Chapter 1560: What I can do is take you to the right person
Pampered by my three brothers: the return of the neglected heiress
Hugo ate his noodles as if the heat didnât bother him, even chugging the soup in consecutive gulps. When he finished, Kiara was still only halfway through her cup. Without hesitation, he reached for the bun she had bought for him and started eating it piece by piece.
While chewing, his eyes never left her.
"Arenât you going to ask me why Iâm here?" he asked after a moment.
Kiara glanced up at him, her cup noodles held just below her lips.
"Hmm?" she hummed. "Didnât you just walk by and see a familiar face?"
"Thatâs why youâre not asking?"
"Well, duh?" She shrugged. "Why else would you be here? Do you live nearby?"
"No. I donât have a place of my own. My father practically calls me homeless."
Kiara squinted at him. "And youâre okay with that?"
"Why wouldnât I be? Itâs true," Hugo replied with a shrug. "I leech off my parents."
"..." She pressed her lips together and gave a small nod. "Is that so?"
She returned her focus to her noodles, blowing gently on them. Unlike Hugo, she didnât have a heat-proof tongue, and a burned mouth was not something she wanted to deal with.
Hugo, meanwhile, continued to stare at her with an odd curiosity. He tilted his head one way, then the other.
Thenâ
"Wow!" He laughed suddenly. "So you really think I just go around stealing food from people?"
She glanced at him and whispered, "Isnât that exactly what you did?"
"..." Hugo opened his mouth, then closed it again, momentarily speechless. Of course not. The only food he regularly stole was from his roommate... who happened to be in a coma. That didnât count, right?
As for the rest, he usually asked.
He shook his head, a chuckle escaping him. Kiara furrowed her brows at the sound.
"What?" she asked. "Something funny?"
"Yeah." Hugo leaned back, popping the last piece of bread into his mouth. "Itâs just funny how, even though I ate your food, you still bought me more and didnât make a big deal out of it."
"Itâs not a good thing for you to do, but I didnât have the energy," she mumbled. "Just take it as a thank-you for your brother. Before he switched careers, he helped my company."
"So youâre really not curious about why Iâm here? Or why did I stole your food?"
Kiara was tempted to say no. But looking at him now, a bit of curiosity sparked.
"Why?" she asked.
"Because my sister Penny would kill anyone who did that," Hugo said, making Kiaraâs face twitch. "Actually, sheâd slap my hand away before I even touched her food. Sheâs ruthlessâbut I get it. I wouldnât like it either."
"..." She blinked. "So... thatâs why?"
"Mhm." He nodded. "I think people show their true colors when theyâre hungry and under the tiniest bit of stress."
Heâd seen it happen more than onceâPenny when hungry, Jessa when hungry, even his own mother, who turned into a beast when she was hungry.
Kiara, on the other hand, didnât quite get it. She forced a small smile and nodded politely, even though she found his reasoning a bit ridiculous.
"Trust me. On a normal day, I probably wouldâve been mad," she said. "But Iâm just... exhausted."
Very exhausted. Physically. Emotionally. Mentally.
She was so tired she couldnât even cry. So worn out that getting angry felt like a chore. And caring? That felt like a luxury she couldnât afford. And it wasnât the kind of exhaustion a full nightâs sleep could fix.
She glanced at him again. I guess he wouldnât understand this kind of exhaustion.
Not giving Hugo much more thoughtâfiling him away as just another weird encounterâKiara quietly finished her food. Maybe she should thank Stephen for this increase in patience. If he hadnât been constantly pestering her for months, she wouldnât have stuck around this long.
Hugo cupped his face and kept watching her.
"Please stop staring," she muttered around her last bite, shooting him a weary look. "I just want to eat in peace."
"My uncle gave me a strange request," he said in return. "He asked me to help you. Said youâre a nice lady. I think heâs right."
Her brows furrowed. A quiet realization stirred within her.
"He seemed desperate. And while I donât really share his sentiment... I think heâs right," Hugo continued, pointing at her. "Look at you. Itâs only been a few days, but youâve lost weight. And you still have a fever."
Her brow furrowed even more. Some of his words set off alarm bells.
"How did youâ"
"If you looked in a mirror, youâd know," he cut in. "Your face is flushed. Looks like itâs burning up."
Instinctively, Kiara touched her cheek with the back of her hand.
"Tsk tsk." Hugo shook his head. "Do you really think your friend is innocent?"
This time, her response was immediate. "Yes. Cassy is innocent."
He didnât need to press furtherâher eyes said it all. Steadfast belief.
"She is innocent," Kiara whispered. "Before she got arrested, she was planning to start over. Sheâd just broken off an engagement. And besides, I grew up with her. Weâre not blood sisters, but she is my sister."
The more she spoke, the hotter her eyes burned. Hugo studied her face, then gave a quiet nod.
"The case is just too complicated. No one wants to touch it because they know how messy itâll be," she continued, her voice tight with emotion. "And I canât even blame them. But theyâre going after the wrong person."
Hugo shrugged and smacked his lips. "Finish your food."
"Hmm?"
"Iâm a soldier. I canât help. But I know someone who mightâor might not."
He stood up, knocking lightly on the table.
"I told my uncle Iâd see what I could do. And what I can do is take you to the right person because whether I believe your friend is innocent or not will not change anything."
Kiara blinked up at him. "Where are we going?"
He smiled and said, "Birthday party."