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Sienna
“I’m telling you, Dave is acting strange.” I rolled my eyes at Roxy for the umpteenth time. “Dave isn't acting strange Rox, you don't know him well enough to say that.” I capped my mascara, and picked up my lip liner. “I have a strong feeling he's cheating on you.” Tina's calm voice filtered in from the bathroom, a straightener in hand. “Exactly! And I've said that for over a month.” Roxy's voice thick with exasperation drifted from the closet. She stepped out pointing a perfect manicured finger at me. “How come you're the only one not getting the gist?” “Okay!” I stood up and moved to the closet. “That's enough about my relationship, you guys made me come here to relax, and this is not exactly relaxing now is it?” I looked pointedly at Roxy. “You know what? You're right.” Tina emerged from the bathroom, her natural curls tamed into a disciplined, glossy mane that hit her waist. “We basically dragged her into this, we should give her a break, Roxy.” With a sigh, she huffed a “fine” and walked into the bathroom to change while Tina applied her makeup. When we got to the club, there was a line waiting to get in. I moved to join them but I was dragged to a hidden door beside the building. “What are we doing here, the door is out front.” “That's not our door… tonight we're VIPs.” Roxy beamed walking through the door and we followed. “You can't be serious” “Roxy's friend owns the club.” Talia explained as Roxy handed the bodyguard a card. “Let's have fun tonight.” Roxy said as we ascended the stairs. The bass of the music became clearer the closer we got and by the time we got to another door with yet another bodyguard, the beat was vibrating through my skin, rattling my bones. The door opened to a VIP lounge, with booths taller than Roxy in 6 inch heels, to give privacy to each group. A waitress walked us to our booth. Glass walls overlooked the whole club– stage, dancefloor , DJ booth, everything. The VIP lounge was arranged in a way that every booth was facing the stage. Roxy turned to us “What do you think?” “I like it, it's not the usual.” “It's beautiful.” I smiled sliding into our booth. “I'll get the drinks” Rox called, already striding for the bar at the far end of the lounge. Talia opened her mouth, but Rox threw a look over her shoulder. “Don’t even try. I’ve got your poison memorized.” A smile lit my face but Talia seemed distracted, she was lost in her own thoughts. “What's wrong?” “Nothing” a sigh left her lips. Before I could get another word out, a high voice shrieked “I come bearing drinks.” A laugh escaped Talia. I guess it was nothing after all. “What did you get me?” I looked at her balancing three glasses, condensation already beading in our booths air. She slammed the first one down in front of me… electric blue, fizzing, a lemon wheel riding the rim. “Las Vegas Bomb,” she said, grinning at my raised brow. “It’s trouble, but fun trouble. You’ll need it.” The second glass she slid to Talia. Same impossible blue, same lemon, but no bite when Talia picked it up and sniffed. “Blue Lagoon,” Rox explained. “No hangover, all the pretty. You’re welcome.” Talia rolled her eyes, but she was smiling. Rox kept the last one for herself. Taller than the rest, bluer than all of them, ice clinking like a warning. “And this…” she took a long pull, eyes never leaving mine, “is an AMF. Adios, Motherfucker; starting strong.” “God,” I muttered, eyeing my Bomb. “Are you trying to kill us before we even hit the floor?” Rox just laughed, already half-done with hers. “No, babe. I’m trying to make sure you remember tonight.” —- Half way into the night, I was tipsy dancing in our booth alongside Rox while Talia watched us, amusement lining her features. “You really won't join us?” Roxy asked for the tenth time. When Talia shook her head, Roxy grunted “You're a killjoy” Suddenly, the music cut out and a voice filtered in through the speakers thick with promise. “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a rare treat tonight. A guest performer who cleared his schedule just for us. For you.” “I wonder who that could be.” Talia muttered walking towards the bar for water. “Let's welcome to the stage…” silence rang through the club, anticipation coating the air. “...the healer.” cheers erupted from the crowd and a crease formed between my eyebrows. Who was that? The neon flickered once, then bled to red. Seductive and hungry. A seam split the stage floor and a pole rose from beneath it, locking into place with a quiet click. The