"Waiting for the night to owe me something," she says.
The Late Shift
She doesn't chase the spotlight. She knows it will always find her first. lexi sindel
A man in a suit that costs more than a car tries to buy her a drink. She lets him. His eyes trace the ink on her collarbone—a constellation of old regrets and sharper victories. He asks what a girl like her is doing in a place like this. "Waiting for the night to owe me something," she says
She steps out of the back of the town car, the click of her heels a metronome against the wet asphalt. The rain has just stopped, leaving the streets slick as glass, reflecting the fractured lights of closed pawn shops and 24-hour diners. She doesn’t look at the reflection. She becomes it. A man in a suit that costs more