The clinking of crystal glasses and the soft hum of violins filled the ballroom. Gowns swept across the marble floor, every shimmer and jewel reflecting the golden chandeliers. The gala was alive with laughter, champagne, and the quiet arrogance of New York’s wealthiest.
Amara Hayes moved between them like a shadow. A white serving tray balanced on her arm, her shoes pinching, her throat dry. She kept her gaze down, letting the glittering crowd blur. She didn’t belong here, and she knew it.
She passed a table where a pair of women draped in designer gowns paused their conversation to glance at her. One smirked, nudging the other. Amara heard the whisper—probably borrowed that uniform. She gripped the tray tighter, jaw aching, and kept walking.
“Careful,” another server muttered as he brushed past. “Tonight’s worth more than your paycheck.”
As if she needed the reminder. Her father’s debts loomed like a noose, every cent she earned swallowed by bills and survival.
Amara steadied herself, adjusted her tray, and glanced toward the dais at the far end of the hall. That was where the power gathered—the real reason everyone was here.
And that was when she saw him.
Xander Romano.
He stood apart, even in the crowd. Tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in black with a suit that looked like it had been cut from shadow itself. His storm-gray eyes scanned the room with a kind of sharp stillness, as though nothing escaped him. The empire he’d built was whispered about in every corner of New York—his ruthlessness, his wealth, his rise from betrayal.
Amara’s steps faltered. Their eyes locked across the ballroom.
His gaze pinned her like she was prey. Cold. Measuring.
The air fled her lungs. She looked down quickly, heat rushing to her cheeks. Just a server, she reminded herself. Invisible. But her pulse betrayed her, beating loud enough she feared the whole room could hear.
“Eyes up, darling,” a woman’s voice purred nearby.
Amara glanced over and found herself staring at Vanessa Lancaster. Blonde, elegant, every inch polished to perfection. She leaned casually on the arm of another billionaire, but her sharp blue eyes flicked over Amara with disdain.
Vanessa’s lips curled. “Careful with that tray. Wouldn’t want to ruin anyone’s evening.”
Laughter bubbled around her.
Amara clenched her teeth, pressing forward, but her hand trembled as she poured champagne into a waiting glass. She could feel Vanessa’s gaze lingering, predatory, amused.
“Honestly,” Vanessa whispered loudly enough for her circle to hear, “they’ll let anyone in these days. Even the help.”
The group chuckled. Amara bit her lip until she tasted iron.
She pushed on, weaving through the guests, wishing the minutes to pass faster. Her shift was nearly over. Just a little longer.
But fate had other plans.
At the far end of the room, a man turned abruptly, brushing into her side. Her tray tipped.
The glass of red wine she balanced at the edge tumbled—slow, inevitable—before splashing across the polished floor.
A hush fell over the nearby tables. Heads turned. Conversations faltered.
Amara’s heart crashed against her ribs.
And when she looked up, she realized the spill hadn’t just splattered on the marble. A dark stain spread across the sleeve of a man’s suit jacket.
Not just any man.
Xander Romano.
Silence swallowed the ballroom.
He turned slowly, his gaze dropping to the stain, then rising to her face. His expression didn’t change—not anger, not surprise. Just that same cold, unreadable stare that made her knees weaken.
Behind him, Vanessa’s laughter rang out like silver bells. “Oh, dear. How clumsy.”
Heat burned Amara’s cheeks, humiliation flooding her veins.
She opened her mouth to stammer an apology, but the words stuck in her throat. Xander’s eyes were fixed on her, and for one terrifying second, she thought he’d say something, call for security, end her right there.
But he didn’t.
He just looked at her. Deep, unblinking, as though memorizing every line of her face.
And then he turned away, dismissing her without a word.
Laughter and whispers erupted around her.
Amara wanted to disappear. To vanish into the floor with the spi
lled wine.
But she couldn’t. Not yet. Not when the night had just begun.