Wearing a stolen red gown she 'borrowed' from the back of a sketchy showroom uptown, a pair of heels one size too big, and a diamond necklace that was actually cubic zirconia from a pawn shop in Brooklyn. Her copper-red hair, wild and slightly frizzy from running through the wind, glowed under the chandeliers like fire caught mid-dance.
She didn't belong. She knew it. And still, she walked through the crowd like she owned the place, chin up, hips swaying, eyes smirking at every condescending glance thrown her way.
And that was when she saw him.
Damien Rourke.
The man himself.
Black tuxedo. Sculpted jaw. Eyes like winter storms-gray, sharp, and dangerous. Billionaire. Tech mogul. Heartbreaker. Cold-blooded, scandal-drenched, untouchable. He stood near the bar, speaking to someone in a navy suit, his glass of bourbon swirling lazily in his hand.
Calla didn't hesitate.
She walked straight up to him, heels clicking, stole a flute of champagne from a passing tray, and stopped just two feet from him. The man in the navy suit gave her a once-over-shock, then distaste. Damien turned his gaze on her slowly, like a king annoyed by an interruption. Their eyes locked.
She smiled sweetly.
"Darling," she said loud enough for everyone within a ten-foot radius to hear, "You left my apartment in such a hurry this morning, I didn't get to thank you for breaking the bed."
Gasps.
Choked laughter.
Damien's expression didn't change.
The man in navy turned white.
Calla downed the champagne, placed the empty glass on the bar with a perfect clink, and blew a kiss at Damien's stony face. Then she turned on her heel and walked away, heart racing like a rabbit on cocaine.
She'd made it ten steps before security swarmed.
"Ma'am, we need you to come with us."
She didn't resist. Just flashed them a dazzling, defiant smile.
"Sure. Just don't smudge my lipstick."
As they led her through the crowd, whispers bloomed like wildfire.
Who is she? Did he really sleep with her? Is she a model? An escort?
Outside, the cold slapped her cheeks. She shivered but kept her spine straight as the guards walked her toward the gate.
And that's when she saw it.
A black McLaren parked at the curb. Engine purring. Door open. A man inside.
Damien Rourke.
He looked bored. Annoyed. But definitely waiting.
"Let her go," he said to the guards. "She's coming with me."
Calla blinked.
"Excuse me?"
"Get in the car, Red," he said, voice smooth as sin. "You started a fire. Now you're going to burn in it."
Calla's Unlikely Encounter with Damien Rourke
It was supposed to be a quick gig. Pretend to be a barista, flirt with the unsuspecting billionaire, swipe his phone, and drop it off to the client. Easy money. In and out in under ten minutes.
What Calla didn't expect was that Damien Rourke-yes, the Damien Rourke-would walk into the coffee shop fifteen minutes early, catch her off guard mid-lipstick touch-up, and order a drink that didn't exist on the menu.
"Triple ristretto espresso with oat milk, one-and-a-half pumps of vanilla, cinnamon powder on top," he said smoothly, not even glancing up from his phone.
Calla blinked. "Is that a drink or your password?"
He raised an eyebrow. "Can you make it?"
She leaned on the counter, arms crossed, sass at full throttle. "Sure. If you give me a minute to consult the spellbook in the back."
That made him look up. And when their eyes locked, something sparked-unspoken and immediate. It wasn't attraction. Not right away. It was challenge. She wasn't impressed. He wasn't amused. And neither of them liked being ignored.
"You're not really a barista," he said after a beat.
"You're not really a person," she countered. "More like a corporate myth with a jawline."
He gave a slow, dangerous smirk. "What's your name?"
"Coffee Girl."
"I'm hiring you."
She blinked. "To do what? Brew your invisible coffee?"
He stepped closer, ignoring the growing line of customers behind him. "I need someone unshakable. Someone who doesn't care about my title or my bank account. Someone with teeth." He gave her a deliberate once-over. "You've got bite."
"I've also got a switchblade and a bus pass. What's your point?"
"You're wasted behind a counter," he said simply. "Come work for me."
Calla laughed, loud and shameless. "What, like your PA? Secretary? Emotional support gremlin?"
He slipped a card onto the counter. "Let's just call it... executive chaos management."
She didn't take the card right away. She stared at it. Then stared at him. There was something about him-too polished, too unreadable, like a man who had never heard the word no.
And that made her want to be the one to say it.
Or maybe... say yes, then drive him absolutely insane.
FAST-FORWARD TO THE GALA (Chapter Two Setup)
That card burned in her purse for a week before she called. He answered on the first ring and didn't even sound surprised.
Now, dressed in a stolen gown she absolutely did not borrow from a coat check, Calla had slipped into his charity gala like a drop of red wine on white silk, she was going to introduce herself to Damien Rourke the Calla way.
By turning his very expensive, very proper night into a memory he'd never forget.