Pregnant Waitress Faced The Viper And Exposed The Hidden Lockbox-eirian

The first thing Hayley noticed about table one was the silence around it.

The rest of Carmine Room hummed with forks, low voices, and the soft clink of glasses, but the raised alcove near the back held its own weather.

Servers crossed the dining room with their shoulders tight whenever they passed it.

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The manager, Richard, had warned her not to make too much eye contact, not to joke, and not to ask any question twice.

Hayley had almost laughed.

At thirty-two weeks pregnant, with swollen feet and a baby grinding one heel beneath her ribs, she had very little terror left to spare for rich people at linen tables.

Her fear was already occupied by rent.

It was occupied by the landlord’s notices taped to her apartment door, the electric bill folded in her purse, and the breast pump she kept putting in and out of an online cart because the price made her chest hurt.

Richard caught her at the kitchen line with a crystal pitcher in both hands and panic shining on his forehead.

“Table one,” he said.

Hayley looked toward the swinging doors.

“The table everybody whispers about?”

“Please,” Richard said, which was not an answer but sounded like one.

Hayley adjusted the apron that barely tied beneath her belly and took the tray.

Spite could carry a woman farther than good shoes.

The woman waiting in the alcove was Serafina.

Everyone in the restaurant knew her name, though nobody said it loudly.

She was dressed in charcoal cashmere and black silk, hair pulled into a perfect knot, hands arranged on the table as if even her fingers had been trained to intimidate.

“Good evening,” Hayley said.

Serafina did not answer.

She let the silence stretch, and Hayley understood, with the dull clarity that came from dealing with nurses, landlords, and men who vanished, that the silence was supposed to make her apologize.

Hayley stood there and shifted her weight from one foot to the other.

The baby kicked.

“Sparkling or still?” she asked.

Serafina raised her eyes slowly.

They were dark and hard, and they moved from Hayley’s face to her belly with deliberate contempt.

“I asked for an experienced server,” she said, each word polished and cold, “not a maternity ward escapee.”

Richard went white by the wine station.

Hayley placed the water glass on the table and kept her breathing even.

“Julian called out,” she said, “and unless you want Richard sweating directly into your truffles, you have me.”

The bodyguard near the alcove stopped looking at the entrance and started looking at Hayley.

Serafina’s lips barely moved.

“Do you know who I am?”

Hayley poured the sparkling water.

“I know you’re table one.”

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