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The bass thumped through the walls like a second heartbeat, the kind that never let you forget you were alive—even when you wished you could forget. I leaned against the polished black bar, polishing the same glass for the third time, watching the crowd pulse under the spinning disco ball. Neon green, electric blue, blood-red colors slicing through the haze of smoke and perfume.
This was my kingdom. Or my cage. Either way, it paid the bills.
My name is Asher. Twenty-four years old, and the only thing standing between my family and the street. 11 years ago, everything shattered. One night my father came home from his late shift at the warehouse, kissed my mother on the forehead, rubbed Nathan's hair and told me I was the man of the house now.
He never made it to his bed. A single bullet to the back of the head in the alley behind our building, assassins, the police called it.
No witnesses, no motive, just another unsolved file in a city that didn’t care about men like us. The company he worked for called it “random street violence.” They sent flowers and a one-time check that barely covered the funeral.
3 years later, Mom got sick, The doctors say it’s stress induced Cardiomyopathy. Pills, hospital visits, specialists. Each one costs more than I make in a month at any normal job. And Kai—my 11-year-old brother—is in boarding school at Kings Academy upstate.
I lied to get him in, forged paperwork that said our uncle was sponsoring him. The truth? I’m sponsoring him. Every dime I earn here keeps him in that clean uniform, away from the streets that swallowed Dad. He sends me drawings every Sunday: stick-figure families smiling under crayon suns.
I cry in the shower so no one hears.
So yeah. I smile pretty, flirt harder, and sell nights to men who can afford to forget their own problems for a few hours.
Tonight the club was packed—Wall Street types, tech bros, a few politicians who thought the dim lights hid their faces. I wore the usual: tight black shirt unbuttoned just enough, dark jeans that left nothing to the imagination, a smile that said I was available but never desperate.
That's when he walked in.
The man in the black tuxedo.
He didn’t belong with the rest of them. The tux was tailored like a second skin—silk lapels catching the neon light, with crisp white shirt underneath, no tie, top button open just enough to show the hollow of his throat.
Tall, broad-shouldered, moving like the crowd parted for him without knowing why.
His face was sharp, silhouettes falling on its angles, hair black as ink falling across his forehead. He didn’t scan the room hunting like others did. He simply…existed. And the moment his eyes swept the bar, they found me.
The air changed. Charged. Like the second before lightning strikes. I felt a churn In my stomach, the heat rising to my face. He didn’t smile. Didn’t nod. Just held my gaze for three full seconds longer than polite, then headed straight for the bar.
He stopped right in front of me, close enough that I caught the faint trace of his cologne—woody, metallic, expensive. His voice was low yet strong, pulling one in with a magnetic force.
“How much for a night?”
No hello. No name. Straight to business.
I tilted my head, letting the practiced smirk slide into place. “A couple hundred dollars, I guess. Depends on what you’re after.”
His dark, unreadable eyes flickered over me once. Slowly. Like he was memorizing the lines of my body without touching.
“First time here?” I added, trying to read him.
He didn’t answer.
Instead he lifted two fingers at the bartender behind me. “Whisky. Neat.” The bartender moved fast—everyone did when this kind of money walked in. A crystal glass appeared. The stranger dropped a hundred on the bar without looking at it, picked up the drink, and turned away. Not a word. Not even a nod. He melted back into the crowd like smoke, leaving me standing there with my pulse hammering and the faint scent of him still in my nose.
Rich men usually at least pretended to be charming. This one didn’t even try.
I thought that was the end of it.
I was wrong.
An hour later he was back. Same spot at the bar. Same unreadable expression. The whisky glass was empty again.
He set it down. “What do you do during the day,” he asked, voice quiet but somehow cutting through the music, “when you’re not here?”
I searched his face to see if there was a hint of smile, cocky or flirtatious, but there was none, just an expressionless figure
“I’m always at the bar,” I said, wiping the counter between us even though it was spotless. “This is it. Day, night, doesn’t matter." The bills don't sleep, I wanted to add, but I thought it a useless information, of what use would it be to him.
