Aria Blake has risen from the ashes of her past, leaving behind her old life - and the name Stacey Adams - for a fresh start filled with invisibility and art. No one knows the secrets she’s buried, and she intends to keep it that way. But when billionaire Killian Stone - ruthless, magnetic, and entirely off-limits steps into her world as the focus of her camera, he sees more than just a photographer behind the lens. He sees her. And he’s not the type to just walk away. Just as Aria dares believe in a future, the shadows of her past catch up to her. Buried secrets resurface, and dangerous players close in, threatening her reputation and Killian’s legacy. If the truth comes out, it won’t just ruin her. It could destroy him too. Can they survive the pull of love that threatens to override everything?
View More“Stacey!”
The voice crashed like a whip from across the hall.
Jack’s voice.
Stacey Adams flinched against the mirror in her dressing room, tugging at the skinny strap of her costume. The red sequins pressed themselves onto her like desperation. Her hands were just a bit shaky - not because of cold, but in anticipation of whatever was going to happen next.
She stepped outside the room, and at the same time, Jack rounded the corner, already having a crimson instep to his fury and a cheap bottle of whiskey.
“You think you can blow off that VIP table and nobody is gonna do anything about it?” Jack barked, threatening to jab her chest with a big finger. “This aint no tea party, darling. You service the customers, or you don’t eat. You understand?”
“I wasn’t feeling well,” Stacey whispered, her head bowed. No fire. No fight. Just desperation.
Jack snorted in disgust, and gripped her arm. Not roughly, but firmly enough to get the point across. “Don’t play dainty. You’re here to get a job done. You don’t have the luxury of being ill. Another mistake like that and you’re off my team. Do I make myself clear?”
At nineteen, Stacey nodded, because that was what you did when you had no one and nowhere else to go: you nodded and kept your head down.
Big blond with heels too high to really walk stuck her head out of the dressing room. “Stace, there’s a guy at room six askin’ for you. Real smooth guy. Said to send the girl with the sad eyes.”
Jack gave a yellow-toothed smile that burnt under the fluorescent light. “See? Even the creeps fall for your pathetic charm. Don’t blow it.”
Stacey un-tucked her hair and trudged slowly toward the bar; all she could hear was the clip-pity clap of her heels on the sticky floor as she walked past glimmering bodies and catcalls and flashing neon lights - all of them flashing like alarms. The stage set was short tonight; now she had no energy left to dance like she meant it, not that she had really wanted to anyway.
She wanted to cry.
Instead, she walked.
With each step it felt like a hundred pounds were added to her body, especially as she moved through the back hallway. It was loud within the club - the beat thumping, walls pulsing, drunken laughter bleeding into every crevice - but this hallway was different. Lower. A little darker.
Room Six loomed at the end of the hallway, a silver of darkness where the door sat slightly ajar.
Her hands shook as she pushed the door inwards.
A man sitting, waiting. Alone. Hands clasped. Suit impeccable. Hair sharp and slick as glass. When he saw her he smiled - it wasn’t a kind smile.
Stacey walked forward until she reached the door-frame and her heart thumped loudly in her chest like the bass from outside.
“You look young and stunning up close.” He rose to his feet and swept his eyes over her body.
Uncertain of what else to say, she nodded.
“Good.” He took a step forward. “I like young.”
Warning lights went off in her head.
“I don’t do-” she said, but he raised his hand out to cut her off.
“I liked your show,” he added, a gradual smile rising to his face. “You have a certain rawness about you.”
She remained silent. When men spoke like that, she never did.
“Drink?” he asked.
“No, thank you.”
“You don’t talk much do you?”
Stacey tried to offer a polite smile and watched the condensation on the glass.
“What do you want?”
“Everything.” he smiled. “About you… like where you come from. What your real name is. What makes a girl like you wind up in a place like this.”
She blinked, taken aback. “Why do you care?”
“Curiosity.” he said, slowly taking a step forward. “Or maybe awe.”
She backed up, heart racing.
“I’ll double whatever you make in a single night.” Andrew said, calmly. “You won’t even dance.”
“I’m not here to entertain you like that.” Stacey said, planting her feet to the floor.
“Oh, I think you will.” His voice dipped, quieter. “But I’m done talking. I want something else.”
He lunged forward with sudden, intense speed.
He caught her by the wrist and pulled her to him. She stumbled towards him as he heels are effectively caught in the carpet, smashing into his chest.
She screeched, her voice tinged with despair, “Let me go!”
With one arm he slammed her wrists against the wall.
He took hold of her wrist. He sneered, “You think I paid triple for a No?”
“You think I don’t know what girls like you really deliver?”
She thrashed about, twisting, attempting to knee him - he was much too strong. He tightened his grip on her. His breath cut through her skin in hot bubbles against her face.
“I’ll scream,” she fought back.
“No one will come,” he whispered.
She felt something break inside of her.
She pushed herself with whatever strength she had behind her and shoved him back and ran towards the door. She elbowed the edge of a side table as she bolted, but adrenaline surged through her, blasting the pain away.
He leapt toward her once again, but he was too late. She opened the door widely and tripped into the hall.
Behind her, Andrew cursed.
She didn’t stop to decide who heard. She didn’t care. She sprinted across the rear of the club, out past the dressing rooms, out into the alley where broken glass and neon color splattered the pavement in colors that resembled war.
She didn’t cry.
She didn’t scream.
She just ran.
She didn’t stop until she was blocks away from there, lungs burning, heart racing, body trembling, and her bare feet bled on the sidewalk.
She didn’t stop until the world melted behind tears that she finally cried.
She threw her arms around herself for comfort as she fell next to a shuttered convenience shop. She strained to keep her breathing normal, and her hands trembled.
