The moment I step off the plane, the air hits me like a wall. It’s thick with heat and dust, so different from New York’s crisp autumn chill. My clothes cling to my skin as if they are refusing to let me breathe.
I drag my small suitcase through the crowded terminal, trying not to look like someone running away from a crime scene. Everyone here moves quickly, as though they have somewhere to be. For me, there’s nowhere. Just the address Natalie gave me scribbled on a piece of paper. First things first, I buy a cheap phone from a kiosk near the exit. The man barely glances at me, muttering prices in Spanish I barely understand, but eventually I walk away with the device and a prepaid SIM card. It feels strange, holding something new when everything else about me is broken. Finding the apartment is harder. The taxi driver takes me through streets that look older than time, past peeling paint and neon signs, past music pouring from open windows. When he finally drops me off, I stand in front of a narrow building with a crooked balcony and rusted gates. The saying, ‘’do not judge a book by its cover' definitely applies to this apartment. The outside looks like it's falling apart, but inside it's pretty decent. The furniture is actually pretty and strong. There's a fan overhead in both the living room and bedroom. The sheep are clean and the bed is quite soft. Natalie knows how to think of everything at the right time. I explore the apartment and pack up my few clothes in the wardrobe. When the silence becomes unbearable, I set up the phone and dial the only number I know. Natalie picks up on the second ring. “Leina?” Her voice bursts through the speaker, warm and familiar. The knot in my chest loosens just a little. “I’m here. The place looks quite good. It's not what I'm used to in New York, but… I’m here.” She laughs softly. “You’ll live. Mexico’s not New York, but it’ll keep you safe. Did anyone follow you?” “No.” My voice cracks. “I don’t think so.” “Good. Then you listen to me—you lay low, you do what I told you, and you’ll survive. Tomorrow morning, go to El Jardín Rojo. Ask for Vincent Vitali. Tell him I sent you.” “Vitali?” The name feels foreign on my tongue. “He’s… complicated,” Natalie says carefully. “But he’ll take care of you. Just don’t cross him. He can be ruthless.” I stare at the cracked ceiling, fighting the shiver that runs through me. “I don’t have a choice, do I?” “No, honey. But sometimes, no choice is the best choice you’ll ever make.” “Thanks again, Nat.” “You shouldn't be thanking me. We are friends, and friends help each other. Now Mexico is tough, but you have to be tougher. Don't show people you are too weak, else they'll prey on you.” We talk until my prepaid minutes warn me they’re running out. When the call ends, I lie in the dark, listening to the fan rattle overhead, wondering if this city will swallow me or spit me out. ~~~ The next morning, I make my way to El Jardín Rojo. It's a huge building, like the Italian casinos in New York. The sign above the door is eye-catching, letters looking like they are inviting you in. Inside, the club is filled with just a few men, lusting after a woman on stage. The air is filled with alcohol and smoke. Bartenders dressed in almost nothing walk around freely. I head towards a corridor and spot two girls dressed in lingeries, chatting. They stop the instant they notice me. “Need something?” The blonde asks. “Yes, actually. I want to see Vincent Vitali.” They exchange a glance before the blonde smiles. “Come along.” I follow her through the long corridor, amazed at how freely the girls walk around in almost nothing. After rounding several corners, we get to a huge wooden door. She knocks twice before opening the door and stepping in. “Ella vino pidiendo verte.” The girl says, and the man who is seated with his back to us nods. “"Puedes irte. Yo me encargaré".” The girl nods and leaves, giving me a thumbs up on her way out. The man turns around slowly, and he's nothing like I expected. Younger, sharper.. His dark hair is held at the back of his head with a rubber band, his suit perfectly tailored, and dark calculating eyes staring at me from head to toe. He is covered in tattoos and has several piercings. Two on both ears and one below his lips. For a man, he's beautiful. “So,” he says, leaning back in his chair and breaking me out of my trance. “You’re the friend Natalie told me about.” “Yes.” My voice wavers, but I hold his gaze. “Leina Ashford,” he murmurs, almost like he’s testing the sound of it. “I know the name. Fell from grace, didn’t you? A scandal in white. Natalie told me everything. By the way, I'm Vincent Vitali, but the girls call me V.V” Heat