LOGINContent Note: This dark romance contains 80% explicit sex scenes, intense power dynamics, trauma, revenge themes, and heavy triggers (attempted assault, wrongful imprisonment, suicide, family betrayal, graphic violence). Reader discretion advised. Emily Jayden was only nineteen when her life was shattered by a lie she couldn’t escape. After a violent incident with her stepfather, Evan John, she was accused and convicted of attempted murder, despite insisting she never intended to hurt him, but with his influence and reputation shielding the truth, Emily spent ten years in prison for a crime she didn’t commit. At twenty-nine, she walks into freedom hoping for a fresh start but the world hasn’t forgotten, her name is stained and no company will hire someone with her past. Survival and revenge leaves her with few options. By day, she carefully builds a plan to expose the man who destroyed her life. By night, she works at R.M Club, one of the city’s most exclusive strip clubs, where powerful men hide behind money and closed doors. The job is humiliating but it gives her something she needed. Money. Then she meets Ryan Mason on her first night, and sparks fly. For the first time in years, Emily allows herself to feel alive and to fall in love. Until she learns the truth. Ryan isn’t just a client.
View More~ Emily ~
I already stood up more than ten damn times, just to flop my ass right back down on that cold bench. Every set of boots clacking down the hall had my heart doing flips like it was tryna escape my chest. Every time that rusty door creaked open, I swore this was it—my fucking moment. Ten whole years. Ten motherfucking years caged up like an animal, and today they’re finally cutting me loose. Feels like I just walked through these doors yesterday, scared as fuck. But nah…somehow a whole damn decade got snatched from me. I’ve been rotting in this hellhole the entire time I was supposed to be living my twenties. Who the fuck would’ve thought that I, Emily Jayden would waste her whole twenties locked in a cage? I was just nineteen, still green, when they dragged me in here. Now I’m twenty-nine, body harder, soul colder. Ten straight years for some shit I never even did. They love to preach that truth always wins. Justice always comes through in the end. I used to eat that fairy-tale crap too. Not anymore. Money talks loud as hell. And when money opens its mouth, truth gets real quiet real fast. That’s power, baby. Real power. Evan John. The golden man the whole world kisses his ass over. The same fake-ass motherfucker who wrecked my life with one smooth lie. Just his name hits my chest like a fist. Makes everything tighten up, ready to snap. I swear on everything, Evan, I’m coming for your ass. I’ll make you choke on every single second I rotted in this hellhole. Every birthday I spent staring at concrete. Every dream that got crushed and died right here in this fucking cell. I’m building power from the dirt up. I’m rising so high your fake-ass empire won’t be able to look away. No matter what it costs. Even if I gotta scrub piss-stained toilets or walk rich bitches’ dogs in pouring rain… I don’t give a fuck. Whatever it takes. Revenge ain’t some cute little word no more. It’s my whole damn religion now. My thoughts snapped like a rubber band when the door finally banged open. Officer Damian stepped in—uniform pressed sharp, but those eyes still soft, same kindness he always had for me. “Emily Jayden,” he said, voice steady and warm like always. “You’re free to go.” I looked up slowly, breath stuck in my throat. “Finally,” I whispered. That word tasted like straight freedom on my dry tongue. I stood up, brushed fake dust off the orange jumpsuit that had fused to my skin. Followed him down the long, dead hallway to the release room. I stripped off the orange that had become part of me, folded it neat like burying a nightmare. Slipped into my old faded jeans and that plain t-shirt from ten years back. It felt like stepping into a ghost version of myself. They hung loose now—body leaner, harder from prison slop and endless push-ups in the yard. My shit came in a little box. Old photo of Mom back when she still knew how to smile. Cheap necklace they somehow didn’t snatch. Beat-up notebook stuffed with my angry plans and poems I scratched out just to keep from losing my damn mind. I signed the papers, my hand shook a little. Pen scratched rough across the page like it was carving my way out. After that, they patted me down one last time, making sure I wasn’t sneaking out any contraband. Of course I wasn’t—ain’t shit left to steal from me anyway. Then they slapped that release paper into my palm, official as hell. Freedom. Black ink on white paper. That's simple. Officer Damian walked me to those massive iron gates, the same ones that had clanged shut on my life a decade ago like a coffin lid. They creaked open slowy. Bright-ass sunlight poured in like it was trying to blind me. I squeezed my eyes shut for a second. Too damn bright after ten years of fluorescent buzz and shadows. “I hope you make something good out there, Emily,” he said, voice real and warm, no fake cop bullshit. “Don’t come back for trouble, alright? Unless you just wanna swing by and say what’s up.” He hit me with that same kind smile…the one that had pulled me through nights when I wanted to break. Back when I first rolled in, I was so scared, alone, fresh meat the other inmates circled like sharks smelling blood. Damian stepped right up, badge flashing, voice low but firm. “Stay strong,” he’d whispered then, like a secret promise. Now I waved back, a small, real smile cracking my lips for the first time in forever. “Thanks, Officer. For