He sarcastically promised a million dollars to fix his car, he never expected the kid to actually do it.

Marcus, a high-powered venture capitalist, was late for the most important merger meeting of his career.

When his custom-built luxury sedan died in the middle of a bustling New York intersection, he felt the walls closing in. He was stranded, stressed, and running out of time.

Then, the kid in the tattered hoodie appeared like a ghost. When he asked to fix the car in exchange for food, Marcus laughed—a sharp, cynical bark.

“I’ll give you a million bucks if you can get me moving,” he scoffed, not believing for a second that a street kid could touch the engine of such a high-end vehicle.

The boy didn’t blink. “Open the hood.”

Marcus complied, expecting failure. Instead, he watched, mesmerized, as the boy moved with surgical precision. He didn’t just mess around; he identified a specific electrical short in the ignition coil, bypassed the faulty relay with a makeshift wire, and had the engine purring in under ninety seconds.

Marcus stood frozen. This wasn’t just luck; this was raw, intuitive genius.

“How?” Marcus asked, stunned.

The boy wiped grease on his jeans. “I watch videos. I learn. I have to.”

As Marcus drove away, the million dollars wasn’t just a payment—it was a seed investment. He knew he hadn’t just bought a fix for his car; he had stumbled upon a diamond in the rough. He realized he was looking at the future of automotive engineering, and he couldn’t let talent like that go to waste on the streets.

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