Chapter 19 The Last Coffee 2
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Chapter 19: The Last Coffee-2
He shouldn’t be here.
How did he even know where she lived?
“Maya!” he called, like they were old friends meeting by chance on a morning stroll. “Good
morning!”
She hesitated, brows drawing together.
“Dr. Beckett?” Her body tensed. “What are you doing here?”
He smiled-wide, warm, practiced.
“I hope I didn’t scare you,” he said quickly, hands raised in a calming gesture. “I just… wanted to see you before I go.”
“Go?” she echoed.
“I’m leaving tonight,” he said, voice low and slightly breathless, like this conversation mattered deeply. “Director picked me for this year’s outreach program. Humanitarian rotation. I’ll be gone for months – maybe a year. Rural placement. So… we won’t be seeing each other again.” He gave a sheepish shrug. “So… this is goodbye.”
She blinked, unsure what to say.
“I just…” Beckett scratched the back of his neck, playing at humble. “Before I leave, I wanted to ask
–
– one last time. Just coffee. Fifteen minutes. As friends.”
Her lips parted. She didn’t know what to say.
“I know you’re not interested. I get it,” he said quickly. “You’ve got a lot on your plate – your brother, your internship, classes. I’m not trying to pressure you, I promise. I just thought… maybe we could talk. No pressure. Just two people getting coffee. No strings. Closure, maybe?”
He glanced toward the sky, then back at her with a sheepish smile. “Besides, if you’re heading to work… we could go to the café near your office? You won’t be late. I’ll drop you off right after.”
Maya hesitated.
Something about it felt… off.
But his tone was soft. His expression, disarming. And it was daylight. Public. Near her workplace. Her gut whispered no. But she was tired. He was leaving. And fifteen minutes wasn’t a lifetime.
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19 The Last Coffee 2
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And maybe – maybe it was her exhaustion, or the weight of too many sleepless nights, or the fact that she was so used to putting others first that she couldn’t bring herself to say no – but she
nodded.
“Okay,” she said quietly. “Fifteen minutes.”
Beckett’s smile widened. Too much.
“Perfect,” he said, too smoothly. “You won’t regret it.”
He opened the passenger door for her like a gentleman.
As soon as she slid inside, he closed the door gently behind her – too gently.
But when he turned away, his expression changed. This time, there was no softness in it.
His eyes darkened.
His lips curved into something twisted.
Not kind. Not friendly.
Only triumph. And malice.
Because Maya had just made a mistake.
Maya gave a soft shrug, not liking the edge in his voice.
“It’s just an internship.”
“Right.” He smiled, but it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “Just curious. Wouldn’t want to drop you off at the wrong building.”
She nodded again, unease crawling higher up her spine.
Something in the way he said “drop you off” scratched at the edge of her nerves.
She turned to glance out the window. The city passed in soft morning colors – gray buildings, sleepy sidewalks, a few early joggers weaving past storefronts.
This road doesn’t lead to my office.
The thought crept into her mind quietly, like a whisper she didn’t want to hear.
She glanced at the dashboard. No GPS.
Then the mirror.
Then him.
“Um… Dr. Beckett?” she asked, gently. “You said the café near my work, right?”
“Oh, I know a better one,” he said smoothly, his eyes still on the road. “Less crowded. You’ll love it.”
She hesitated.
“Don’t worry,” he added, his voice warm. “We’ll still make it in time. I wouldn’t let you be late, Maya.”
Her name in his mouth felt wrong.
Like something sacred was being handled with bloodied hands.
Something’s wrong.
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Dex Morgan works to elevate each story with clean writing, emotional balance, and thoughtful flow for readers.

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Billionaire's Intern (Maya Thompson)
Dear Author, this novel is amazing, especially chapter 328 the love of brother for her sister. Damm good, well potrait. Keep going best wishes...