detail.
Jake listened more than he spoke, which wasn’t unusual, but tonight there was sothing lighter in the way he did it. He wasn’t distracted, wasn’t half-thinking about charts or next steps or the next problem waiting to be solved. For once, he let himself just be there.
Aliya noticed, even if she didn’t say it.
By the ti the main course arrived, she had relaxed completely. She no longer looked like soone worried about using the wrong fork in an expensive restaurant. She looked like herself again, just dressed a little better and eating food she would definitely describe to her friends in painful detail later.
Halfway through the al, though, she set her fork down and looked at him properly. "Okay," she said. "I have a real question."
Jake took a sip of water. "Ask."
She hesitated, which was unusual enough on its own that it made him pay closer attention.
When she spoke again, her voice was softer. "You’re doing really well, aren’t you?"
Jake didn’t answer imdiately. He wasn’t avoiding the question. He just didn’t want to answer carelessly. With Aliya, the truth mattered, especially because she was the only one who knew there even was a truth to hide.
She went on before he could respond. "You don’t have to tell numbers or anything. I’m not asking that. I just..." She searched for the right words and then gave up on making them perfect. "I just want to know if you’re okay. Like actually okay."
That landed more deeply than he expected.
For a mont, the restaurant around them seed to blur into background noise. The low music, the conversations, the soft clink of cutlery from other tables—none of it mattered much. It was just the two of them in the warm light, with her looking at him in a way that had nothing to do with curiosity and everything to do with care.
Jake leaned back slightly in his chair. "I’m stable," he said at last. It wasn’t a full answer, but it was an honest one.
Aliya held his gaze for a second, then nodded slowly. "Good."
She picked her fork up again, but sothing about her expression had changed. The teasing was still there sowhere, but softer now, held back by sothing more thoughtful.
"I knew you’d figure things out eventually," she said after a mont, trying for a lighter tone. "You always do."
Jake didn’t respond out loud.
He didn’t need to.
Sothing in his chest eased anyway.
After dinner, they stepped back out into the cool evening air. Aliya drew in a breath and stretched her arms a little. "That was amazing."
Jake glanced at her. "Good. I didn’t spend four thousand five hundred VM just for you to complain."
She turned to him with imdiate delight. "That number was not necessary, but thank you. Also, I’m definitely not telling Mom and Dad anything. This secret life is way too beneficial."
Jake shook his head, though there was no real disapproval in it.
They walked to the car together, and once they were inside, Aliya ran a hand lightly over the dashboard as if she still hadn’t entirely accepted that it belonged to him.
"You really did it," she murmured.
Jake started the engine. "I’m working on it."
City lights slid across the windshield as he pulled back onto the road. Traffic had thinned enough that the drive felt smooth, the spaces between intersections longer and quieter than earlier in the evening.
Aliya leaned back in her seat and looked at him from the side. "So where are we going now?"
"Ho."
She kept watching him. "Your new ho or ours?"
Jake’s eyes stayed on the road. "Mine."
For once, she didn’t respond imdiately. A few seconds passed before she gave a small nod and turned toward the window again.
Westbridge Residences looked calm under the night lighting when Jake pulled into the underground parking. The building seed even quieter now than it had during the day. Aliya stepped out of the car more slowly this ti, taking in the surroundings with that sa open curiosity she never quite managed to hide.
"You really moved," she said as they walked toward the elevator.
"Gradually," Jake replied.
When he unlocked the apartnt and pushed the door open, she stepped inside, took three steps, and stopped.
The silence hit her first. Then the space.
Soft lighting. Clean lines. Minimal furniture arranged with deliberate restraint. Nothing extravagant, but everything intentional. The apartnt didn’t look like a student place. It looked like soone had chosen it carefully for a reason.
"Jake..." she said, and this ti there was no joke attached to his na.
He closed the door behind them while she wandered farther in.
She moved through the living room slowly, then toward the second bedroom where his desk setup stood ready. Laptop. Monitor. Organized cables. A clear surface. Everything arranged with the kind of discipline that said more about him than the apartnt itself did.
"You built all this," she said quietly.
Jake leaned against the doorfra. "Step by step."
Aliya turned to face him.
The teasing had disappeared completely now. No dramatic comntary. No clever line waiting to rescue the mont from sincerity. She just looked at him with sothing that felt deeper than surprise.
"I’m really proud of you," she said. The words landed harder than he expected.
Maybe because they were simple. Maybe because there was no performance in them. Or maybe because so part of him had been moving so quickly through each new milestone that he hadn’t really stopped to think about what it looked like from the outside—how much had changed, how much work it represented, how visible the climb was to soone who had seen where he started.
Jake nodded once. "Thanks." It was all he said, but it was enough.
They stood in the quiet for another mont before Aliya clapped her hands together suddenly, the sound sharp enough to break the mood on purpose.
"Okay," she announced. "Emotional mont over. I still expect my allowance every Thursday."
Jake let out a breath that was almost a laugh. "Of course you do."
She grinned, satisfied that normal order had been restored. "Good. Now drop ho, rich man. I have school tomorrow."
Later that night, Jake returned alone.
The apartnt felt quieter after she left, but not emptier. If anything, it felt more settled than before, as if her presence had confird sothing he already knew but hadn’t fully let himself feel. Soone else had seen what he had built. Soone who knew enough of the before to understand the weight of the after.
That mattered.
He sat down at the desk in the trading room and opened his laptop. The charts loaded. The account updated.
1,103,800 VM
Still climbing. Still steady.
Jake leaned back in the chair and looked at the screen without any urgency to act. Tonight wasn’t about trading. It wasn’t about pushing for more or trying to extract aning from the next move. It was about perspective.
He had crossed a major threshold. Independence was no longer hypothetical. Stability wasn’t fragile anymore. Montum had beco real.
And from here, growth would an sothing different than it had before. He wasn’t only trying to survive now, or solve imdiate problems before they swallowed the next week. The shape of the goal was changing.
Power wasn’t just money.
Money was part of it, of course. But real power was what money created when it was used properly. Distance from instability. Freedom to choose. Protection against pressure. The ability to move without asking permission from circumstance every ti life shifted.
Jake closed the laptop and walked out to the balcony.
The city stretched before him in scattered lights and distant movent, thousands of lives crossing paths without knowing that his had quietly changed direction. Sowhere out there people were still dealing with the ordinary small crises of a Saturday night. Argunts. Deadlines. Regret. Hope. Plans for the week ahead.
And here he was, standing in the dark with his hands resting lightly on the railing, aware that his life had entered a different stage without anyone really noticing yet.
For now, everything still felt calm. Controlled. But underneath that calm sat a steady awareness he couldn’t quite ignore.
The more his life improved, the harder it would beco to stay invisible. And visibility always brought pressure with it.
Jake’s gaze stayed fixed on the city. Sooner or later, sothing would test him. He didn’t know what form it would take, or how close it already was.
But he could feel it coming.
---
User Comments
0 comments from readers