He studied me for a long moment. No pity. No judgment. Just… calculation. Like he was weighing something he hadn’t decided yet.
“And the money?” he asked next. “It’s enough?”
I shrugged, keeping my tone light even though the question dug under my ribs. Enough to keep my little brother in school. Enough to keep my mom’s heart from giving out. Enough to eat. I said, but only in my head, I met his eyes and spoke out loud “Enough to survive.”
He didn’t reply. Again. Just signaled for another whisky. Paid. Drank in silence. But he stayed longer this time. Five minutes. Ten. His gaze kept drifting back to me between sips—subtle, but I felt every second of it like fingers on my skin. The charge between us crackled hotter now. I caught myself biting the inside of my cheek to keep me from staring too obviously at the way the neon painted green shadows across his jaw, the way his throat moved when he swallowed.
Twice more that night he returned. Same ritual. Short, clipped questions.
“You like it here?”
“Doesn’t matter if I like it.”
“You have family?”
“Mom and a brother.”
Each time he left without a goodbye, disappearing into the VIP section or the dance floor. Each time the silence after he walked away felt heavier. I told myself he was just another rich weirdo killing time. But my body knew better. Every time his eyes found mine across the room, something inside me tightened—like a wire pulled taut, ready to snap.
The crowd grew wilder. The music louder. The neon flashed faster. I stepped out from behind the bar for a moment, weaving through the bodies the way I always did when I needed to breathe. Sweat glistened on necks, hips rolled, laughter spilled like champagne.
And then I felt it again.
That same electric pull.
The morning light had barely crept in when loud banging erupted from outside.Kai jolted awake on the thin spread mat, a sharp gasp escaping him. The sounds grew louder, sharper, more aggressive. Before he could fully sit up, the flimsy door burst open with a violent crack as a group of able-bodied men stormed inside.“Where’s that hag?!” one of them yelled.Kai scrambled to his feet and stepped in front of them before his mother could emerge from the back room. His small frame was tense, fists clenched at his sides.The leader — a burly man with a cruel face — thrust a folded paper toward them.“It’s over.” He threw the eviction notice at Kai’s mother as she stepped out. She flinched as the paper fluttered to the floor. “You’ve had four months of extensions on accumulated rent. Today is the day.”He signaled to his men with a sharp jerk of his head. “Take this filth out.”The men moved like vultures, grabbing what little furniture and belongings they had. Kai’s mother dropped to her
*****************living in memories***********Rain threatened in the moody grey sky as young Kai sprinted down the pebble streets, heart pounding in his ears. One of his old slippers was coming loose with every desperate stride, threatening to fly off. Lightning flashed, casting bright, jagged sparks across the dark alleys. He clutched the stolen loaf of bread tightly against his chest, the leather wrapping already damp from the humidity.He took a sharp turn behind a crumbling building and pressed his back against the cold wall, trying to quiet his ragged breathing. The men chasing him thundered past the block.“That little thief! He must be hiding somewhere around here!”Their footsteps grew dangerously close. Kai’s small hands tightened around the bread. The second he heard them turning the corner, he bolted — kicking off both slippers without a second thought. Sharp pebbles dug painfully into his bare feet, cutting into his skin, but he didn’t stop. Pain was nothing new.“Little
*******************Étienne Brooks ***************Death wasn’t something I wished on anybody, but not all the dead deserved to be mourned. Jobes Baker was certainly one whose death brought more silence than sorrow. But it was far from over. He was only one of the hundreds of billionaires behind the systematic exploitation of African and East Asian countries — the mines, the bribes, the destroyed communities, the rivers running red with more than just iron.I took a slow drag from my cigarette, staring out at the glittering city lights from my balcony. The night air was cold against my skin. For a moment, I allowed myself to believe I was safe up here.Then I felt it.That shift in the air. The way the silence suddenly felt