After Tommy bought drinks for literally everyone in the clubâhis grand "Iâve made it" flex that had the whole place cheeringâand Reyna covered our last round of whiskeys with that knowing smile that said
she knew exactly what kind of night this had been,
he finally called it.
"Iâm done," he announced, swaying so hard he had to grip the bar like it was the last solid thing on Earth. "If I stay any longer, Iâm gonna promise the whole world to this club. Gonna buy everyone cars. Gonna adopt the DJ. Gonnaâ" He blinked at his empty glass like it had stolen the rest of his sentence. "What was I saying?"
"Youâre done," I said, standing and catching him before he went face-first into the counter. "Come on. Time to go home."
"Home. Yes. Good idea. Great idea. Best idea youâve ever had." He tried to walk and immediately proved that his legs had resigned mid-shift. "Whyâs the floor moving?"
"Itâs not. Youâre just drunk."
"Impossibly drunk," he corrected, proud of it. "Legendarily drunk. The kind of drunk they write songs about."
I half-carried, half-dragged him toward the exitâand of course thatâs when Reyna appeared, materializing with the kind of perfect timing that never happens by accident.
"Leaving already?" Her smile was professional, but there was something softer behind it. "The hero doesnât even stay for the victory lap?"
"The heroâs gotta get his drunk friend home before he buys the place out of guilt and tequila."
She laughedâa real one this timeâand pulled a small card from her pocket. Plain white, just a phone number in clean handwriting. No name. No message. Just ten digits.
"For you." She pressed it into my palm. Her fingers lingered a heartbeat longer than they needed to. Warm. Intentional. "Iâm too smart to try anything here. Youâd say no. But laterâwhen youâre not playing babysitter to Mr. Billionaire Hangoverâyouâll think about it. And if you do..." she nodded at the card. "Youâve got the number."
I looked at it. Heavy cardstock. Expensive. The kind of detail that said
she planned this.
"You planned this," I said out loud.
"I plan everything." Her smile tilted, sharp and playful. "Itâs the jobâreading people, anticipating what theyâll do, positioning yourself for the right moment. Youâre interesting, Peter Carter. I want to know more about the guy who drives a Rolls-Royce, tips like money doesnât matter, and knocks out seven guys without breaking a sweat."
"Maybe Iâm boring once you get to know me."
"Maybe," she said. "But I doubt it."
Then she stepped backâprofessional again, distance restored. "Drive safe. Get your friend home. And think about calling me when youâre ready for a conversation that doesnât involve bar fights and hero speeches."
I pocketed the card, still feeling the warmth of her touch against my palm, and helped Tommy outside. Her gaze followed us all the way to the door.
The LA night hit like a wallâhot, heavy, that kind of heat that clings even after the sunâs long gone. Tommy inhaled like he was tasting the smog. Then he looked like he regretted being alive.
"Fresh air is overrated," he muttered.
"Donât throw up on my car."
"No promises."
The Phantom sat where Iâd left it, glowing under the streetlights like a shrine to bad financial decisions. The valet looked relieved to see meâprobably spent the night praying no one keyed a four-hundred-thousand-dollar Rolls.
I got Tommy into the passenger seat. He melted into the leather like a man meeting God. I slid into the driverâs seat, hit the ignition, and that V12 engine purred awake like a wild animal that knew its worth.
Then my watch buzzed.
ARIA:
Reminder setâCall Reyna within 48 hours. Iâve analyzed her behavioral cues and sheâs genuinely interested, not just networking. Also, her numberâs been active for six years. Statistically stable. Green flag.
I stared at the message, then at the card still in my hand. Reyna had planned her moment perfectly.And somehow, I already knew Iâd call.
I glanced at the watch displayâsleek, minimal, showing the reminder with timestamp and ARIAâs analysis that always went way beyond what Iâd asked for.
"ARIA, I didnât ask for a psychological profile."
"You didnât ask me
not
to provide one either. Iâm being helpful. Youâre welcome."
"You set a reminder on my watch."
"Because youâd forget otherwise. Youâre terrible at following up on romantic opportunities when distracted by... other things. Like, for example, your current preoccupation with getting your drunk friend home safely."
She wasnât wrong.
I pulled the card out again, staring at Reynaâs neat handwriting, ten digits that meant possibility, and tucked it into the center console where it wouldnât vanish into the abyss of my life. Maybe Iâd call. Maybe I wouldnât. But ARIA was rightâReyna had been smart. No pressure. No expectation. Just
hereâs my number if you want it.
The Phantom sliced into LA traffic. Tommy immediately passed out, head leaning against the window, soft snoring filling the cabin. He looked peaceful in that way drunk people do when they finally surrender to gravity.
The drive gave me time to think.
Lincoln Club. The celebration. The confrontation with Jack that had ended with seven guys learning precisely how much Iâd changed. Tommyâs loyalty, his friendship, and his ridiculous drunk philosophies about remembering who you were.
The streets blurred pastâfamiliar now, from Lincoln Heights into neighborhoods where wealth bent rules and expectation. I passed my momâs mansion, glancing at the lit windows, wondering if sheâd returned from her shift. I didnât stop.
Tommyâs new place was only a few blocks aheadâclose enough to visit, far enough to feel like his own domain. The neighborhood was a curated vision of wealth: clean, modern architecture, houses that belonged in design magazines, streets that smelled faintly of ambition.
I pulled up to the gateâmatte black metal, automated, the kind of security that costs more than a normal human earns in a lifetimeâand pressed the call button.
"Hello?" Miaâs voice, slightly staticky through the intercom.
"Itâs Peter. Iâve got your boyfriend. Heâs very drunk and very unconscious."
"Oh god." Not annoyed. Not scolding. Just resigned affection. "Gateâs opening. Pull around to the front."
The gate slid open, precise as a luxury watch. I guided the Phantom up the curved driveway. And holy fuck... Tommy had done well.
Three stories of aggressive modern architectureâall sharp angles, clean lines, matte black exterior like someone carved a building from shadow and polished it. Floor-to-ceiling windows glowed with warm interior light. Bold. Deliberate. Unapologetic.
Yes, I have money. Yes, I want you to know it.
Landscaping mirrored the aesthetic: minimal, sculptural, strategic lighting, perfectly manicured patches of grass, carefully placed trees. Nothing accidental. Everything staged.
I eased the Phantom to the front doorâmassive, black, haloed in soft light, a portal to somewhere more interestingâand killed the engine.
The door opened before I even reached it. Mia appeared.
Holy hell, Mia.