The slam of the heavy glass door behind the last man in black sealed the stifling, grease-filled air inside, a final, suffocating barrier against the brutal Nevada heat.
Frozen by the sticky counter, Harper’s chest heaved, pulling in ragged breaths that tasted of burnt coffee and old frying oil. Numbly, her head lowered to stare at her empty right palm.
There on her pale skin, a harsh, crescent-shaped red mark had bloomed. It was a physical brand, left by the brutal pressure of his rough thumb, the angry curve of skin a perfect match for the silver quarter he had stolen.
A violent wave of humiliation crashed over her, mixing with the cold, shaking adrenaline of a narrow escape. A tremor started in her knees, shooting straight up her spine.
Running from the distant red vinyl booth, Chloe finally reached her, her fingers digging painfully into Harper’s stiff arm.
"What the hell was that?" Chloe hissed, her voice a frantic whisper. "Are you trying to get us killed? You don't just walk up to guys like that, Harper!"
Harper flinched, snapping out of her paralysis to yank her arm away. Curling her right hand into a tight fist, she hid the red mark behind her back as a stiff, unconvincing smile pulled at her lips.
"It was a mistake," Harper lied, her voice hollow in her own ears. "I thought he was someone I knew from New York."
Before Chloe could interrogate her further, the tarnished brass bell above the door clanged, announcing a young man in a faded, distressed motorcycle jacket.
He scanned the dim room. His eyes locked onto Chloe, and a bright, easy smile spread across his face.
The sheer terror on Chloe’s face vanished instantly, replaced by two faint, entirely out-of-character pink spots on her cheeks. She grabbed Harper’s arm again, this time with excited energy, and pulled her toward the boy.
"Harper, this is Leo," Chloe said, her voice suddenly an octave higher. "He's my friend. He's heading to New York for college soon."
Leo stepped forward, politely extending his right hand. His eyes, however, were sharp, immediately noticing the sickly pallor of Harper’s face and the rigid set of her posture.
Though she wanted nothing more than to avoid physical contact, years of ingrained Manhattan etiquette forced her to bring her right hand out from behind her back and slide it into his.
Leo’s eyes immediately dropped to her palm, staring directly at the angry, crescent-shaped welt. A teasing smirk formed on his lips as he raised an eyebrow.
"Rough morning?" Leo joked, his gaze lingering on the crescent-shaped bruise. "Looks like you got on the wrong side of a bad bet."
Harper’s heart slammed against her ribs. Her lungs tightened, her brain scrambling for a lie to shut this down while her face remained a perfect, blank mask.
With her left hand, she reached into her Hermès Birkin, her fingers closing around the smooth, gold-accented tube of her Tom Ford lipstick. She pulled it out, popping the cap off.
"I was swatching colors in the car," Harper said, her voice dripping with bored, lazy arrogance as she held up the vivid, blood-red lipstick. "Dug in my bag for a coin and accidentally scraped my skin. It's just a stain."
To prove it, she boldly pressed the expensive lipstick to her palm, smearing the thick red pigment directly over the swollen skin. The bright cosmetic color perfectly camouflaged the physical bruise.
Leo shrugged, his teasing smile fading. The absurd, expensive excuse was easily accepted from a spoiled Manhattan socialite.
Chloe eagerly looped her arm through Leo’s.
"Let's get out of here," Chloe complained, wrinkling her nose. "This place smells like motor oil and death."
The three of them pushed through the heavy door, stepping back out into the blinding, scorching afternoon sun.
Before pulling open the door of the rusted Mustang, Harper stopped and looked over her shoulder, staring at the empty, gravel-covered space where the massive black SUVs had been parked.
The man’s deep, vibrating voice echoed in her ears.
*In my city, the house always wins.*
The words felt like a physical poison in her blood.
Sliding into the cracked leather backseat, she rolled down the window, letting the boiling desert wind whip her hair across her face. She dug her nails into her thighs, a silent vow forming: she would not let that arrogant bastard walk away with her leverage.
The engine roared, and the car merged onto the interstate. Harper stared at the barren landscape, her mind already calculating the logistics of a second, much more dangerous approach.
###