heavier.I turned around and there he was — a tall man in a black coat standing only a few feet away, watching me like I was already something he owned. His presence was calm on the surface, but underneath it was something far more dangerous. Threatening. Like a bla
*******************Asher’s POV************************ Sunlight bled softly into the room through the half-closed blinds and white silk curtains. Tiny motes of dust danced in the golden beams. Outside, birds chirped cheerfully, completely unaware of the chaos that had chased us here. I lay with my cheek pressed against Kai’s bare chest, listening to the steady, reassuring thud of his heartbeat. I wasn’t sure if I was imagining it, but his arm was wrapped around me tightly — like he was afraid I might disappear if he let go. I shifted slightly, trying to sit up, but his arms tightened immediately, pulling me back down against him. “Stay,” he murmured, voice coarse and sleepy, still heavy with exhaustion. I stayed. My fingers traced lazy patterns across the hard planes of his chest as I nestled deeper into his warmth. It felt safe here. Dangerously right. In this quiet, hidden bungalow, away from the penthouse, the media, the bullets, and the endless noise of his world… I didn’t wa
*****************Matheo’s POV************************Matheo Voss swirled the deep red wine in his crystal glass, the liquid catching the pale winter light like fresh blood. He stood on the wide balcony overlooking the family estate’s vast green fields, where purebred horses moved gracefully through the light snowfall. The contrast was beautiful — vibrant life against the quiet descent of white. He found it fitting.Soft footsteps approached. His mother came to stand beside him, regal as ever. Her dark hair was pinned up in intricate patterns that spoke of old money and older power. A lit cigar rested between her elegant fingers, the smoke curling lazily into the cold air as she watched the horses.“Maybe this will be the final straw,” she said quietly, voice smooth as silk. “The one that finally pulls your father from his madness.”Matheo let her words settle over him. He took a slow sip of wine, the rich taste blooming on his tongue. Smoke from her cigar drifted across his vision li
******************Ashers Pov**************************“What’s that?”Kai’s voice was low, his eyes locked on the folded check still clutched in my fingers. My hands went rigid, cold as ice. The paper suddenly felt like it was burning me. Should I tell him? Matheo’s face flashed in my mind — that calculated smile, the casual wink. Do I even owe Kai an explanation? I wasn’t sure. But fear still coiled tight in my stomach at the thought of his reaction.I swallowed hard, the lump in my throat threatening to choke me.“I—”GAAW!!!The gunshot cracked through the air like thunder. Birds exploded from the trees in a chaotic frenzy of flapping wings and panicked cries. People screamed. Cars slammed on brakes. My heart stopped. My breath stalled completely.The bullet had been aimed directly at Kai.He moved like lightning, dodging at the last second as the shot slammed into a nearby tree, bark exploding outward in a violent spray. His eyes narrowed, scanning the direction the shot had come
I inhaled deeply, still heaving and panting, desperately trying to catch my breath. Kai moved behind me without a word. He bent me over until my face was pressed into the pillows, ass up. His hard, veiny cock slid between my parted cheeks, heavy and intimidating. My hands were still cuffed behind m
Even though I had worked for years at the bar, I had never been pushed into role-play this intense. Othello used to tell me stories about this kind of stuff, and I would always call him sick. Now, staring at the array of terrifying tools laid out on the bed, my breathing grew shallow. But I refused
The rest of the day passed in a hazy blur. Kai’s words kept replaying in my head on an endless loop: “At my apartment. 9pm.” The deep timbre of his voice still lingered, sending unwelcome shivers racing down my spine no matter how hard I tried to ignore them. I couldn’t focus. Couldn’t concentrate
I followed behind him, my legs moving reluctantly. I could feel the other employees’ eyes boring into my back, silently praying for me and hoping I’d come out alive. I hadn’t fully decided if I regretted stepping forward, but I was still convinced it had been the right thing to do. I watched the wi







