LOGINSienna
I tore my gaze away from him immediately, my fingers tightening around the pole. Focus. Focus on the routine. Not the man sitting upstairs looking like sin wrapped in a tailored suit. The music pulsed through the room as Roxy spun around the pole beside me effortlessly, completely unaware that my nervous system was currently malfunctioning. I forced myself to move. To climb. To breathe. But every few seconds, my eyes betrayed me. They kept drifting back toward that booth. And every single time, he was already watching me. Not looking around the room. Not distracted by the women surrounding him. Just watching me with those cold, unreadable eyes like he was trying to pull something out of me. It was unsettling. Heat crawled beneath my skin as I slid down the pole smoothly before transitioning toward the silk again. The crowd blurred into noise around me, but his presence stayed sharp. Heavy and impossible to ignore. I looked away quickly, annoyed with myself. What the hell was wrong with me? I didn’t even know this man. But every time our eyes met, my body reacted before my brain could stop it. And that was dangerous. —--- The performance ended, but my body still hummed with adrenaline. Even backstage, with the music muffled behind thick walls and the bright stage lights no longer burning against my skin, I could still feel the rush crawling beneath my veins. My chest rose and fell heavily as I grabbed a towel off a nearby chair, dabbing at the thin layer of sweat covering my neck. “See?” Roxy grinned, already reaching for a bottle of water. “Nobody died.” I shot her a look before taking the bottle from her hand. “That’s debatable.” She laughed while I twisted the cap open, taking a long sip. The cold-eyed man flashed through my mind again. I frowned into the bottle. Why the hell did I keep thinking about him? It wasn't even like he had done anything. He had just sat there the entire performance looking like human intimidation wrapped in a designer suit. No smile, no reaction. Just those cold eyes following me every single time I accidentally looked his way. And somehow, that was worse. “You're thinking about the booth guy again,” Roxy sang. I choked on my water. “I am not.” “You literally have the exact same face you had on stage every time you looked upstairs.” “I looked upstairs like twice.” “Six times.” My jaw dropped. “You were counting?” “I notice everything,” she said proudly. “That’s actually concerning.” “It’s a gift.” “It’s psychological damage.” Roxy ignored me completely and reached for a thick envelope sitting on the vanity beside the mirror. “Anyway,” she said dramatically, waving it in the air, “your emotional support money has arrived.” I blinked. “My what?” She shoved the envelope into my chest. I opened it casually at first, still distracted. Then my eyes widened. “Oh.” There was a lot of cash inside. Like… A lot. I stared at it for another second before looking back up at her. “For one night?” Roxy looked offended. “For one shift.” My mouth opened slightly. Then closed. Then opened again. “People make this much from dancing?” “People make more than this from dancing,” she corrected. “Especially when rich men start getting emotionally attached to women with daddy issues and good thigh strength.” I snorted despite myself before looking back down at the money. The strange thing was, it didn’t even make me feel guilty. It made me feel… capable. Iindependent. Like maybe my entire world hadn’t actually ended tonight. Like maybe Dave leaving destruction behind him didn’t automatically mean I had to stay destroyed too. The thought settled quietly in my chest. Roxy must’ve noticed the shift in my expression because her face softened slightly. “Feels good, doesn’t it?” I looked down at the envelope again before nodding once. “Yeah,” I admitted quietly. “It does.” Before she could respond, Madame Lilith appeared beside us seemingly out of nowhere. I genuinely had no idea how that woman moved in heels without making a sound. “Vesper.” I looked up immediately. Her sharp red lips curved slightly. “You’re needed downstairs.” My brows furrowed. “Downstairs?” Not upstairs. Not a VIP room. Downstairs? Something about that word immediately made my stomach tighten. Roxy noticed it too because her teasing expression disappeared almost instantly. Lilith adjusted the sleeve of her black dress calmly. “Basement level.” Basement. Okay, somehow that sounded significantly worse. I glanced at Roxy. She raised both hands immediately. “Don’t look at me. I’ve never been called down there before.” That did absolutely nothing to comfort me. “What’s in the basement?” I asked carefully. Lilith smiled. Which somehow felt more unsettling than if she hadn’t smiled at all. “Follow me.” That was not an answer. But unfortunately, my survival instincts had apparently clocked out for the night, because I followed her anyway. The further we walked, the quieter things became. The loud music upstairs faded into a distant vibration beneath my feet while the lighting grew dimmer with every hallway we passed through. Black walls, dark marble floors, soft golden lights built into the ceiling. Everything down here felt colder. Private. My heels clicked against the floor as nervousness slowly twisted tighter in my stomach. Who the hell would be asking for me after one shift? And why did it have to happen in a basement like the