Noble Jewelry Studio was a place meant for light, but Elise Monroe had always been better with shadow. The early morning sun angled through the glass and brick of the old textile mill, lighting up the dust motes over her workbench. Where the sun hit, it landed squarely on the unfinished necklace, a lattice of hammered bronze, twisting in a way that was both elegant and threatening.
Throughout the studio, sunlight and shadows split the concrete, sharp and precise.
Elise liked it that way. Boundaries made sense to her. There was her side of the line, and everything else on the other.
She nudged another bead into place. It was raw quartz, jagged right in the center. Her hands never shook. The setting tool moved as if it already knew what to do. The rotary polisher at the soldering table gave off a steady hum, but it was more background than noise.
Another commission, another day. This necklace would soon belong to a woman who probably hadn't taken a city bus in her life. It would be the highlight of an event where ice sculptures melted before dinner was served. But for now, it was just work metal meeting skin, the push and pull of creation.
Elise tapped the quartz down with her thumb. There was a click, solid and final. Satisfying.
She paused for a second. Her attention went to her battered sketchbook, spread open next to her elbow. The page was full of quick diagrams and streaks from old coffee spills, but the idea was clear. Even before she'd cut the wire, she'd known what she wanted the necklace to look like, and the effect she wanted it to have.
Elise didn't mind being bold. But she respected the risk that came with it.
The sunlight shifted, just a little, and so did her thoughts. Not a dramatic memory, but something quieter, a warm feeling, a memory of hands tougher than hers. Her grandmother's workshop. It had always smelled like beeswax and burnt cotton, buzzing with its own living energy.
Elise remembered being a child, sitting on a little stool next to a vise. Her grandmother had never gone by "glamma" or "Nana" always strictly herself. She'd taken Elise's fingers, placed them on a half-finished ring, and said, "Don't look away. If you flinch, the metal wins."
Even now, the words stayed with her, sharp and true as cut wire.
Elise turned the new necklace in her hands, making sure it balanced right. The chill of the bronze seeped into her palms, and she liked the reminder; it meant that beauty could hurt if you weren't careful. She double-checked the joint, set the necklace down on black velvet, and made a note in her phone: "file joint 7, possible weak spot." After that, she started the studio playlist. The music was minimalist and quiet, but enough to keep her company.
She wiped her hands on her black dress and surveyed her space. Every tool lined up where it was supposed to be pliers organized by size, soldering irons fanned out on their stand. Her coffee mug, half-full and long since gone cold, waited at the edge of the table. Elise took a sip, grimaced, and put it back.
Outside, the city noise pressed against the window, a faint tide of delivery trucks, people, and the start of evening. But inside the studio, the world was hers alone. She liked it that way. Sometimes, she could almost believe nothing existed outside these walls, except the next design and the fading light.
But tonight, she had to deal with people.
She picked up the next piece. She counted the hours until the event, listing what still needed to be done and who she'd have to see. This necklace was going to be the star of the evening, a private preview for buyers and the press. She pictured the glass display cases, camera flashes, and champagne; the quick conversations, and Tyler at her side, making introductions.
He was all charm on the surface, but Elise knew better.
She knew how these things worked. She'd trained herself to handle them.
But it never came easily.
She focused on the next step. It needed precision, a tension wire, platinum, so thin you'd almost miss it, threading through the bronze like a hidden vein. She measured, cut, and let the bit of wire fall to the floor. She'd sweep up later. For now, she fixed the new wire with a drop of flux, hunched over the bench to solder, breathing in the sharp smell of hot metal.
Time passed. She wasn't sure how long. The sun changed from yellow to deep gold, and the world outside turned hazy by the end of the day.
The necklace was getting heavier, each new piece adding actual weight, and something else, a pull she could feel. This was not a piece anyone would overlook.
Elise took a minute to appreciate it.
Then her phone chimed, a single alert. She jerked, the soldering iron clattering against the stand. Muttering under her breath, she checked her screen. The message dissolved her irritation.
Mom, "Wear something with sleeves tonight. The board is old-school. Love you."
She smiled a little. Replied with a thumbs-up. Then she stared at the screen, letting the message fade. The ache in her hands was familiar by now, almost comforting. Maybe her grandmother would approve of the work she'd done.
By six, the skyline looked as if it had been washed with copper and smoke. Elise cleaned her tools, wiped down her bench, and put the finished necklace onto its velvet tray. She locked it in the display case. Even in the dim light, the necklace drew the eye.
She gave herself a moment to rest before the evening events began.
Elise walked over to the tall window, opened it, and leaned out. On the street below, the nightlife was just starting shoes on concrete, laughter from the wine bar. She watched the movement, feeling separated from it.
Part of her wished she could be down there.
A breeze tangled her hair. She shut the window, smoothed the strands back, and looked at her reflection. The face she saw wasn't what people expected from a soon-to-be-famous designer. Her jaw and cheekbones were from her mother; the tired green eyes were all her own.
She tugged her sleeves down, hiding the tattoo on her wrist. Then she headed to the bathroom. Cold water, soap, and the workday faded away.
She checked her reflection. After a few steady breaths, her nerves settled. The necklace would get noticed. It always did. All she had to do was go, remember her sleeves, and not let herself flinch.
She could handle that.
With her hands dry and her dress smoothed, she let the studio fill with dusk. Then she stepped into the corridor, headed for the night and whatever came with it.