Andrew, meanwhile, had returned to the club and was leaning on the bar, his jaw tight, his drink still unfinished.
Jack walked over, face puckered.
“She ran?” Jack asked.
Andrew nodded once.
Jack shook his head. “She’ll be back. They always are. Girl like her’s got no other place to go.”
Andrew said nothing.
“I don’t like being rejected.”
His smile was gone.
His voice didn’t allow for misinterpretation.
He would show her that no one messes with him and gets away with it.
Aria was seated at the rear of the plush, white sofa. Open windows of the beach house let in the salty scent as well as the quiet sound of waves washing against the beach. It was soothing, too soothing for the tense night she expectedBut somehow, since she and Killian agreed to meet here, she’d felt more at peace than anxious. She was ready to speak.Ready to tell him everything.Ready to stop letting her past dictate her silence.She retrieved her phone and started to look through Instagram while waiting. She grinned at some hilarious memes and videos. Then—A headline cut through her feed like a knife.“Aria Blake Exposed: The Woman Behind the Lens Once Danced for Dollars.”Her finger hovered. She didn’t click at first. She just stared.No breath. No thought. Just the burn of disbelief rising in her chest.She opened the article.And there it was.A photo of her.Her face. Her body.But not in anything she had worn that night. The picture was manipulated, made into something ugly
By the time Killian and Ethan were done at the bar, the sun had dipped below the horizon, casting the city in deep amber and softening shadows. It was late evening now, and Killian had been checking his phone obsessively - even while driving - waiting, hoping for a reply from Aria.Nothing.He shut off the car, parked in the driveway, and settled into his car. But he stayed in. He slid the windows down and let the cold night air touch his skin. His phone had been in his hand for an hour now. He’d replayed his voice note at least three times in his head, wondering if it had come across the way he wanted - honest, raw, vulnerable. Not desperate. Just real.Yet, no word from over there hurt a lot. Looking out the window, his pulse shot, and he was overcome with worry. Just as he started to open the car door, his phone came on.Her name glowing on the screen made his breath catch. Relief, hope, fear - it all hit him at once, too tangled to separate. He answered before he could even blin
Andrew sank back in the soft leather chair of his hotel room, the Los Angeles city view spread out past the big windows. A low hum of satisfaction came from him as he hung up with Dante. Business in Miami was booming again.Dante had confirmed what Andrew already knew from the sudden boost in his bank balance. His latest batch of girls - fresh, desperate, and easily manipulated - were pleasing the right clients. The money was rolling in faster than before. No complaints. No slip-ups. Just how he wanted it. He took a slow drink from his glass of old bourbon, a tiny, pleased smile on his lips. Even L.A. was starting to look up.Howard Batalon had been proving himself useful, keeping him up to date on Aria’s movements. Or, more accurately, her lack of movement. She hadn’t been to her apartment. Not her studio either. No sightings with her best friend Mia. And none with that smug, “well-to-do” boyfriend of hers, Killian.Andrew scoffed at the thought of him, smirking. Golden boy with a
Killian sat behind the wheel of his parked car, staring down at the small slip of paper in his hand - Mia’s address, scribbled quickly by Lucy, now slightly creased from how tightly he’d been holding it. He’d been sitting outside the studio’s building for nearly twenty minutes, engine running, mind spiraling.He knew showing up unannounced wasn’t exactly the smartest move. He wasn’t even sure Aria was there. But something in him - it wasn’t logic, it wasn’t reason, it was her - was telling him to go.His hands held the wheel tightly, and he moved the gears. As he moved onto the road, his phone lit up the dashboard. Ethan.Killian tapped his earpiece. “Yeah?”“Where are you?” Ethan’s voice came through steady but serious.“I was just about to head to Mia’s,” Killian said, voice low. “Why?”A pause.“Change of plans. Meet me first,” Ethan said. "I need to talk to you. It won’t take long.”Killian didn’t argue. Whatever it was, Ethan rarely spoke like this unless it was important.Fift
Killian Stone was outside the building that once buzzed with Aria's vibe, his jaw tight, hands deep in his coat. He hadn't had a good sleep in days. Ever since she withdrew from him without a word, a storm had been brewing in his chest - one that wouldn’t settle until he saw her again.He’d tried calling, texting, even reaching out to Mia. But Aria was a ghost now, slipping through his fingers every time he got close.And after what he’d seen in the file his father shoved into his hands - a glimpse of a girl weighed down by choices she never should’ve had to make - Killian understood a little more. Not everything, not fully, but enough.She once told him her mother had been sick. She took on jobs she wasn’t proud of. And he knew sometimes survival didn’t look noble - it looked messy and desperate and silent.So this had to be it. Whatever secret Aria was drowning in… this was what she meant.And still, all he wanted was to tell her she didn’t have to carry it alone. Not anymore.He al
Aria gazed upward toward the ceiling; the stillness of the room weighing on her like a heap of blankets. Gossip, breaking news, and muttered digital talks she tried not to read through filled the outside world. But here, wrapped in the neutral peace of Mia's guest bedroom, the silence was loud.On the nightstand, her phone vibrated.Killian.She watched it buzz. The screen lit up with his name and dimmed again when she didn’t reach for it.The silence returned.Mia came out from the bathroom, wiping her hair with a towel in a huge T-shirt. She caught the look on Aria’s face, and the phone now still on the bed.“Still not picking his calls, huh?”Aria sat up, pulling her knees to her chest. “I can’t. Not yet.”Mia sighed and walked toward her. “You know he’s been trying, right? Lucy said he stopped by the studio again. Ethan’s been asking me about you, and Killian’s been to your apartment too.” She paused. "It's hard to keep up the lie that I have not seen you."Aria held her sleeves t
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