Font Size
15px

Chapter 3 Beth’s Burgers

Beth’s Burgers was already buzzing with activity by 8 a.m. The sizzling of at on the grill blended with the chatter of custors waiting in line, their voices creating a symphony of morning chaos. I flipped a patty with a practiced ease, the spatula a natural extension of my hand.

One perk of having superpowers was possessing top-notch bodily coordination. At least, that was my case. It was like my brain and muscles were constantly synced, no lag, no hesitation. It made flipping burgers almost… fun? Well, maybe not fun, but it was easy. In fact, most physical stuff ca easier to than it did for regular people. If there was one thing I didn’t hate about being “special,” it was this: always fit, always healthy.

As I stacked a fresh burger onto a bun and slid it onto the counter, the next custor stepped forward. But before I could greet them, I spotted soone cutting through the line like they owned the place.

Blond hair, smug grin, designer jacket. My stomach sank as he stopped right in front of .

Chadwick Hamilton.

I froze for half a second, but forced myself to keep working. If he recognized from last night, I was screwed.

“So,” he started, his voice loud enough to draw attention, “you quit school to master the art of flipping burgers?”

My jaw tightened, but I didn’t look at him. If I ignored him, maybe he’d get bored and leave. Fat chance. Chad wasn’t the type to let things go.

I kept my voice steady. “Can I take your order?”

He leaned over the counter, too close for comfort, his grin widening. “What’s the special today? Humble pie?”

"Dude... we're eighteen and technically adults... Can we quit the childish stuff?"

A couple of custors chuckled. My grip on the spatula tightened. I wanted to snap back, but that would only make things worse.

Chad tilted his head, mock curiosity in his eyes. “What’s it like, Nick? Going from the Academy’s biggest slacker to a burger-flipping dropout? Guess so of us were just born for diocrity.”

I didn’t flinch. I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction.

“Order sothing, or get out of the way,” I said, keeping my tone even.

His grin faltered, just a little, but he recovered quickly. “Relax, Caldwell. Just here to check in on an old classmate. Glad to see you’ve found your true calling.”

He turned and walked away, leaving a trail of snickers in his wake. I kept my eyes on the grill, flipping patties like nothing had happened, but inside, I was boiling.

Chad didn’t know how close he’d co to eating his words, literally. It took everything I had not to phase his stupid smug face through the floor.

The manager didn’t even look in the eye when he called over. “Nick, take the trash out.”

I raised an eyebrow. “That’s usually an afternoon thing.”

He shrugged, already walking away. “Just do it.”

Sothing about the way he avoided looking at made my gut twist, but I grabbed the bags and headed for the back door.

The alley was quiet, except for the sound of the scattering rats by the nearby dumpster. I’d barely stepped outside before I saw them. Chad, leaning casually against the wall with that damn smug grin, and two of his goons—muscle-bound idiots I vaguely rembered from the football team.

My grip on the trash bags tightened.

“Nick,” Chad said, his voice dripping with fake charm. “So glad you could join us.”

Before I could respond, the two brutes grabbed , each one locking an arm. The trash bags fell to the ground as they dragged deeper into the alley.

“Really, Chad?” I muttered, but my heart was pounding.

He stepped forward, cracking his knuckles like so cartoon villain. “You shouldn’t have looked at my girl that way.”

“What girl?” I asked, genuinely confused.

His fist slamd into my kidney, and pain shot up my side. “Don’t play dumb!”

Another punch, this ti to my gut, doubling over. “I’m glad you dropped out, Caldwell,” he sneered. “Saves the trouble of humiliating you every day at school.”

The punches kept coming, and I gritted my teeth, swallowing down the urge to lash out.

I could phase through them. I could drop all three of them into the ground and leave them stuck up to their necks. I could…

But I didn’t.

Using my powers in public was a risk I couldn’t afford. If soone saw—or worse, if Chad figured it out—it wouldn’t just be a beating anymore. It’d be a witch hunt. Chad’s dad was a powerful man, with political ambitions that stretched beyond Markend. If I made this personal, it wouldn’t end here.

Instead, I bided my ti, letting the hits land and pretending I was just another scrawny dropout.

But that didn’t an I couldn’t fight back another way.

I let out a pained chuckle, wincing as I straightened up. “I wonder if dear old Dad knows his golden boy is out here slumming it in alleys. Isn’t he running for mayor next year?” I paused, tilting my head mockingly. “Then again… maybe you aren’t his son after all?”

Chad’s face twisted, the smug grin vanishing in an instant. “What did you just say?”

Bingo.

“Co on, Chad,” I said, forcing a smirk despite the throbbing in my ribs. “You really think he’d risk his precious reputation for you? I an, look at yourself.”

His fist ca flying at my face, but this ti, I braced myself, turning my head just enough to minimize the impact. Blood trickled from my lip, but I knew I had him.

“You son of a—” he started, but one of his lackeys interrupted.

“Chad, man, we should go. If soone sees us…”

I could see the gears turning in Chad’s head. He wanted to keep going, but he also knew his friend was right. With a final glare, he stepped back, spitting on the ground near my feet.

“This isn’t over, Caldwell.”

The goons let go of my arms, and the three of them walked away, leaving slumped against the alley wall.

I wiped the blood from my lip and laughed quietly to myself. “Yeah, Chad. It’s never over with you, is it?”

Once I was sure they were gone, I stood up, brushed myself off, and went back inside.

Ti to finish my shift.

The manager marched up to , his face already twisted with that familiar mix of disdain and fake professionalism. I knew what was coming before he even opened his mouth.

“Nick—”

“I quit,” I interrupted, pulling off my apron and flinging it straight at his smug face.

The fabric smacked him square on the nose, but before he could say anything else, I threw a punch.