burns my cheeks, but I don’t flinch. “I need work. Natalie said you’d help me.” He smirks. “Help is a strong word. But I do own a club, and I do have an audience that pays well for beauty. Can you dance?” “I can try. But I don't know if I'm good enough. ” “You don't need to be good enough to have the men spending their money,” he tells me, voice soft. “All you need is confidence in yourself. Let's do this.” He stands up, walks around the table and leans against it, facing me. “I’ll play a song. I want you to convince me using your body that you, Leina Ashford, are beautiful.” He fiddles with his phone for a moment. The lights dim, soft music plays, he nods towards the dance pole I hadn't noticed earlier. I set my bag on the table, and proceed to undress. I keep my gaze down in shame. “"No, no hagas eso.” You must look into the eyes of the men you are performing for. Confidence is the first rule. It is your body, you own it.” I take a deep breath, then meet his gaze. I finish taking off my dress and head over to the pole. Placing my hands on it, I do what best I know about pole dancing. When the music ends I step towards him, trying hard not to cover myself with my hands. “That was good.” He says, a proud smile on his face “You’ll start tonight. You’ll hate it at first, but you’ll learn. It's a gradual process. Make the men happy, stick to the rules and I'll make you happy.” I swallow hard and nod. “I understand.” “Good.” His eyes flick over me one last time, sharp and knowing. “Come back tonight. We’ll see what you’re made of.” --- That night, the club transforms. Lights burn red and gold, music thrums through the walls, and men crowd the tables with drinks in their hands and hunger in their eyes. The air is heavy with smoke and perfume, with promises none of them mean to keep. Backstage, I meet the other girls. The blonde I met earlier, introduces herself as Sofia, her smile wide and genuine. A taller brunette, Camila, rolls her eyes but helps me lace the straps of the sequined bra they’ve given me. For the first time since I left New York, I feel something like belonging. When my turn comes, my legs tremble as I step into the lights. The music swells, drowning out my heartbeat. I grip the pole, forcing my body to move, to bend, to sway. The crowd cheers. They throw money. And somewhere in the heat and the lights and the noise, I stop shaking. My body remembers what control feels like. Maybe not the kind I was raised with, but something darker, sharper. Power, even if it’s bought with shame. By the time it's over, my heart is pounding so hard, I can hear it in my ears. I stumble back into the dressing room, Sofia hugs me. “First time?” she asks, grinning. I nod, breathless. “You were good. You’ll get better. We all did.” “Yh, my first time was worse. I froze in the middle of the performance and had V.V give me a lecture after.” A petite girl with brown eyes says. “Is he kind?” I find myself asking. “V.V? Of course. He's the kindest you'll meet here. But he's not always here,” Sofia explains while brushing her hair. “Why?” “Well he controls the other clubs elsewhere. Like in New York for example. When he's here we get treated kindly, but when he leaves, it's a tough time.” “Don't let anything scare you,” a girl I know to be Myla says. “Show them you are unbreakable and you will survive.” For the first time in weeks, a laugh escapes me. It feels fragile, but real. Maybe, just maybe, I can survive this city after all.Natalie’s wedding is everything I could ever want for her. The flowers bloom in soft pastels, laughter spills through the air, and the music wraps around the room like a promise of forever. She looks radiant, glowing with the kind of happiness she once feared she’d never find. For a moment, pride swells in my chest, and I let myself smile for her.She's getting married to Louis Dublin, a huge tech giant in New York. Theirs was the kind of romance you don't see coming. It just hits like a storm. The moment I step past the grand doors of the reception hall, the atmosphere shifts. I had Damien go ahead of me, knowing that if we both alighted the same car, the NEW YORK TIMES would get a good gossip topic for a week. Heads turn, conversations freeze mid-sentence. Crystal glasses hover in the air, suspended in trembling hands.And then the whispers begin.“Is that… her?”“She came back?”“After everything?”“How could she just show up after three years like nothing happened?”Their eye
