
Forgiven but Choosing Self
Chapter 2
The neon sign of Eclipse cast a crimson glow across the wet pavement, its letters flickering like a dying heartbeat. I stood before the upscale bar's entrance, clutching my purse with trembling fingers. Inside lay my only hope—a job that would keep the medical bills at bay, keep my mother's treatments flowing.
Three days had passed since Jameson's dismissal. Three days of watching my savings dwindle to nothing. The check he'd thrown at me still sat uncashed in my wallet, a paper monument to my pride. I'd rather starve than touch his money.
The bar's interior was all black marble and gold accents, crystal chandeliers casting prisms of light across leather booths filled with the city's elite. My simple black dress—the same one I'd worn home from the mansion—felt shabby among the designer gowns and tailored suits.
"You must be the new girl," the manager said, barely glancing up from his tablet. "Table service. Keep the drinks flowing, smile pretty, and don't cause trouble."
I nodded, accepting the small serving tray with hands that had once worn diamond bracelets. The irony wasn't lost on me—from kept woman to cocktail waitress in less than a week.
The first few hours passed uneventfully. I served overpriced whiskey to business executives, champagne to socialites, my face a mask of professional pleasantness. But as the night wore on, I noticed the stares. The whispered conversations that stopped when I approached.
Then Marcus Whitfield, heir to a shipping fortune, raised his voice just loud enough to carry across the VIP section.
"Well, well. Isn't that Jameson Hoffman's discarded pet?" His words sliced through the ambient jazz music like broken glass. "Heard Cora Schmidt came back from Europe. Poor little substitute finally got replaced."
The conversations around him died. Every eye in the section turned to me, predatory and amused. My tray trembled in my hands as heat flooded my cheeks.
"Marcus, you're terrible," laughed Victoria Sterling, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "The poor dear probably thought she meant something to him."
"Three years of playing house," another voice chimed in. "Must be quite the adjustment, going from penthouse to... this."
Marcus leaned back in his booth, swirling his bourbon with theatrical flair. "Tell me, sweetheart, did you really think he'd choose you over his first love? A nobody from nowhere over Cora Schmidt?"
The words hit like physical blows. I forced my spine straight, my voice steady. "Can I get you gentlemen anything else?"
"Actually, yes." Marcus's smile turned cruel. "Get on your knees and serve our drinks properly. After all, that's what you're used to, isn't it? Being on your knees for rich men?"
Laughter erupted around the table. My face burned with humiliation, but my mother's face flashed in my mind—pale and weak in her hospital bed. I needed this job. I needed the money.
Slowly, I sank to my knees on the marble floor, the cold seeping through my dress. My hands shook as I reached for the first glass, the laughter growing louder, more vicious.
"Look how well-trained she is," someone sneered. "Jameson certainly knew how to break them in."
Tears blurred my vision as I crawled between their chairs, serving drinks while they hurled insults like daggers. Each comment about my "proper place" and "knowing my station" felt like another piece of my soul being stripped away.
Then, through the haze of humiliation, I heard a voice—quiet but carrying an unmistakable authority.
"Gentlemen."
The laughter died instantly. I looked up from my position on the floor to see a man in an impeccably tailored charcoal suit standing at the edge of our section. He was tall, with dark hair and eyes that held a coldness I'd never seen, even in Jameson's cruelest moments.
"I believe there's been a misunderstanding," the stranger continued, his voice never rising above conversational level yet somehow commanding the attention of everyone present. "You see, I've just purchased this establishment for the evening."
Marcus sputtered, "What? You can't just—"
"The transaction is complete." The man pulled out his phone, showing a screen I couldn't see but that made Marcus's face go pale. "Which means you're all trespassing on my property. I suggest you leave. Now."
The authority in his voice was absolute. One by one, the patrons who had been laughing at my degradation gathered their belongings and filed out, their earlier bravado evaporating like morning mist.
When the section was empty, the stranger approached me. I was still on my knees, frozen in shock and shame.
"Please," he said, extending his hand. "Let me help you up."
I stared at his outstretched hand—strong, unmarked by calluses, but somehow different from the hands that had owned me for three years. There was an invitation in his gesture, not a command.
Slowly, I placed my trembling fingers in his palm and let him pull me to my feet.
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