Chapter 12: A Proper Dinner
When Cyrus woke again, the room had gone dim enough that he could not tell whether morning had just arrived or evening was already leaving.
The curtains were still drawn. A thin line of light slipped through the gap near the window, faint and gold at the edge, but the apartnt itself remained tucked in shadow. For a mont, he stayed still under the blanket and listened.
There were no footsteps in the hall.
There was no voice outside the door.
There was no strange woman standing over his bed with soup and suspicious enthusiasm.
That counted as a aningful improvent.
Cyrus reached for his phone, squinted at the screen, and saw that it was already a little after seven in the evening.
He stared at the ti.
He had slept through the entire day.
His body had returned to its usual shape while he was unconscious. The shirt that had hung off him like stolen laundry now fit properly again. His limbs were normal. His hair had settled back into a color he could manage without causing imdiate disaster. The fever had loosened its grip enough that his head no longer felt packed with wet cotton.
The apartnt, however, felt warr than he liked.
That was probably the fever’s fault. When his Frostborn body had gone into protection mode, the room had cooled around him on instinct. Now that the worst had passed, the temperature had started drifting back toward sothing normal humans would tolerate. Unfortunately, normal human comfort and Cyrus comfort were not the sa thing.
He sat up slowly.
His body felt heavy, but it no longer felt useless. That was progress.
If he stayed inside through the night, the room would gradually bend back toward the temperature that suited him. The walls and floor had already absorbed enough of his presence that his apartnt held cold better than it should. That was one of the few useful things about living alone. Nobody complained about the chill, nobody asked why the windows fogged at odd tis, and nobody tried to fix the air conditioner when it was not even running.
Cyrus got out of bed.
Even though he had not sweated, he went straight to the bathroom and showered. Sickness made his skin feel wrong, and too much sleep made everything worse. He kept the water barely lukewarm and stood under it until the last of the fever haze cleared.
Afterward, he changed clothes and threw yesterday’s shirt into the washing machine. The drum started turning behind the glass, steady and obedient.
Cyrus stood there for a mont, watching it.
The human world really did have many convenient things.
Laundry was one of them. Hot water was another. Convenience stores, delivery apps, door locks, elevators that mostly worked, and streets full of food all belonged on the list too. If he was hungry, he did not need to hunt, beg, bargain, or wait for permission. He only needed to leave the apartnt, walk to the right block, and trade money for sothing hot.
His stomach gave two quiet but aningful sounds.
Cyrus looked down.
That settled the matter.
He had just paid rent, but he still had enough money on hand to breathe a little easier. Malcolm had told him to rest until he felt better, so he did not need to work tonight. Tomorrow had its own problems waiting, and school would co back soon enough. Even so, one proper al would not ruin him.
A good al might even help him recover.
That made the decision feel almost responsible.
Cyrus accepted that reasoning without resistance.
The evening outside was still bright in the long, stubborn way sumr days could be. The sun had nearly slipped down, but the last amber light clung to the far edge of the sky, catching on the tops of buildings and the windows of parked cars. Grayhaven slled faintly of salt, pavent, and restaurant exhaust.
Cyrus locked the apartnt behind him and headed out.
He felt grateful to Malcolm as he walked. The older man had not argued when Cyrus asked for ti off. He had not demanded details. He had simply told Cyrus to stay ho, drink water, and return only when he could stand upright without looking like a ghost from a cheap horror movie.
That kind of help mattered.
It also made Cyrus uncomfortable if he thought about it too long, so he chose not to think about it.
Instead, he thought about sickness.
People said only fools never got sick. That saying was obviously false. He had gotten sick, and he was not a fool. A fool would still be trapped in the black room, waiting for soone else to decide when he could eat. A fool would not have made it to Grayhaven, found work, paid rent, and learned which convenience-store sandwiches were edible after midnight.
Therefore, the saying had no value.
Cyrus was satisfied with that conclusion.
He kept his school-facing appearance as he walked, bangs low, shoulders unremarkable, expression flat enough to let strangers’ eyes pass over him. The street had plenty of people out for dinner: couples walking toward restaurants, families with takeout bags, students in weekend clothes, and visitors drifting toward the waterfront. No one paid him much attention.
That was how he liked it.
Near one intersection, he passed a woman with her hair tied in a bun. The sight pulled a mory loose.