everything.” The gates slammed shut behind me with one last heavy-ass thud. No more clanging cell doors ringing in my ears. No more buzzing fluorescent lights that never gave you a break. But freedom? It didn’t feel light and airy like they say in the movies. It felt heavy, like carrying ten years of bricks on my back. Mom turned her back on me a decade ago. Swallowed every word Evan fed her without even asking what really went down. “You’re no daughter of mine,” she spat the last time she showed up, eyes ice-cold, no love left. Nobody was waiting out here. No family. No crib to crash at. Nothing. Then I spotted Emma and Sophia. Leaning against some old, beat-to-shit car a little ways off. They had been released a few days before me. Emma did twelve years straight for running drugs, she was twenty when they locked her up. Sophia pulled seventeen for offing her sister, also at twenty when it happened. She never spoke about it. Ask her anything about that night? She’d shut down tight, wall up, end of story. When I first rolled into that hellhole, they made my life pure misery. Emma sliced me up with her razor-sharp mouth. Sophia didn’t even need words…just one cold stare and you’d freeze, praying she looked away. They tested me hard. Pushed every button. Wanted to see if I’d crack and cry. But prison don’t play. It changes you or it breaks you. We started splitting meals. Whispering real shit late at night when the block was dead quiet. Having each other’s backs when bigger, meaner bitches came sniffing. Somehow the same hoes who tried to bury me became the ones who guarded my back. Crazy how getting through the worst shit flips the script. Turns straight enemies into ride-or-die. Survival don’t give a fuck about old rules but it writes new ones in blood.I couldn’t get Emily out of my head. The door creaked open, and there she was—Vicky, all curves and confidence, her hips swaying. She locked eyes with me, a smirk playing on her lips as she kicked the door shut behind her, hips rolling like she already knew she was getting fucked tonight.Vicky’s been working with me for nine years now. She came on board about a year after I opened R.M Club, and honestly, she’s been one of the main reasons the place makes real money.I met her on a rainy rooftop at like three in the morning. She was standing on the edge, soaked, shaking, with a handful of pills and zero fight left in her. The people at her old job had bullied her until there was nothing left but shame and silence.I talked her down, got her off that ledge, and then I helped her get even. We didn’t just get revenge, we made sure those people lost everything they cared about.After that night, she didn’t want to go anywhere else. She stayed. And I d
~ Ryan ~I don’t usually watch the floor feeds.The club runs itself. Vicky handles the girls, the money, the drama. I stay upstairs in the office—glass wall overlooking everything, tinted so no one sees me. I like it that way. Invisible. In control.But tonight I couldn’t look away.She walked in at 9:03 p.m. New girl. Emily. Vicky had mentioned her in passing yesterday. “some convict fresh out, thinks she can dance.” I’d rolled my eyes. Another desperate one. Another body to fill the roster.Then the camera caught her.Black skirt hugging her hips, her top stretched tight over her boobs that looked too full for the cheap fabric. Hair dark and loose, falling past her shoulders like she didn’t give a fuck who was looking. She moved through the crowd like she owned it with her chin up, eyes sharp, serving drinks with a smile that didn’t reach them.I zoomed in on the main feed.Her hands were steady pouring whiskey. But when a drunk suit grabbed her wr
“What the fuck did you just say to me?” she hissed, stepping up so close I could smell her perfume mixed with that post-dick sweat and straight-up sex glow.I locked eyes with her ass, chin high as fuck. Prison taught me never to fold for no basic-ass hoe like her.Her lips twisted into that signature sneer, but her sneaky-ass eyes dipped right down to the envelope poking outta my cleavage like she already knew what time it was.“Ryan doesn’t ask newbies for dances. He watches first. And you—” She popped a finger at my chest, stopping just short.“You stroll in here all loud and cocky, legs open like you that girl? Chill out, Emily. This place will chew a girl like you up and spit you right back out. Don’t say nobody warned you.”Jealousy was fucking dripping off every damn word she said. The girl knew him and real close, the kind that leaves scratches and secrets. Just stepped out of his office? Fucked him quick and dirty, got hers, then sent my ass in to play c
“I’ll give you five grand. Cold cash, straight in your hand. One song, that’s it. You give me a show worth my money, when the lights come back on, you bounce the same way you came in. No touching, no grabbing, no extra shit. Just business and mad heat.”Five thousand dollars for one song.My mind lit up like fireworks. That pitiful bank account laughing at zero, revenge still simmering hot and vicious in my veins, Evan’s smug, punchable face smirking from every screen like he still owns pieces of me.I stood up slowly, thighs shaking, slick sliding down between them. Shoulders back, chest out, chin high, hips rolling like the whole damn room was mine to fuck.Run that fucking music, boo,” I purred, velvet voice wrapped in steel, sliding into full savage queen mode, and ready to make him regret even thinking he could handle the fire I’ve been holding for ten years locked up.He pulled out his phone, tapped once. Boom, nasty bass flooded the room, slow and filthy,
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