She had a career changing interview by 9 the next day ,but here she was; pouring gin for men who had more money than she had blood cells.
She was alone behind the mahogany "Island" the central circular bar that was the heart of the lounge.
Her shift partner had called in sick, leaving her to handle the elite crowd of the city's financial district.
Her feet ached, a dull throb that pulsed in time with the jazz playing overhead, but she kept her back straight.
Then....the heavy oak doors swung open.
The room didn't go silent, but the energy shifted. It was like a predator had walked into a room full of prey.
He didn't look for a table. He walked straight to the Island and took the stool directly opposite where Star was polishing a glass. He sat with a grace that was almost lethal,tailored, dark, and silent.
Star took a breath and stepped forward. She had seen handsome men before, but this man was an architect of beauty and power. He had a jawline that looked carved from granite and eyes the color of a stormy sea,grey, cold, and deep.
His hair was dark, expertly styled but with a single rogue strand falling over his forehead, giving him a touch of human rebellion.
He had the easy allure of a man who'd known too many admirers, whose charm had been answered far too often, even behind closed doors. It showed in the way he moved;smooth, unhurried, dangerously confident.
"What can I offer you, handsome sir?" Star asked.
Her voice was soft, a habit from her childhood. She had a strange, melodic lilt; standard British in its crispness, though her features were undeniably American. It was a contrast that usually made men lean in closer.
The man didn't reply immediately. He didn't even look at the drink menu. His gaze was fixed on her, heavy and analytical, as if he were reading the fine print of her soul.
"A double Macallan 1926. Neat," he said. His voice was a rich baritone that made the fine hairs on Star's arms stand up.
"An expensive taste for a cold Sunday," Star replied, her professional mask firmly in place. "Coming right up."
As she turned to reach for the top shelf bottle, she felt his eyes on her back. It wasn't the usual oily stare she got from the regulars; it was a weight.
"Star," he said.
She froze, the bottle in her hand. She turned back, her heart skipping. "How do you know my name?"
He gestured vaguely to the small silver name tag pinned to her vest, but his eyes never left hers. "A bright name for such a dark room."
Before she could respond, a man hurried out from the back office. It was Mr. Henderson, the lounge manager, a man who usually moved with the slow entitlement of a king. Now, he was sweating, adjusting his tie with shaking hands.
Henderson practically tripped over his own feet to get to the bar. "Adrian!! My apologies, I didn't realize you were coming in tonight. Please, come to the private lounge. This stool is... it's not suitable for someone of your stature."
.
Adrian didn't look at Henderson. He kept his eyes on Star. "I'm perfectly comfortable here, Henderson. The service is... intriguing."
Star poured the amber liquid into a crystal tumbler, her hand steady despite the roar of adrenaline in her veins. She set the drink down on a silk coaster.
"Is there anything else, sir" she asked, intentionally using his title to build a wall between them.
Adrian reached out. He didn't touch her hand, but he picked up the glass, his fingers inches from hers. The heat radiating from him was palpable.
Adrian leaned in closer to the manager, his tone dropping into that smooth, entitled drawl. "I want her, Henderson. Tonight."
Henderson went pale. "Mr. Scott... Adrian... Star is one of my best. But she's... well, she's out of bounds. She doesn't do 'after-hours' with the clients. She's a student, very strict about her rules."
Adrian's smirk only deepened. He pulled a slim leather wallet from his jacket and placed a stack of high denomination bills on the mahogany surface. It was a silent, violent display of wealth.
"Everyone has a price, Henderson. In fact, tell her I'll pay ten times what she earns on this shift just for a conversation in my hotel suite."
Henderson's eyes bulged at the sight of the money. Greed won over professional ethics in a heartbeat.
He moved down hurriedly to the other end of the bar where she was
"Star darling,a minute please"he called her attention
Star, who had been attending to a group of businessmen, wiped her hands on a cloth and walked over, her brow furrowed. "Yes, Mr. Henderson?"
"Star, honey," Henderson whispered, his voice oily. "The gentle man over there is making a very... generous offer. He's a billionaire, Star.
"One night with him could pay off your student loans, your rent, everything. He wants you to accompany him to his hotel. Just for a 'talk.'"
Star felt the blood rush to her face...not from shyness, but from a blistering, white hot rage. She looked past Henderson to Adrian Scott.
He was watching her, swirling his whiskey, looking like a king waiting for his servant to kneel.
"Is that so?" Star said, her voice loud enough for Adrian to hear.
"Well tell Mr billionaire over there "...she said, her British accent sharpening into a blade. "I am a bartender. My job is to serve drinks, not my dignity. He might be able to buy this lounge , but he doesn't have enough zeros in his bank account to buy me."
Adrian's eyes darkened, a flash of genuine surprise crossing his features. "It's just an invitation, Star. Most women would kill for it."
"Then go find one of them," she snapped.
She turned to Henderson, her eyes flashing. "I'm taking my break. Don't ever insult me like that again, or you can find someone else to run this bar alone on a Sunday."
With a sharp turn, Star grabbed her bag and walked out toward the back alley, the heavy door slamming behind her.
The lounge fell into a stunned silence. Henderson turned back to Adrian, wiping sweat from his forehead with a silk handkerchief.
"I told you," Henderson stammered, his voice trembling. "I told you she was different. She's out of bounds. She's the only girl in this city who doesn't care about the money.
Adrian didn't look angry. Instead, a slow, predatory smirk spread across his face. He watched the door she had disappeared through as if he were memorizing the path she took.
"I'll get her," Adrian whispered, more to himself than to the manager. "You'll see.
Henderson sighed, shaking his head as he reached for the abandoned whiskey.
"I know you always get the girls, Adrian. You've got the money, the looks, and the power; but I doubt about this one. Star isn't a girl you 'get.' She's a girl you have to earn... and I don't think you know how to do that."
Adrian stood up, buttoning his jacket with slow, deliberate movements. He looked like a man who had just found a new, favorite game.
"Then I suppose I'll have to learn," Adrian said. He tossed another hundred-dollar bill onto the bar for the drink he barely touched. "
"Since I'm not spending the night with your bartender," Adrian said, his voice returning to that smooth, dangerous drawl, "call my usual."
Henderson nodded, knowing exactly what that meant.
"The blonde?" Henderson asked.
"Yes," Adrian replied, his gaze darkening as he adjusted his cufflinks. "The one with the long legs and the quiet mouth.
Tell her to meet me at the penthouse in twenty minutes. Tell her to wear the lace......and also inform her I'm in a particularly bad mood."
He needed a body to distract him from the one he couldn't have. He needed someone who would whisper his name and follow his every command, someone who wouldn't look at him with the fierce, intelligent fire that had just burned him.
"Consider it done," Henderson muttered, already reaching for his private phone.
Adrian stood up, the power of his presence filling the room one last time. He looked at the door Star had exited through, a cold, predatory smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
"I'll have her, Henderson," Adrian whispered, his eyes glinting with a dark promise. "And when I do, she won't be walking away. She'll be begging me to stay."
He turned and strode out of the lounge. As he stepped onto the sidewalk, the biting, dry air of a bitterly cold night hit him, the frost crystals had dared to say no.
He climbed into the back of his waiting car, the door shutting with a heavy, expensive thud, already counting the hours until he could return to the bar to see Star again.