“Next!"
Kaylee stepped forward, resume clutched in her glove-covered hands. The café owner glanced at her file, then at her.
“You play piano?" he asked, eyebrows raised.
“I used to."
“What happened?"
She hesitated. “An injury. But I can bus tables. Wash dishes. Clean."
He leaned back, flipping the page. “What's this about aggravated assault?"
Her jaw tightened. “It was self-defense. I served my sentence."
He grunted. “I'm sorry. We just can't—"
“I don't need benefits. I'll work double shifts. Just give me a chance."
He sighed. “Look, even if I wanted to, insurance won't cover a felony case on staff. Try somewhere without liability."
“Thanks," she muttered, turning away.
---
The next place was worse.
A sleek music academy with polished floors and grand pianos lined like soldiers.
The receptionist gave her a bright smile—until she saw the name on Kaylee's ID.
“Wait… Are you the pianist from the news? The parricide case?"
Kaylee bristled. “You make it sound like a musical."
“I mean—no offense! Just… you're kind of infamous."
“I came to apply as a piano tutor."
“Right. Um. I think we're full."
“Your website says you're hiring."
The receptionist offered a weak smile. “I'll forward your file."
“You won't."
The smile faded.
---
By sunset, Kaylee had visited eight places. Rejected at all.
One even slammed the door before she spoke.
She wandered into a dingy jazz bar, half-desperate, lungs full of cigarette haze and desperation.
“Can I audition?" she asked.
The bartender eyed her hands. “You play?"
“Chopin. Liszt. Whatever you want."
He snorted. “This isn't a conservatory, sweetheart. Play something people can dance to."
She moved to the upright piano near the stage, flexing her stiff fingers.
Pain flared immediately.
She started anyway—halting, broken chords, the melody from *Nocturne in C-sharp minor* gasping through her ruined joints. Halfway through, her hands gave out.
Silence.
A few patrons clapped politely.
The bartender approached. “You've got soul. But soul doesn't pay fines if the city yanks my license. Sorry."
---
Rain chased her back onto the street.
Kaylee stood under a marquee that blinked *Help Wanted*—then flickered out.
She laughed bitterly.
“You think this is funny?" a voice asked.
She turned. A wiry man huddled in a doorway, soaked to the bone. Homeless.
He nodded to the sign. “You laugh like someone who just hit rock bottom."
“I'm getting familiar with it."
He pulled a crumpled sandwich from his coat. “Want half?"
Kaylee hesitated, then took it. “Thanks."
“Name's Troy."
“Kaylee."
He stared. “Wait. Like, *the* Kaylee?"
She didn't answer.
“Damn. You're real."
She sighed. “Unfortunately."
---
She curled up in a bus station bench again, wrapping her coat tighter.
Her phone buzzed—barely holding a charge. She'd set a news alert for job postings.
Instead, her screen lit up with:
> *Kaylee Hart spotted panhandling near Meridian East.*
> *Sources say Wolfe Holdings has blacklisted her from employment.*
> *Once a prodigy, now a pariah.*
Her breath caught.
She opened the comments.
“Crazy b*tch should've stayed locked up."
“Why would any business hire a murderer?"
“Clarence Wolfe is a saint for not pressing charges."
She dropped the phone, heart hammering.
---
The next morning, she marched into a diner with fire in her steps.
The manager barely looked up. “What now?"
“You posted a job ad."
“Filled it yesterday."
“I saw the new girl leave crying."
He blinked. “How'd you—"
“I'm not here to beg. Just tell me—why's every door already shut before I knock?"
He hesitated.
“Is it Wolfe?" she pressed. “Did he warn you?"
The manager exhaled. “Lady, I don't know what you did to that guy, but yeah—he's got reach. Insurance, suppliers, online reviews… If he whispers your name, the whole city ducks."
“Why?" she demanded.
“Because he's rich. And pissed."
---
She slammed into the public library restroom, staring at herself in the mirror.
Her eyes were sunken, feral.
She tore off the gloves.
Her fingers were pale, scarred, one knuckle permanently crooked. She flexed them. Pain lanced up her forearm.
“I should've let him burn," she muttered.
Her phone buzzed again. Another alert.
> *Private prison whistleblower claims Wolfe Holdings funds city blacklists.*
Her blood ran cold.
She clicked the link.
The article was half-buried under noise—but the accusation was there: Wolfe's legal team submitted “anonymous safety concerns" to businesses tied to parolees, resulting in blanket employment bans.
It was Clarence.
He hadn't just exiled her—he was choking every option she had left.
She stepped into the rain and whispered, “Game on."
---
She found a payphone. Slid coins in.
The number from the postcard was burned into her brain.
It rang once.
Then: “Wolfe Holdings. This is Jordan Mara."
Kaylee's lips curled. “Tell Clarence I want to meet."
A pause.
“Name?"
“She'll know."
---
A black car arrived by sunset.
She climbed in, silent.
Jordan Mara looked her over. Polished suit, rehearsed smile. A shadow behind every word.
“Ms. Hart. I'm sorry for the rough start. Clarence hoped to handle things more discreetly."
She scoffed. “He lures me with a postcard, poisons every job, and calls that discreet?"
Mara smirked. “He prefers elegant solutions. You're… complicated."
“I want a meeting."
He nodded. “He expected that. He's ready."
“Good. Because I'm done playing polite."
Jordan raised an eyebrow. “Just remember—Clarence Wolfe doesn't lose."
Kaylee leaned back. “Neither do I."
---
They drove through city glass and steel, past fortune and filth, to the edge of Wolfe Tower.
As they pulled into the underground garage, Kaylee whispered, “You know, he used to say music was truth."
Jordan glanced at her. “And now?"
She smiled coldly. “Now I play vengeance."