The masked woman from earlier had called herself Daphne Whitlock.
Cyrus slowed for half a step, then kept walking.
He had known her eyes looked familiar. It was not only the alarming emotion inside them, although that had been morable in a way he wished it were not. The shape of her gaze, the way she focused, the slight pause before speaking, and the voice under the mask all lined up too neatly with soone he had seen in class.
Daphne Whitlock was also the na of his English teacher.
That teacher was the one his classmates talked about most often. It was understandable. She taught carefully, spoke well, dressed like she knew exactly what every room expected from her, and had the kind of looks that made students whisper when they thought adults were not listening. Cyrus had never cared much beyond the fact that her class required him to stay awake more often than he preferred.
Now he had learned a different proverb because of her, or because of soone who looked and sounded far too much like her.
People really could not be judged by appearance.
Still, it could be a coincidence.
Maybe the masked woman was his teacher’s sister. Maybe she had panicked after being asked her na and gave the first na that ca to mind. Maybe Grayhaven contained another woman with the sa na, the sa eyes, the sa voice, the sa teacher-like habit of asking health questions, and the sa unsettling interest in feeding feverish strangers.
Cyrus considered the odds.
Then he decided to stay polite toward reality and keep doubting everything.
He continued down the street.
The food block was busier than he rembered.
A row of small restaurants, food trucks, and window counters filled the narrow stretch near the waterfront, each one throwing its own sll into the air. Grilled at, fried dough, garlic butter, hot oil, sugar, lted cheese, charred peppers, coffee, seafood, and cinnamon fought each other above the sidewalk. People lined up in front of nearly every window. Plastic tables had been pulled into the open area between storefronts, and every bench seed to have at least one person guarding a takeout bag like it was treasure.
The heat here was worse than outside.
Cyrus stopped at the edge of the crowd and looked around.
He had passed this block once before by accident. Back then, his money had been too tight to justify eating here, and stealing food would have created the exact kind of trouble he had crossed the country to avoid. He had walked through, morized too many slls, and left with the kind of hunger that beca personal.
Now he had enough money for dinner.
Not unlimited money. Not the kind of money that invited stupidity. But enough to eat sothing he actually wanted.
That made the entire street feel different.
He walked slowly past the options, trying to make a decision and failing several tis. One stand sold crispy potato bites tossed with garlic, cheese, and bacon. Another had buttered griddle noodles with chicken and vegetables, the kind of food that slled filling from six feet away. A third served fried skewers, chicken, sausage, vegetables, and battered cheese, all lined up in paper trays with sauce on the side.
Cyrus wanted all of it.
That was not realistic.
Then again, he had been sick, had missed breakfast and lunch, and had spent the day being fed soup by a possibly deranged woman who might share a na with his English teacher. Recovery required calories. Emotional recovery required better calories.
He joined the first line.
Then the second.
Then, after giving restraint a fair chance to defend itself, he joined the third.
By the ti he found an open seat at a small tal table near the edge of the crowd, he had three containers in front of him and no regrets worth respecting. Steam rose from the noodles. The potato bites were crisp at the edges, loaded with sauce, cheese, and enough green onion to pretend they had health value. The fried skewers slled like every poor financial decision he had ever wanted to make.
Cyrus picked up a fork.
The first bite of potato was hot enough to make him pause, but he refused to regret it. The outside cracked, the inside was soft, and the sauce hit with garlic, salt, and fat in a way that made his entire body accept being alive again. The noodles ca next, rich and savory, with just enough char from the griddle to make them taste like soone had taken hunger seriously. The skewers were worse for him and possibly better for his soul.
He ate slowly at first.
Then he stopped pretending.
The crowd around him stayed loud, but it faded into the background. Soone laughed near the drink stand. A child complained about onions. A woman argued with a man over which truck had better fries. Paper trays rustled. Ice shifted in plastic cups. A grill hissed sowhere behind him.
Cyrus let all of it exist around him without needing anything from him.
This counted as freedom too.
It was not dramatic freedom, and nobody would write speeches about it. It was food he chose, bought with his own money, eaten at a table no one had assigned to him.
For food this good, he absolutely could not let himself get dragged back.
Eventually, he leaned back, one hand resting over his stomach, full enough that walking sounded like a future problem.
He had just decided to sit a little longer when a familiar voice cut through the noise.
"Cyrus Calder?"
