Rain tapped against the diner windows like impatient fingers. The neon sign buzzed faintly overhead, casting a sickly red glow on the cracked tiles. Chloe's hands, wrapped around a chipped coffee mug, were trembling, not from the cold but from exhaustion.
She hadn't slept in two days. Her mother's medication had run out three nights ago. And the rent was overdue by a week. Again.
Her sneakers stuck slightly to the greasy floor as she moved behind the counter. The smell of burnt coffee and fryer oil clung to her clothes, her skin, her hair. Her back ached from the double shift, but she couldn't afford to leave early not when this week's tips were barely enough to cover the electric bill.
"Chloe," barked her manager from the kitchen, "Customer on table six. Move."
She forced a smile onto her face and tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear. She looked older than twenty-two. Life had worn her down early. No college. No safety net. Just her mother
Paralyzed from a stroke, her body frozen in time but her eyes still sharp with sadness and an endless string of minimum wage jobs that never lasted long enough.
Table six was a man in a suit too expensive for this part of the city. His fingers drummed against the menu, arrogant and slow. He didn't look up when she approached.
"What'll it be?" she asked, pen poised.
He glanced at her, gave her a slow once-over, then smirked. "You take tips in cash, or… other ways?"
Chloe blinked. "Excuse me?"
He leaned in, breath sour with liquor and power. "I'm just saying, you could make more in an hour with me than you do here all week."
Her grip on the pen tightened. Behind her eyes, she saw her mother's face, pale, silent, waiting for medicine they couldn't afford. She forced her jaw to stay still.
"Order something," she said flatly, "or leave."
He laughed. Loud. Ugly. "Don't be stupid, sweetheart. Women like you aren't made for real work."
The mug in her hand slipped. Coffee splashed across the table, right into his lap.
A second of silence. Then he stood, flinging the cup aside. "You stupid bitch!"
The slap never came. Her manager stormed over, apologized profusely to the man, and turned to her with fire in his eyes.
"You're done, Chloe. Out. Now."
She didn't argue. Just pulled off the apron, threw it on the counter, and walked out into the rain.
Her sneakers were soaked by the time she reached the bus stop. The streets blurred under neon lights. Her fingers ached from the cold, but she didn't cry. She couldn't afford the luxury.
Her phone buzzed, a reminder from the pharmacy.
Prescription ready: $146.32.
She had twelve dollars in her wallet.
Chloe sat down on the cold bench and finally let herself exhale. She'd promised her mom she'd fix everything. Now she couldn't even buy her seizure meds.
She stared at her reflection in the bus shelter window. Hollow cheeks. Dark circles. Hair tied in a messy bun. Her shirt still smelled like grease. She looked like a girl holding on by a thread and that thread was fraying.
Across the street, a flickering sign caught her eye:
Horizon Staffing Agency — Work Today, Paid Today.
It wasn't much. But it was something.
She crossed the street without thinking, ducking under the broken awning as lightning split the sky behind her.
The office smelled like stale perfume and toner ink. A woman sat behind a white desk, her lipstick a perfect, bloody red. She looked up as Chloe entered wet, desperate, clutching her purse like it held her life.
"Looking for work?" the woman asked smoothly.
Chloe nodded. "Anything. Please."
The woman's eyes flicked over her assessing, almost hungry. Then she smiled, slow and secret.
"Hmm. Most jobs are booked today. But…" She opened a drawer and pulled out a sleek black envelope with a gold embossed crest, an old world symbol that looked like a serpent coiled around a rose.
"What's that?" Chloe asked, wary.
"A private client. Extremely wealthy. Very… selective. He only hires through us. You'd go tonight. No experience necessary. And the pay is"… the woman leaned forward "significant."
Chloe hesitated. "What kind of job is it?"
The woman tilted her head. "He likes companionship. Someone to talk to. Someone to… listen."
Chloe's heart pounded. "So it's… sex work?"
The woman's red lips curled. "Not quite. He doesn't want your body. Not in the way you're thinking. He wants something deeper."
The words sent a strange chill through her.
"He will explain," the woman said, and slipped the card into her hand.
The address was embossed in gold. No name. No phone number. Just a time: Midnight.
Chloe stared at it. The paper felt heavy. Luxurious. The gold shimmered in the fluorescent light. Her fingers trembled slightly as she turned it over, hoping for more information but the back was blank.
"Why me?" she asked quietly. "You just met me."
The woman's smile deepened. "Because he asked for someone like you."
Like me?
Chloe opened her mouth to question it but the woman was already typing again, disinterested. The conversation was over.
She walked out into the night, clutching the black envelope against her chest. The rain had slowed, but the air was still heavy. Electric.
She looked up at the sky, gray, churning, almost alive. Thunder rolled in the distance. Somewhere behind the clouds, the moon was watching.
Midnight was four hours away.
And something deep inside her whispered:
This is the moment your life changes forever.