My fist connected with his jaw, and he crumpled like a sack of overcooked fries. The sound of his body hitting the floor was oddly satisfying.

I didn’t waste ti. Grabbing him by the collar, I dragged his unconscious form to the back door and dumped him right where Chad and his goons had left . It felt poetic, in a way.

Turning back inside, I glanced at the counter. No one else was around. Chad’s little scene had cleared the place out. Perfect. I walked over to the register, opened it up, and grabbed all the cash inside. The bills and coins felt weighty in my pocket, a tangible reminder of how much this place owed .

Next stop: the kitchen.

I grabbed so plastic bags and started filling them with burgers, buns, condints—anything that wasn’t bolted down. If I were leaving, I wasn’t leaving empty-handed. The fridge at ho was going to be full for weeks.

Vindictive? Yeah, maybe. But screw it. I was underage, overworked, and underpaid, and they’d treated like garbage the entire ti I’d been here. If anyone deserved to get ripped off, it was them.

With the bags in hand, I walked to the front door. I flipped the sign from “Open” to “Closed” and locked the door behind .

“Beth’s Burgers is out of service,” I muttered to myself, stepping out onto the street.

I didn’t look back.

I stord down the street, the plastic bags in my hands swinging like pendulums. My heart was pounding, not from exertion, but from the seething anger bubbling inside .

Five years. I’d been clean for five years since my powers woke up inside . No flashy displays, no reckless heroics, nothing to draw attention. Just training. Quiet, careful training for the day I’d finally need these abilities for real.

Turns out, that day had co.

The Hamiltons. My first heist proved sothing important: I could do this. I’d kept my head down and stuck to rules I thought mattered, but screw the rules. Chad made this personal, and I couldn’t let it slide.

Chad had been a great motivator.

I was going back.

Not because I needed the money—well, okay, partly because I needed the money—but because this ti, it was personal. I’d barely scratched the surface the first ti I visited. This ti, I wasn’t going to hold back.

Their bedroom. That’s where I’d start this ti. If there was anything truly valuable, it would be there. Jewelry, safes, maybe even blackmail material if I got lucky.

I wasn’t stupid. Well, it was arguable. I knew this was reckless, maybe even suicidal. The Hamiltons weren’t just rich—they were connected. If I got caught, it wouldn’t end with sitting in a jail cell.

But the anger didn’t care about consequences.

By the ti I got back ho, my head was clear enough to focus on practical things, like shoving stolen burgers into the freezer. The satisfying thunk of the freezer door shutting was like sealing away a bit of my frustration.

Next, I grabbed my duffel bag and started packing. The familiar bonnet mask went in first, followed by a hoodie, jeans, a plain shirt, and my latest addition: a small retractable shovel I swiped from the neighbor’s garden. No plan was perfect, and digging through so dirt might co in handy if things went sideways. For example, burying evidence.

I’d taken the bus to Hamiltons’ estate, using the ti to rehearse the plan in my head. I didn’t have any grand strategies, just a straightforward approach: get in, grab sothing valuable, and get out before anyone realized I was there.

The forest surrounding their property felt oddly familiar, almost comforting. I’d spent countless nights training in places just like this. Learning to phase through trees without snagging my clothes. Dropping into the ground and holding myself there to avoid detection. Climbing walls and using my powers to cheat gravity. It was a brutal process back then, full of accidents and mishaps, but now? Now it was second nature.

I found a secluded spot near a large tree and stashed my duffel bag in the tree hollow. With my retractable shovel, I dug a hole for my “old criminal uniform” from the hoodie, jeans, a basic T-shirt, and the sa old bonnet mask. As for my current clothes, I'm wearing a new set of 'work clothes' and even padded my shoes to create the illusion that I was a different person. I gave myself a quick once-over, making sure I was ready.

Back when my powers first manifested, I was a walking accident. I’d phase through my clothes without aning to and end up stuck, half-naked, in the weirdest places. I couldn’t control how long I’d stay intangible, either. More than once, I’d phase into the ground and panic, thinking I’d fall straight through to the Earth’s core.

Mom’s face flashed in my mind. Her face red with frustration, tears streaming as she drowned herself in alcohol. She called it my “affliction,” like I’d caught so kind of disease instead of gaining the one thing that made unique.

Shaking off the mory, I focused on the present. A quick stretch loosened my muscles, and I took a mont to steady my breathing. My powers didn’t have any flashy visual tells, which made them perfect for a job like this.

I approached the estate’s wall, keeping low. The polished stone was cold and imposing, but it didn’t matter. I let my power hum through , and the world shifted as I phased through the wall like a ghost.

On the other side, I imdiately scanned my surroundings. The manicured garden was empty, just as I’d hoped. Moving quickly, I ran toward the side of the house and launched myself up the wall. The second-floor balcony wasn’t far, and parkour was second nature to after all the years I’d spent training. My hands found their grip easily, and I hauled myself over the railing.

The bedroom was ahead. The Hamiltons’ sanctum. I crept toward it, moving silently as I phased through the glass door.

Inside, I paused, my senses on high alert. The room was lavish, with rich carpets, an ornate bed, and furniture that scread we have too much money. It was everything I’d expected and more.

Now ca the hard part: finding the safe or any important bits like money or jewelry.

You are reading Unheroic Life of a Certain Cape Chapter 3 Beth’s Burgers on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Immortal Paladin cover
Same author

Immortal Paladin

Alfir ·Action

Ihadfinallydoneit—achievedtheultimatePaladinbuild.Maxedstats,impenetrablearmor,andsomanyresistancesthatdeathitselfhadgivenuponme.Iwasanunkillableta...

Elven Invasion cover
Similar genre

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.