A Tired Server Sat Beside A Dangerous Man, And Everything Changed-thuyhien

The crystal chandelier above table 12 had needed cleaning for weeks.

I knew because I had stared at it every time I crossed from the kitchen doors to the private dining room, balancing plates hot enough to sting through the towel wrapped around my wrist.

That night, the lowest tier carried a faint gray ring of dust.

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It bothered me more than it should have.

Maybe because everything at Giovanni’s was supposed to look perfect.

The wineglasses were polished until the stems flashed under the lights.

The white linen was pressed until it had knife-sharp corners.

The leather menus smelled faintly of oil and old money.

Only the people carrying the trays were allowed to come apart quietly.

My name was Lily, and by 8:47 p.m., I had already worked six hours at Giovanni’s after working a morning shift at a coffee shop and a lunch shift at a medical office filing room.

My hair was pulled back so tight my temples throbbed.

My black flats had been resoled with glue because buying new shoes meant choosing between shoes and groceries.

The glue had not held.

Every step made the left shoe flap just enough to rub my heel raw.

The room smelled like lemon polish, aged wine, garlic butter, and cologne that had probably been chosen by someone who owned more than one watch.

I remember all of it because fear makes the smallest details bright.

People think a dangerous moment announces itself with thunder.

Mine arrived with a sparkling water pitcher in my hand.

“Table 7 needs water,” Marcus muttered as he pushed through the kitchen doors with plates stacked up his forearms. “And 12 just sat down. VIP section.”

Marcus was twenty-one, always sweating, always joking, always one bad tip away from quitting.

He did not joke then.

At Giovanni’s, the VIP section was not just a better table.

It was a back room behind frosted glass panels etched with grapevines, where men sat with their backs to walls and the owner himself sometimes carried the wine.

I had been in that room twice in eight months.

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