She refilled the coffee cups at the corner booth, nodding politely as the men ignored her, too wrapped up in a conversation about stocks and something called "mergers" that she couldn't quite follow. Not that she needed to. Their voices alone reminded her of how far removed their world was from hers.
The bell above the diner door chimed.
She didn't look up immediately,she was too busy gathering empty plates. But she felt it. The shift in the room, the way the air seemed to straighten itself, tense almost, as though even the walls recognized power when it entered.
When she finally glanced up, her breath caught.
He walked in with the kind of confidence that didn't need announcing. Broad shoulders, tailored suit, wristwatch that gleamed under the fluorescent lights. Every detail screamed wealth. Authority. Untouchable. Even the three men in the corner booth quieted for a second, exchanging quick looks of recognition.
The newcomer scanned the room like it belonged to him, his gaze cool and detached until it landed on her.
For the briefest moment, Alice swore the world slowed down. His eyes, a piercing shade of gray, locked with hers. It wasn't curiosity. It wasn't kindness. It was... interest. Sharp, unsettling, and impossible to ignore.
She quickly looked away, heat rushing to her cheeks. She wasn't the type to catch a man like that staring especially not that kind of man. Maybe he was looking past her, at the menu board or the clock behind her head. Maybe she was imagining things.
Still, her hands trembled as she set the plates on the counter.
"Excuse me," a deep voice said. Smooth, commanding. The kind of voice that made people move before they realized it.
She turned, nearly knocking over the pot of coffee. He stood there now, close enough for her to see the faint shadow of stubble on his jaw, the clean cut of his suit, the faint trace of something expensive in his cologne.
"Do you serve anything that doesn't taste like it's been sitting in a pot for twelve hours?"
Alice blinked. "Uh we have fresh pie."
A corner of his mouth curved upward,not quite a smile, more like an acknowledgment. "Then I'll have that. And coffee. Fresh, if possible."
She nodded quickly, scribbling on her notepad though she already knew the order by heart. Her pen nearly slipped from her fingers when she glanced up again. He was still watching her, eyes steady, as though he had all the time in the world to study a diner waitress in a faded apron.
Trying to calm the flutter in her chest, she busied herself at the counter. She brewed a fresh pot partly because he'd asked, partly because she suddenly cared whether the coffee was any good. Sliding the steaming cup onto a saucer, she carried it to his booth with what she hoped was a steady hand.
"Here you go," she said, placing it in front of him.
"Thank you..." he glanced at her name tag, "Alice."
The way he said her name made her pulse trip. Too smooth. Too intentional.
"You're welcome," she murmured, retreating a step, but his next words stopped her.
"Sit."
She blinked. "Excuse me?"
"Sit," he repeated, as if it were the most natural request in the world. "Unless you're too busy avoiding me."
Her lips parted, stunned. Customers didn't talk to her like that. They barely noticed her, except when they needed more napkins. She wanted to say no, wanted to remind him she was working but something in his gaze pinned her in place.
"I... I shouldn't. I'm on shift," she finally managed.
"Then I'll wait," he said smoothly, lifting the cup to his lips. His eyes never left hers.
Alice's heart thudded so hard she was sure the entire diner could hear it. She turned quickly, fumbling for her order pad just to give her hands something to do. But even as she served the other tables, she felt the weight of his gaze following her every move.
By the time she brought his pie, her nerves were buzzing. He set his phone aside a sleek, top-of-the-line model and gestured to the seat across from him again.
This time, his voice was lower. Softer. "Just five minutes. Indulge me."
She hesitated. Something told her saying yes would be the start of trouble. But something else the part of her that noticed the faint crinkle at the edge of his eyes when he looked at her wanted to know why a man like him would ask.
Against her better judgment, Alice slid into the booth.
"Good girl," he murmured, leaning back with the kind of ease that only came from power. He studied her for a moment, then said, "Tell me, Alice. Do you always work this late?"
She folded her hands in her lap, trying to ignore the way her pulse raced. "Someone has to pay the bills."
His mouth curved, as though her answer amused him. "Honest. I like that."
He didn't ask about the pie, or the coffee. He didn't even touch them. He just... looked at her, as if trying to read every thought running through her head.
And for the first time in her life, Alice felt like she wasn't invisible.
But she also had the distinct feeling that this man wasn't here for pie
Alice shifted in her seat, feeling his gaze linger on her like a question she didn't know how to answer.
The bell above the door jingled again, and a gust of cold air swept through the diner as two more customers walked in. She jumped a little, suddenly remembering where she was and what she was doing.
"I should... get back to work," she said quickly, pushing back from the booth.
He didn't stop her this time. He only nodded once, that unreadable half smile playing on his lips. "Of course. Thank you for indulging me."
Indulging him. The words sounded strange in her ears. Like she had given him something more than a seat at her table.
She hurried to the counter, eager to busy her hands again, but curiosity pulled her eyes back toward his booth more than once. He didn't touch his pie. Barely touched his coffee. He just sat there, scrolling idly through his phone as if he had all the time in the world.
And when she returned a few minutes later with the bill, the booth was empty.
Only the untouched plate, a full cup of coffee, and a hundred dollar bill left neatly under the saucer remained.
Alice froze.
She looked toward the door, but he was already gone.