“I have a reservation,” Maya said calmly, placing her phone on the counter.
The confirmation email was clear:
Sterling Grand Hotel – Penthouse Suite
Guest: Maya Richardson
The manager barely glanced at it.
“Photoshopped,” he scoffed. “Anyone can fake an email.”
The clerk typed quickly, then froze.
“There is a Maya Richardson in the system,” she said slowly. “But… this doesn’t make sense.”
“What doesn’t?” Maya asked.
“Well,” the clerk hesitated, lowering her voice, “the real Maya Richardson would look… different.”
The manager leaned forward.
“Let me be clear,” he said. “This is a luxury hotel. CEOs. Diplomats. Celebrities. Not people who look like they just walked in from a bus stop.”
Around them, guests began to watch.
A couple in evening wear whispered.
A man in a tailored suit stopped his call.
A young woman near the lounge discreetly raised her phone and went live.
“This is wild,” she whispered. “I think I’m watching straight-up discrimination at a five-star hotel.”
Viewers climbed by the second.
⸻
Maya checked her watch.
11:52 PM.
Eight minutes before a video call with Tokyo.
Eight minutes before closing a deal worth hundreds of millions.
“I don’t need your opinion,” Maya said evenly. “I need my room.”
The manager laughed.
“I’ve worked hospitality for years. I can spot a fraud instantly. The clothes. The bag. The attitude. You don’t belong here.”
The clerk added, “Should we call security?”
“Absolutely,” he said. “And maybe the police.”
The word police echoed in the lobby.
Maya bent down, picked up her card from the floor, and slipped it back into her bag.
“Have you ever been insulted in a place you owned?” she asked quietly.
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