âWhat did he do to her?â Claire thought, not for the first time. âWhat did he actually do?â
The Four Seasons Garden building was part of it, obviously. You didnât give someone a hundred-million-dollar gift and leave no impression. But Claire had watched Sophie date wealthy men before, or rather, watch them try to date her. Money alone had never moved the needle. Sophie had turned down Ferraris and Patek Philippes and penthouse invitations from men whose net worth dwarfed most of the city. She wasnât a woman who could be bought.
So it wasnât the building. Not entirely.
It was something else, something in the way Stan carried himself, or the way he looked at Sophie, or the way heâd walked into a hostile crowd and asked for her Snapchat like it was the most natural thing in the world. Something Claire couldnât quite name and couldnât quite argue against.
She exhaled slowly and picked up her phone from the counter.
"Fine," she said. "I give up. But if he breaks your heart, I reserve the right to say I told you so."
"Deal," Sophie said, and went back to washing the dishes.
Meanwhile, The Four Seasons Garden buildingâs private dining floor was warm, softly lit, and filled with the quiet murmur of expensive conversations happening at carefully spaced tables. Stan and Maya settled into a table near the center of the room, a good spot, with a view of the city skyline through floor-to-ceiling windows and enough distance from the nearest diners to talk freely.
Theyâd barely unfolded their napkins when the atmosphere behind them shifted.
A large group was being seated at the adjacent table, twelve, maybe fifteen people, arranging themselves with the noisy, self-important energy of an entourage that existed primarily to make one person feel important.
Stan didnât recognize any of them.
Then the crowd parted slightly, and the person at its center came into view.
Vivian Reeves.
She was dressed differently tonight, something dark and structured, probably worth more than the table they were sitting at, and she moved through her entourage with the proprietary ease of a queen moving through her court. Every head at the table turned to track her as she sat. Every voice adjusted its volume to accommodate hers.
Stan watched the whole performance through his peripheral vision and quietly returned his attention to the menu.
âOf course sheâs here. Of course.â
The universe, it seemed, had developed a personal interest in making sure Stan Harrison and Vivian Reeves occupied the same square footage as often as possible.
The group behind them wasted no time launching into the particular brand of aggressive flattery that surrounds people with money and influence.
"Sister Reeves, I heard youâre working at an entertainment company now? In Velaris City?"
Vivianâs voice carried easily across the gap between tables, not because she was being loud, but because she had the particular diction of someone who had never in her life needed to raise her voice to be heard.
"Thatâs right. Iâm managing one of the branch offices at Star Entertainment Company."
"Star Entertainment? The Star Entertainment?"
"No way, thatâs one of the biggest entertainment conglomerates in the world."
"I heard theyâre comparable to Netflix. Is that true?"
Vivianâs lips curved into a smile that managed to be simultaneously modest and deeply self-satisfied.
"Itâs true. Weâre one of the top tier companies in the global entertainment industry. I oversee talent development at the Velaris branch, scouting promising individuals, managing their training pipelines, building their public profiles."
"Do you actually have celebrities working under you?"
"Several." She said it the way someone might confirm they owned several pairs of shoes, casually, as if the number were too small to be interesting but worth mentioning nonetheless.
"Iâve been actively scouting new talent recently, in fact. Looking for the right faces, the right potential."
The flattery doubled in intensity. A dozen voices tripped over each other in their eagerness to align themselves with Vivianâs orbit.
"Sister Reeves, you have to let me know if there are any openingsâ"
"Iâd love to work under you after graduationâ"
"If you ever need an assistant, Iâm available starting immediatelyâ"
Vivian absorbed it all with the practiced grace of someone who had been receiving this particular brand of worship since birth. She was in her element, the center of a circle, the sun around which lesser bodies gratefully orbited.
Maya, sitting across from Stan, raised an eyebrow. Despite herself, she looked genuinely impressed.
"Star Entertainment is no joke," she said quietly, leaning across the table. "Theyâre one of the most powerful media companies in the country. Having access to their talent pipeline at her age, thatâs serious influence."
Stan said nothing. He was staring at the logo on a business card one of Vivianâs companions had set on the table beside an untouched glass of wine.
âStar Entertainment Company.â
The name echoed in his mind, and for a moment he couldnât place why it felt so familiar. Then the memory surfaced, clear, precise, unmistakable.
Yesterday. The rain. The binding notification.
âBinding successful. Reward: 30% of Star Entertainment Company shares.â
Star Entertainment huh?
Stan Harrison owned thirty percent of the company Vivian Reeves was currently bragging about managing a branch office of.
He almost choked on his water.
Vivian, as if sensing his attention, or perhaps simply unable to resist the opportunity to twist a knife, turned in her chair and fixed him with a cold, pointed stare.
"Star Entertainment Company," she said, enunciating each word with deliberate clarity, "is one of the most prestigious entertainment conglomerates on the planet. Comparable to Netflix, HBO, the very top of the industry."
She paused, letting the weight of the names settle.
"Someone like you has probably never even heard of it. Have you?"
Her smile was thin, sharp, and designed to cut.
"You couldnât get through the front door of a company like this in your entire lifetime. Not as an employee. Not as an intern. Not even as a visitor."