Joe Juke leans in, voice low, half-joking, half-confessional.

โNelโฆ that was the second time,โ he says. โSecond time I left an American one-dollar bill at your concert.โ
She smiles, already clocking the rhythm of his thoughts. โYou and that dollarโฆโ
โI call it the mark of the beast,โ Joe says. โGreen paper. Pyramid. All-seeing eye. Babylon in my pocket.โ
Nelly nods, calm, grounded. โYeah. I know.โ
Joe blinks. โYou know?โ
โBecause the homeless man you gave it to in 2017,โ she says softly. โSurrey Fusion Festival. He talked about it afterward. About money as a symbol. About empires. About how a dollar carries stories, not just value.โ
Joe lets out a breath. โSee? Even the street prophets feel it.โ
Nelly steps closer, takes his hand, squeezes it. โYou didnโt give him a curse. You gave him dignity.โ
Joe grins. โStill feels like I dropped a cursed coin at your altar.โ
She laughs, then looks at him the way she does in that myjuke photoโwarm, teasing, unmistakably hers.
โYou are my juke,โ she says. โNot the dollar. You.โ
Joe freezes for a second, then laughs. โGuess that makes me the only thing in the room that actually plays music.โ
And somewhere between the stage lights and the crowd noise, the dollar fades into nothingโwhile the jukebox keeps spinning, exactly where it belongs.