beginning of a crime documentary? Lilith finally stopped in front of a large black door at the end of the hallway. She turned toward me calmly. “Go inside.” I stared at her. “That’s it? You’re not coming with me?” “No.” Wonderful. Absolutely wonderful. My anxiety was now fully moisturized and thriving. Lilith opened the door anyway. The room beyond it was completely dark. I hesitated. Every horror movie instinct in my body told me this was a terrible idea. But before I could embarrass myself by backing out, Lilith gently pushed me forward. The door shut behind me. And just like that, I was alone. The darkness swallowed everything. I could barely even hear myself breathe. For a few long seconds, nothing happened. Then— The lights came on. I stumbled slightly, caught off guard by the sudden brightness. And when my eyes adjusted, there he was. The man from upstairs. The cold-eyed stranger who had watched me all night like I was the only person in the room. He sat sprawled lazily against a dark leather chair, one arm resting against the armrest, his expensive black suit somehow making him look even more dangerous instead of civilized. His gaze locked onto mine instantly. Heavy and unmoving. My pulse tripped over itself. Oh shit.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
SiennaMarcello’s hand under my chin for another heartbeat. Then his gaze began to travel, dark eyes sliding down the line of my throat, over the thin cotton stretched across my chest, and lower still until they settled squarely between my thighs. He stared shamelessly at the wet patch darkening the fabric, a slow, wicked smile curved his mouth. He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to. The gleam in his eyes said he could smell my surrender and was savoring every second of it.Only when he had his fill did his fingers finally release my jaw. The absence of his touch left me reeling, as if the floor had vanished beneath me.My head was spun so violently that the expensive decorations lining the office walls seemed to blur into long, dark shadows. The metallic scent of blood and the heavy, intoxicating pull of his cedarwood cologne still coated the back of my throat, making it difficult to breathe. Every single pulse point in my body was throbbing, a chaotic rhythm that made my skin feel
SiennaI stood there looking completely dumbfounded at him. My lips parted, but for a second, no sound came out. My brain flatlined. The words he had just spoken hung in the cool air of the office, turning into something thick and suffocating. The walls of the massive room felt like they were actively closing in on me, shrinking the space until I was pinned against the floorboards under the unyielding weight of his shadow."You're joking, right?" My voice sounded thin, hollow, and utterly desperate in the quiet room. I forced a weak, breathy laugh, my eyes scanning every inch of his face, searching for any crack in the armor, any twitch of his jaw, any sign that this was a sick, twisted game meant to scare me into compliance. "You've got to be joking."I waited for one of his rare smiles; that brief, mocking tilt of his lips that usually signaled he was messing with my head. I desperately needed him to laugh, to tell me I was an idiot for believing him. But nothing changed. The ar
MarcelloSienna’s eyes snapped toward the heavy door behind her once more.Her shoulders went rigid under her top. Her chin dropped just a fraction. A physical acknowledgment of the reality she was trapped in. Then she seemed to remember the heavy mechanical snap from a few minutes ago. The sound of the deadbolt sliding home when my hand went under the desk.There was no way out. No back exit. No Roxy to hide behind. Just the two of us in a sealed room.She turned her head back to face me. Her chest heaved. The movement was fast and erratic, a frantic rhythm against her collarbones. I stood still, watching the pulse point in her throat throb against her skin. She closed her eyes. She squeezed them shut, holding them like that for three long beats. She was fighting herself. Forcing the hysteria back down into her stomach before it choked her.When she finally opened her eyes, the wild panic was gone. Not completely. But it had hardened into something else. Defiance. Her hands dug i
MarcelloI watched with deep satisfaction as the realization hit her like a physical punch straight to the gut. The sudden change in her posture was instantaneous, her whole body freezing as the weight of my words anchored her to the floorboards. I kept my gaze locked onto her face, watching closely with a dark sense of amusement as her eyes widened to the size of saucers, her pupils dilating in shock. It was a beautiful sight. Her brain was working at a sprint, connecting the dots bit by bit, piecing together every event that had happened since we met. The shattered glass from the alleyway, the silent, armed men guarding the doors, the casual talk of execution in my office, and the size of this safe house. The confusion was fading, replaced by a cold terror that made her skin go pale under the dim light.My eyes moved slowly along the contours of her face with so much intensity it felt like a physical touch. I tracked the curve of her jaw, the slight tremble in her bottom lip, a
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
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 filtere