spotlight slammed down. From the shadows, a man stepped forward. The cheering turned feral. My heart beat stuttered when I saw that he had on a mask that concealed his face, making him mysterious and more captivating. A slow, sensual music bled from the speakers as he stepped onto the stage and my heart skipped two beats, I know that song... It's Dave's favorite. Thinking about Dave while watching another man about to do some unholy things only made my situation worse. I leaned into Rox to ask "he's not actually going to..." I swallowed Her eye roll could level buildings. "With music like that? What do you think Sienna?” He moved. One second he was walking, the next he was wrapped around that pole like gravity was optional. He spun in the air, effortless and lethal. Like he'd mastered the act of seduction. I picked up a bottle of water, downing it to at least reduce the heat radiating through my body. That didn't help, it only made me sober. My head became clearer by the minute and the closer I look at the man on the stage the more familiar he looked. As the music slowed, the man on stage shifted. It was a small movement–a subconscious roll of his shoulders to settle into the beat; but it sent a jolt of pure, freezing electricity down my spine. I knew that silhouette. I knew the exact breadth of those shoulders. My vision tunneled until the rest of the club was just a blur of red smoke. Another man climbed onto the stage, circling him like a predator. When that stranger’s hand slid to the back of the dancer's head, I didn't just feel jealous; I felt a violent surge of nausea. My lungs refused to expand. An ugly feeling clawed at my inside, bile rose in my throat as curiosity swallowed me whole. My heart was seconds from combusting. Don't be who I'm thinking, I prayed, even as I leaned so far over the booth I nearly fell. Please, let me be wrong. Then he dropped the mask. Time didn't just slow down; it curdled. And when it fell, my heart fell with it.”SiennaIt had been a week since I sat at that long marble table, suffocating under the weight of Marcello’s frost, and a week since I had last seen him.He hadn't returned since he walked out to handle whatever crisis had flared up. Seven days of silence from the man who claimed he owned my schedule. In his absence, the house had settled into a quiet, heavily guarded routine, the armed giants in the corridors remaining as stone-faced and unmoving as ever. Since I’d been stripped of my normal routine and cut off from the life I knew in LA, the empty hours should have driven me insane. But I was grateful for Roxy being with me. The girl always found a way to keep us busy, refusing to let me sit in a corner and spiral over the contract. She was a whirlwind of distraction, inventing tasks out of thin air just to keep our minds from focusing on the armed guards standing right outside our doors.Right now, we were sprawled out on Roxy's bed, the sheets covered in half-empty bowls of popc
SiennaIt had been a week since I sat at that long marble table, suffocating under the weight of Marcello’s frost, and a week since I had last seen him.He hadn't returned since he walked out to handle whatever crisis had flared up. Seven days of silence from the man who claimed he owned my schedule. In his absence, the house had settled into a quiet, heavily guarded routine, the armed giants in the corridors remaining as stone-faced and unmoving as ever. Since I’d been stripped of my normal routine and cut off from the life I knew in LA, the empty hours should have driven me insane. But I was grateful for Roxy being with me. The girl always found a way to keep us busy, refusing to let me sit in a corner and spiral over the contract. She was a whirlwind of distraction, inventing tasks out of thin air just to keep our minds from focusing on the armed guards standing right outside our doors.Right now, we were sprawled out on Roxy's bed, the sheets covered in half-empty bowls of popc
Sienna I sat frozen, my fork hovering uselessly over my half-eaten plate as I stared dumbfounded at the double doors Marcello had just stormed through. I let out a ragged breath I hadn't realized I was holding, my shoulders slumping as the rigid posture I had forced myself into collapsed.What a joke. I looked down at the dress, suddenly feeling ridiculous. I had actually listened to Roxy. I had sat at the vanity, letting her convince me that putting on makeup and dressing up would give me some kind of upper hand. And for what? The man hadn't even blinked. He hadn't acknowledged the effort, he hadn't lingered on the dress, and he certainly hadn't given me the satisfaction of seeing him stumble. Instead, he had sat there looking like a striking, unbothered god in a bold red dress shirt, his dark hair pulled back into a neat man bun, treating me with the exact same detachment he’d probably use to read a manifest. He had just laid down his cold, unyielding rules like a judge handin
