Identity

“How many of those did you go through?”

“Including the table bottles, you could round it up to a hundred. The signature Bellini and straight champagne were popular. The Aviations came in a distant third, by my estimates, behind the champagne and beer.”

“Sunglasses or pilots?”

“It’s a drink, Miles.”

On cue, the best man—sans jacket, tie, and waistcoat—came up to the bar.

“How’s it going, Morgan?”

“It’s going great, Trevor. Another round for you and Darcie?”

“You got it. Best party ever. I’ll be back for the drinks. Gotta dance!”

“You know that guy?” Miles asked.

“I do now. He and the groom—that’s Hank, the one out there with the crown of flowers on his head—have been friends since grade school.”

She dumped ice into a flute and a martini glass to chill them, then got out a shaker. “Trevor and Darcie have been an item for about ten months. It’s serious,” she said as she added ice to the shaker.

“An Aviation,” she continued, “or, as one of the two signature cocktails, a Flying High. Gin, lemon juice, maraschino liqueur, and crème de violette.”

As she shook the ingredients, she grabbed a bottle of champagne out of the ice tub. She lifted off the silver stopper, dumped the ice out of the flute.

As Miles watched, she managed to pour the champagne, strain the first drink into the martini glass. She added peach nectar to the champagne and had the drinks on cocktail napkins when Trevor danced back.

“All right!” He dug in his pocket, pulled out a money clip. “Only got twenties left.”

“Don’t worry about it,” Morgan began.

“Nah, you’re worth it.” He stuffed a twenty in the tip jar. “Hey, this your girl?” he asked Miles.

“No.”

“Making a mistake. Best bartender in the universe of bartenders. Plus, hot. Ah, don’t tell Darcie I said that last bit.”

“Lips are sealed,” Morgan assured him. “Fly high, Trevor.”

“Bet your ass!” He took a slug of the Aviation, then carried the drinks off to the dance floor.

“It’s purple. Why is it purple?”

“Violet,” Morgan corrected. “And because of the crème de violette.”

“I get that part, but not why. They’ve got, what, about another fifteen?”

“About.”

“I’ll be back.”

At quarter after one, only staff worked the ballroom while the band finished breaking down. She helped catering secure the alcohol, started to tie up her last bag of empties.

“Catering will haul that out to the bin,” Miles told her, and glanced around. “You’re clear.”

“It’s my first event at the resort, but I can say you guys know how to run one.”

“We’ve got another one in here tomorrow, so we’ll undress the tables and chairs, but leave some.”

“With Loren out, do you need coverage?”

“No. Smaller, less elaborate, second-time-around event. You’re clear,” he said again, then took her arm. “I’ll walk you out.”

“Actually, I’m going to just swing by Après first.”

“It’s closed.”

“I know that, and Nick’s great. He’s thorough and he’s responsible, but he’s also not used to closing, especially on a weekend night. Après is my responsibility, so I’m just going to check.”

With a shrug, he led her through the hallways, around to the lobby, and the archway. When he flicked on the lights, she scanned the room.

Tables, booths, chairs looked clean. Housekeeping hit the floors every morning, the windows every week.

“Satisfied?”

Ignoring him, she walked in, circled the bar.

Clean, backbar tidy, tubs and trays clean and draining, sinks wiped down.

“Why don’t you look tired?” he wondered as she did her check.

“I’m a creature of the night,” she said absently.

“Owl or vampire?”

“Depends on the night, and despite the event, it looks like Après had a good night.”

“I can see the stock.”

He came around the bar himself, got a bottle of Cabernet off the rack. “I’m having a drink.” He glanced at her while he drew the cork. “Are you having a drink? You’re off duty.”

“I … Sure.” She set two red wineglasses on the bar, then fixed a wine keeper on the bottle after he’d poured.

“Booth.” He gestured, walked over, and sat.

When she went over to join him, sat, she let out a sigh. “I do remember how to sit. It’s been awhile.”

“You’re entitled to breaks during an event.”

“Yeah, Tricia and I worked them out.” But it felt damn good to just sit. She sipped the wine, sighed again. “Do you do this a lot? Sit in an empty bar?”

“No. You?”

“Actually, yeah. Not drinking Cab, especially this label, but an empty bar has its own personality. This one’s quiet comfort with a touch of subtle elegance. It’s nice.”

He shouldn’t ask; he didn’t like small talk. But he asked anyway because he wanted to know.

“Why bartending?”

“Well, I get to hang out in bars—and stay sober. I like bars. I like people. You have to when you’re in hospitality.”

“I’m in hospitality. I don’t especially like people.”

She studied him as she drank. Those eyes, she thought, sure knew how to focus in when he wanted to. “That’s crazy. You have to work with people every day.”

“Point made.”

“Well, I like people. Working behind a bar’s a busy place, but it’s usually a cheerful one. People come in because they’re ready to unwind or celebrate. You’ve got your lonelies who just want someone to talk to. That’s what you’re there for. Why do you come in on Friday nights, especially Friday nights when the bar’s going to be crowded, if you don’t like people?”

“Come into a crowded bar for a drink and it’s not likely anyone’s going to try to talk to you. I can get some work done, unwind, and have a glass of wine. Come in when it’s not crowded? Somebody’s going to try to start a conversation. ‘Some weather we’re having,’ ‘How about those Cubs,’ something.”

Aha, she thought. Now she got it.

“You use your phone as a force field.”

He smiled a little. “I use it for work, and yeah, it doubles as a force field. What I wonder is how you got into tending bar, and, according to—was it Trevor?—have risen to the best bartender in the universe of bartenders.”

“Trevor was flying high,” she reminded him.

“I’ve seen you work, and I know why my mother and sister wanted you on that very demanding event tonight.”

“I waited tables in college. Jesus, that’s hard work.”

Whether it was the empty bar, the Cab, or the company, she felt absolutely relaxed.

“It can be rewarding, but the fact is there are types—and a lot of them for various and situational reasons—who’ll take out anything that doesn’t work for them with the meal on the server. I decided I didn’t want to waitress for a living or run a restaurant.”