Three Years Later The cold bites against my skin as I step out of the private jet. The private terminal is quiet, less chaotic. New York. It seems like forever since I last saw the skylines of this city. Three years since I was forced to leave in shame and disgrace. But now I'm back and I'm no longer the girl they mocked or ridiculed. My phone rings and I pick it up to see it's the man who's been my anchor all these years. “Damien,” I say when I answer the call. “Have you arrived yet?” “Yes I just got out of the plane.” I walk out of the terminal, searching the area for the car that's supposed to pick me up. “Hurry home then. Isabella has been asking about you.” He said. I smile before hanging up the call. A man in a black suit walks towards me and bows. “ Mrs Moretti, I'm here to take you home.” I nod and follow him to the black limo. We get in and drive out of the airport. As we drive through the city I let my gaze linger outside. Not much has changed in three years. Nat
The words hang in the air, heavy, almost absurd in their audacity. Marry him? Be Isabella’s mother? Step fully into Damien Moretti’s world? My pulse accelerates, not from excitement, but from calculation. Every instinct in me tells me to hesitate, to analyze, to measure the risks.I might have grown up amongst riches, but Damien was a different kind of rich. The rich that involved blood. I take a step back, forcing my voice to steady. “You can’t seriously expect me to just… agree.” My fingers flex at my sides, twisting the hem of my dress. Damien doesn’t flinch. His gaze is calm, intense, like he’s reading my mind even as I try to hide it. “I’m not asking for an answer now,” he says evenly. “I want you to think about what’s at stake. For her. What you stand to gain, Leina Ashford.” The shock I feel must show on my face, because he chuckles. “It's all over the news. New York Times aired it for a week. Every soul in New York has seen the video and knows the scandal.” “And you want s
Morning light slips through the blinds and lands across my face. I push the pillow over my head, trying to block it out, but the headache from last night keeps pulsing. I barely slept last night. Each time I shut my eyes Isabella's face comes to my mind. The stiffness in her shoulders when Irina scolded her. The way she didn't expect her father to defend her. That lifeless room with nothing but a strict schedule pinned to the wall. It haunts me.What parent raises their child in such a manner? My phone rings on the nightstand, interrupting my train of thoughts. Natalie’s name flashes.“Hey,” I answer, my voice low, edged with sleep..“Hey sweetie. How are you enjoying Mexico?” Her voice is vibrant, filled with life as always. “Well, I'm alive. Does that count?” She lets out a laugh. “Of course it does. It's almost a month now and I'm happy to know you are doing okay. I spoke with Vincent and he told me you're holding up well.” “I do what I have to survive.” I contemplate on te
The uber winds through streets I’ve never dared to explore before. My fingers drum nervously on my knees, and Rosa is practically buzzing beside me, pressing her face to the glass as though she’s afraid to miss a single view.“This place,” she whispers as we approach tall iron gates. “Leina, this isn’t just money. This is old money. Untouchable money.”The gates open after a brief call on the intercom, and we’re ushered into a neighborhood that looks like it belongs in another world. Lush gardens, marble fountains, manicured driveways, it all feels suffocatingly perfect.By the time we pull up to the sprawling white estate Isabella calls home, my stomach has tied itself into knots.The uber drops us by the gates and we step in. A servant greets us, bowing her head politely. “Señorita Isabella. You've been gone for so long. You're father is so worried.” “Where is Papa,” Isabella asks, clutching her bag tighter.“He went out. I'll inform him of your return.” I should probably leave.
The club is alive again tonight, every light like a star that burns too close. By now, the stage doesn’t terrify me. it makes me feel untouchable. I twirl under the spotlight, each movement peeling away another layer of the woman who was once weak, naïve, and blind. Here, I control the story. The men only get the pieces of me I allow.They scream, wanting more, throwing bills at me. But I decide what to give them. After my shift, I join Rosa and Sofia at our usual booth. We drink, laugh, and dance until our feet ache, until the bruises of yesterday don’t feel quite so heavy. For a few hours, I let myself forget the ashes of my old life.---The next morning, restless, I can’t stand the silence of my apartment. The four walls suffocate me, dragging me back into memories I don’t want. So I leave.The city is blinding in the daylight. Vendors crowd the streets, shouting over one another, colors and scents swirling until I feel drunk on life itself. I stop at a fruit stand, fumbling ove