The sun was setting over the Caribbean, painting the horizon in shades of orange and pink that looked almost fake, like a postcard someone had oversaturated in Photoshop. The cruise ship Ocean Majesty cut through the calm waters with the kind of quiet luxury that only comes when you’re floating on several billion dollars’ worth of engineering.
Margaret Adelaide Thornton—Maggie to her friends, Mrs. Thornton to everyone else—sat at the mahroom bar on Deck 12, her small frame perched on a leather barstool that was probably worth more than her first car. She was dressed impeccably in a cream silk blouse and navy slacks, a string of genuine pearls at her throat, and her white hair styled in soft waves that had required exactly thirty minutes and a patient hairdresser that afternoon.
At 80 years old, Maggie had learned that presentation mattered, even—or especially—when you were about to make a point.
The bartender, a young man named Carlos with a name tag that gleamed under the soft lighting, approached with a professional smile. He had the kind of practiced charm that came from working cruise ships for years, the ability to make every passenger feel like they were the only person in the world.
“Good evening, ma’am. What can I get for you tonight?”Maggie folded her hands on the polished mahogany bar and spoke clearly, her voice still strong despite eight decades of use.“I’ll have a Scotch, please. Single malt if you have it. And Carlos,” she added, reading his name tag, “just two drops of water.”
