At A Yacht Party, The Barista Became Their Bank President-mdue - Chainityai

At A Yacht Party, The Barista Became Their Bank President-mdue

The martini hit my dress at three in the afternoon, right as the sun slid off the chrome rail and into my eyes.

For one second, all I could smell was gin, lemon peel, and saltwater.

Then I heard Victoria Richardson laugh.

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It was not a big laugh.

It was worse than that.

It was small, practiced, and meant to tell everyone around her that humiliating me did not require effort.

“Oops,” she said, holding the empty glass between two red nails. “I forgot you people don’t know how to stand still around nice things.”

The yacht drifted gently in the Atlantic chop, all white fiberglass, polished teak, chrome fixtures, and quiet money that had been borrowed more than earned.

Soft jazz played from hidden speakers.

A few women near the champagne tower laughed into their flutes.

A man in loafers looked away, pretending the marina was suddenly fascinating.

I stood there with sticky alcohol sliding down my knees and into my sandals, feeling the pale linen of my dress cling to my skin.

I had been invited to Liam’s family yacht party as his girlfriend.

Victoria had introduced me to her friends as “the coffee girl.”

Not my name.

Not Liam’s girlfriend.

The coffee girl.

Eight months earlier, that might have hurt me enough to show.

By then, I had learned that the Richardsons measured people by whatever made them easiest to dismiss.

Mine was Rowan Street Coffee.

I worked there some Saturday mornings because I liked the hiss of the espresso machine, the chalkboard menu, the smell of cinnamon syrup and burnt sugar, and the way regular customers told the truth before nine in the morning.

Rowan Street was also funded through one of my community investment programs, though Liam did not know that part.

He thought I picked up shifts because I needed them.

I let him think that.

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