A Waitress Answered His Russian Insults, And Chicago Went Quiet-habe

The billionaire thought Russian made him untouchable.

He had used it that way in hotel lobbies, elevators, private clubs, and restaurants where the staff smiled because their rent depended on it.

At the Meridian in Chicago, he used it on a waitress named Briana Ellison.

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The room smelled of seared butter, lemon peel, and cold white wine, and every sound in it seemed expensive.

Crystal glasses rang softly under the chandeliers.

Silverware scraped against plates with the kind of quiet that wealthy rooms mistake for manners.

Briana stood beside table twelve with her notepad open in her left hand and her black apron pressed flat against her skirt.

Gregory Holt leaned back in the center seat like he owned the windows, the pianist, the white tablecloth, and everyone moving between them.

He lifted his wineglass, smiled toward the two people with him, and spoke in Russian.

“Does this one even know where she is, or did they drag her straight out of the gutter?”

The words landed without landing, at least to him.

He expected the usual thing.

A server smiling because she did not understand.

A room pretending not to hear.

A cruel man getting to feel clever for free.

Briana did not blink.

“Good evening, sir,” she said in English. “Welcome to the Meridian. Can I start you with—”

“Oh,” Holt said, cutting her off with a grin. “It talks.”

Philip Townsend, his associate, laughed once.

It was not a full laugh.

It was a little surrender, the kind a man gives when he knows the room has gone wrong but does not want to be the first person to stand up.

Nadia Petrov, Holt’s assistant, stared down at her menu.

Her fingers rested too tightly against the leather cover.

Holt turned back toward Briana and continued in Russian.

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