His good mood took damage imdiately.
Cyrus turned.
Audra Sloane stood a few steps away with Gemma Rhodes beside her.
Audra was not in uniform. She wore a fitted white blouse and light blue jeans, simple enough clothes that should not have drawn much attention. On her, of course, they did anyway. Her hair fell neatly over her shoulders, and the evening light caught the side of her face in a way that made several people nearby glance twice before pretending they had not.
Gemma stood behind her, shorter hair framing a more open expression. She looked casual, alert, and curious in the way people beca curious when their friend suddenly called out to a gloomy boy eating alone at a food table.
Audra stepped closer once she confird it was him.
Her gaze dipped briefly to the containers in front of him, then to his face. Cyrus realized too late that he had probably not cleaned his mouth as well as he thought.
"Are you here by yourself?" Audra asked.
"I ca out for dinner," Cyrus said. "I am heading back soon."
For so reason, saying that made Audra’s expression shift.
It was small, but he saw it. A little disappointnt appeared, then disappeared before anyone else would have caught it.
Before he could decide why that mattered, Gemma moved up beside her.
"Is this a friend of yours?" Gemma asked, lowering her voice toward Audra but not enough to keep Cyrus from hearing.
"He is a classmate," Audra said. "I caused him so trouble during that storage-room accident."
Gemma’s face changed with recognition, then confusion. She looked at Cyrus more carefully, trying to match him to a mory that clearly refused to cooperate.
That suited him perfectly.
Cyrus preferred being forgettable.
Gemma gave him an easy smile anyway. "We were about to find a table. Do you want to share? Audra has been saying she still owes you a al as an apology."
"No, thank you," Cyrus said. "I already finished."
The answer ca out politely enough, but Audra’s attention sharpened.
Cyrus stood and gathered his empty containers.
He had no desire to be rude. He also had no desire to sit with Audra Sloane while she tried to turn a minor accident into a al, a debt, a conversation, or whatever else beautiful girls did when they refused to let things end.
"The accident was not that serious," he said, keeping his voice even. "You really do not need to keep worrying about it. I am going ho now, so I will see you at school."
He turned to leave.
Audra moved before he took the second step.
"Wait," she said, pulling a napkin from her bag. "You still have sothing near your mouth."
Cyrus paused.
He looked at the napkin in her hand.
Then he reached back to the table, took one of his own, and wiped his mouth. After that, he dropped the napkin and empty containers into the nearest trash can.
"I already handled it," he said.
He left the food block without looking back.
The sll of fried oil, garlic, and sugar followed him for several steps before the evening air thinned it out.
Behind him, Gemma stared after his retreating back.
She had not expected that.
Most boys did not walk away from Audra like that. They did not refuse a shared table with her so cleanly, ignore a chance to be fussed over, and leave without pausing to check whether she was watching. Even Gemma was used to people responding to the two of them with so form of interest, nervousness, or pride at being noticed.
Cyrus had looked almost relieved to escape.
It was not the exaggerated coldness of soone trying to seem impressive either. He had not perford indifference. He had simply left.
That made the refusal feel worse.
Audra stood silently for a mont, still holding the unused napkin.
Her expression did not change much, but Gemma knew her well enough to see the difference. Audra was not angry exactly. She was not hurt in any obvious way either. She looked thoughtful, which was usually more interesting than either of those things.
There was a small spark under the calm now.
Gemma could guess why.
Audra knew she was beautiful. She did not act vain about it, but she was not stupid. When people noticed her, she noticed them noticing. Cyrus did not fit the pattern. He did not beco nervous, flattered, overeager, or embarrassed. He treated her apology as an inconvenience and her kindness as sothing he needed to step around.
That would bother anyone, and it seed to bother Audra more than she wanted to admit.
Gemma linked her arm loosely through Audra’s and guided her toward another line before the crowd could make the silence more obvious.
They chose a busy stand selling grilled sandwiches and fries. The line moved slowly, giving Gemma too much ti to think and Audra too much ti to pretend she was not thinking.
At last, Gemma leaned a little closer, her voice teasing but genuinely curious.
"Did you do sothing to that boy in the storage room?"
Audra turned her head, her brows drawing together. "Why would you ask that?"
"I am asking because he dodges you like you are personally responsible for a natural disaster," Gemma said. "That kind of reaction usually has a reason."
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