She Was Sent To The Kitchen At Her Son’s Party. Then The Owner Spoke.-olive

The service elevator at the Ritz-Carlton penthouse did not move like the guest elevators.

It shook.

It rattled.

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It carried the smell of bleach, melted butter, wet flowers, and hot metal up through the spine of one of the most expensive buildings in the city.

Jessica Chen stood inside it with six servers and one crate of mineral water, wearing a simple black dress and a strand of pearls her late husband had bought her thirty-one years earlier.

The pearls were not flashy.

They had tiny scratches near the clasp.

Jessica liked that about them.

New wealth wanted everything to look untouched.

Real history always left marks.

A young server with a narrow black tie glanced at her dress, then at her face.

He had the gentle nervousness of someone who had already been corrected too many times that evening.

“First time working the penthouse?” he asked.

Jessica almost smiled.

“Something like that,” she said.

He nodded with sympathy.

“Just keep your head down,” he whispered. “And don’t make eye contact with Miss Ashworth unless she talks to you first.”

Jessica turned her head slightly.

“That bad?”

The boy looked toward the elevator doors as if Victoria Ashworth could hear through steel.

“She made the pastry chef cry because the macarons were pink instead of rose gold.”

A girl holding champagne flutes gave a bitter little laugh.

“She made me polish the same glass six times,” she said. “Told me fingerprints were a sign of bad breeding.”

Jessica let that sentence settle.

Bad breeding.

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