The Waitress Who Answered A Crime Boss In His Secret Language-eirian

The first thing Josephine Miller learned at the Gilded Lily was that rich people hated being seen while they were being cruel.

They wanted their wine poured without the server hearing the insult.

They wanted their plates cleared without the server noticing the hand under the table.

Image

They wanted the luxury of being ugly in private while surrounded by witnesses paid to pretend blindness.

Josie was excellent at pretending.

She smiled at hedge fund men who called her sweetheart.

She carried three trays at once past women who looked at her body before they looked at her face.

She memorized allergies, affairs, anniversaries, and the exact tone required to make a difficult customer feel like the room still belonged to him.

That was why Albert Henderson kept her on the schedule, even though the Gilded Lily usually hired women who looked like the black dress had been designed around them.

Josie did not disappear into the uniform.

She filled it.

She moved through the warm light with red lipstick, pinned hair, steady hands, and the kind of composure that made weaker people want to test it.

Taylor Rossi tested it on a Thursday night.

He entered at ten with three men behind him and silence in front of him.

The conversation in the dining room did not stop all at once.

It thinned.

Forks paused.

Eyes lowered.

People who owned companies suddenly remembered their manners because Taylor Rossi owned fear better than they owned anything.

Albert caught Josie’s elbow near the service station.

“Table nine,” he whispered.

His face had gone damp.

“Pour, take the order, leave.”

Josie glanced toward the velvet-roped alcove.

“It’s another table.”

“It is not another table,” Albert said. “That man could buy this building just to close it.”

Josie took the Bordeaux anyway.

Fear did not pay rent.

She stepped into the alcove with her tray balanced on her palm and greeted the men in the same voice she used for senators, actors, and drunk sons of old money.

Taylor did not answer.

He watched the candle flame instead.

Jordan, the man to his left, watched Josie.

When she leaned to pour, her hip brushed the heavy leather chair because the alcove had been designed for privacy, not space.

The bottle clicked against the glass.

One drop of red wine landed on the white cloth.

Read More