MarcelloI stared at the ceiling for hours, watching the shadows shift as the first weak rays of light filtered through the heavy curtains. Sleep never came. My body was heavy with the kind of exhaustion that settled deep into the bone, a consequence of running on pure adrenaline since the ambush. Between handling the fallout, securing the safe house, and sorting out the grim message we had to send back to the Sicilian syndicate to mark our borders, I had managed maybe two hours of actual rest.But the business wasn't what kept me awake. That was the problem.It was pathetic. I was a man who ran an empire, yet I had spent the night restless over a girl who hadn't laid a finger on me. Even after jerking off under the freezing shower spray, the knot of need she left in my gut still refused to loosen.The memory of her standing in my office, her body giving in while her mind fought me, stayed locked behind my eyelids. I hated myself for it. I hated that she had found a way to clog my
MarcelloAn hour after Sienna left the office, I was still sitting behind my desk, trying my best to stay focused on the paperwork stacked in front of me. The dark-covered contract she had signed sat to the side, a completed transaction, but the stack of supply manifests and reports demanding my signature remained untouched. I stared at the lines of text printed on the page, the ink crisp and clear under the desk lamp, but none of it was registering. No matter how hard I tried to force my brain to process the logistics, I couldn't shake her out of my thoughts. She was consuming my head, her presence lingering in the quiet room like a thick fog that wouldn't lift.I shifted in my leather chair, the friction of my tailored trousers against the seat sounding loud in the silence. I flipped the document, trying to read to the next page, hoping a new set of figures would finally ground me.The safe house was quiet, the thick walls built to isolate the outside world, yet the silence insid
SiennaRoxy sat at the edge of the bed, the box of tissues gripped tightly in her hand as she waited patiently for me to stop sniffing. The silence in the room was thick, broken only by the ragged sounds of my breathing and the occasional wet gasp as I fought to keep the tears from spilling over again. My throat felt like it was coated in sand, the phantom weight of Marcello’s hand still burning against my jawline, making my skin flush with a humiliating, lingering heat.When the crying finally subsided into a dull ache in my chest, I wiped the back of my hand across my nose, my shoulders dropping as exhaustion took over.Roxy shifted on the mattress, the springs groaning softly under her weight as she pushed me for answers. The patience in her face was fading, replaced by the need to know what had happened behind those closed office doors."Sienna, come on," she whispered, her fingers digging into the tissue box. "Look at me. You're shaking. What did he say to you?"My mouth opened
Sienna “I can’t do this.”The words came out smaller than I intended. Pathetic, almost.Like all the confidence I had been running on tonight had finally expired and left me stranded backstage in six-inch heels and a dress that could barely qualify as fabric.The crowd outside erupted again, impat
Sienna The cold of the alleyway fueled the fire roaring in my chest. I wiped the back of my hand across my mouth, erasing the last trace of the girl who had spent three years playing house with a monster.“Im in,” my voice sounded like gravel. “I’ll do it.”Roxy’s eyes lit up, a triumphant spark d
Sienna The world didn't just stop; it fractured.The mask hit the stage floor with a hollow thud that echoed louder than the bone-rattling bass. Under the harsh, blood-red spotlights, the "Healer" looked up.It was a face I had kissed every morning for three years. The same jawline I’d traced whil
SiennaThe air in the room vanished entirely, leaving behind a vacuum that smelled faintly of static electricity and impending ruin.With every slow, deliberate step he took, the cheap laminate flooring beneath my bare feet seemed to tilt, warping the axis of my world until the only coordinates tha







