Follow
Chapters
Share
Underneath city lights Novel Cover

Underneath city lights

This book is dedicated to all the underestimated ones, the ones who live in the shadows, whose strength is mistaken for fragility. To those who have learned to navigate worlds that were never built for them, finding their power not in the spotlight, but in the quiet resilience of their own spirit. It is for the young women who find themselves in circumstances that demand more than they were ever prepared for, yet who rise to meet those challenges with a ferocity born of necessity. May you always remember that the world often misjudges the depth of a person's will, the sharpness of their intellect, and the unyielding nature of their resolve. To the fighters, the survivors, and the strategists who operate unseen, crafting their own destinies in the face of overwhelming odds. This is for you, and for the truth that vulnerability is often a carefully constructed mask, hiding a strength that can shatter the most powerful of illusions. To my own personal sources of strength, whose unwavering support has been the quiet foundation upon which all my creative endeavors are built, thank you.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The humid Los Angeles air, heavy with the exhaust of a thousand passing cars and the

faint, sweet decay of overripe fruit, clung to Angie's skin like a second, unwelcome

layer. It was the breath of South Central, a district that hummed with a restless,

resilient energy, a symphony of distant sirens and the closer, more intimate laughter

of neighbors sharing stories on stoops. But tonight, that familiar embrace was a

distant memory, replaced by the cloying, artificial perfume that saturated 'The Velvet

Orchid.' This was her gilded cage, a place where dreams were sold in shimmering

fabrics and potent liquor, and where desperation was the common currency.

At seventeen, Angie was already a veteran of survival, her eyes holding a wisdom that

belied her years. The choice to work here had been a brutal calculus, a necessary evil

born from a need so acute it gnawed at her insides. Rent didn't pay itself, and the

stack of bills on her meager kitchen counter seemed to multiply in the dim glow of

the single bare bulb. Each sequin on her costume, each practiced sway of her hips,

was a transaction, a piece of herself traded for a chance at a future that felt

increasingly out of reach. The air inside the club was a potent cocktail of cheap

arousal and profound sadness, a stark contrast to the humid, hopeful nights of her

neighborhood. Here, the laughter was too loud, the smiles too brittle, and the

shadows in the corners seemed to deepen with every passing minute.

Maya, her girlfriend and fellow dancer, was her anchor in this churning sea of

manufactured allure. They found solace in each other's company, their whispered

conversations between sets a lifeline in the cacophony of the club. Their bond was

forged in shared anxieties and the flickering embers of dreams they dared to hold

onto. "Another Friday night, another mountain of debt," Maya sighed, tugging at the

hem of her too-short skirt, her voice a low murmur against the thumping bass. Her

eyes, usually bright with a defiance that mirrored Angie's own, held a weary

apprehension. "Sometimes, Angie, I just want to scream. Just walk out and never look

back."

Angie squeezed Maya's hand, her own fingers cool against her girlfriend's clammy

skin. "I know, baby. Me too. But we're almost there. We just gotta keep our heads

down, do the work, and get out." It was a mantra they repeated to each other, a fragile

shield against the encroaching despair. The 'work' was a euphemism for the

performances, the solicitous smiles, the sometimes-unwanted attention from patrons

who saw them not as people, but as commodities. Each dance was a delicate

negotiation, a tightrope walk between earning enough to survive and maintaining

enough of herself to feel whole.

The scent of stale beer and cigarette smoke, perpetually clinging to the plush, worn

velvet of the booths, was a constant reminder of the environment. It was a world

away from the vibrant, if sometimes gritty, streets of South Central, where the aroma

of grilling corn from a street vendor or the distant sound of a mariachi band might fill

the air. Here, the air was thick, stagnant, and carried the metallic tang of desperation.

Angie's apartment, a small, unassuming unit in a weathered building whose paint

peeled like sunburnt skin, felt like a sanctuary of clean air and genuine connection by

comparison. She'd spent hours ensuring it was meticulously clean, a small act of

control in a life that often felt dictated by others. The neighborhood itself, though

often carrying an undeniable air of danger, especially after dusk, also possessed a

resilient energy, a blend of streetwise caution and a surprisingly strong communal

spirit. It was the only place she truly called home, a stark, honest contrast to the

artificial glow of the club.

Maya's unease was a palpable thing, a shadow that clung to her more persistently

than the club's signature scent. She often spoke of escaping, her voice hushed on

their shared, cramped apartment balcony, the dim city lights painting fleeting

patterns on her face. "I dream of a small house, Angie," she'd confessed one night, her

gaze fixed on the distant, glittering skyline that seemed to mock their present reality.

"With a garden. And a dog. No more heels, no more fake smiles. Just... peace." She'd

shiver, pulling her threadbare cardigan tighter. "But this place... it pulls you in. And

I'm scared, Angie. Scared of men like him."

The 'him' Maya referred to was a specter that haunted the upper echelons of The

Velvet Orchid: Silas. He was a name whispered with a mixture of fear and grudging

respect, a man whose presence in the club was as predictable as the closing of the

bar. His power was a palpable force, radiating from him in waves that seemed to

silence the surrounding noise, drawing every eye. He moved through the opulent,

shadowed VIP rooms with an unnerving grace, his expensive suits impeccable, his

gaze sharp and assessing. Angie had caught his eye before, a fleeting, intense flicker

that had sent a shiver down her spine, a cold premonition of danger. It was the look of

a man accustomed to taking what he wanted, a predator surveying his territory.

Silas's attention, however, was beginning to shift. It was no longer just a passing

glance, but a focused, unnerving observation. He started requesting Angie specifically

for his private parties, his requests delivered with an unassailable authority that left

the club management with no choice but to comply. It was a subtle form of coercion,

a demonstration of his power, and a clear signal that his interest was more than

casual. Angie felt his eyes on her even when she wasn't directly in his line of sight, a

constant, invisible surveillance that prickled her skin. He was a spider, weaving his

web, and she was a fly, unaware of the intricate design until it was too late. The city's

elite, a swirling vortex of power and privilege, mingled freely in these exclusive

rooms, their hushed tones and expensive suits a stark contrast to the desperate

energy of the main floor. They were a different breed, their power etched onto their

faces, their influence a tangible force in the air.

One evening, during a particularly tense set where Silas was holding court in his usual

VIP booth, Angie overheard fragments of a conversation. Two men, their faces hard

and impassive, spoke in low tones, their words laced with the casual cruelty of those

who felt themselves untouchable. "She's just a kid," one of them, a burly man with a

scar bisecting his eyebrow, had grumbled, his gaze flicking towards Angie as she

passed. "Lives out in South Central, I hear. Poor thing." The other man, leaner and

with eyes that seemed to miss nothing, had merely grunted. "Doesn't matter where

she lives. She's got something that interests the boss."

This snippet of conversation, insignificant to them, landed in Angie's mind like a shard

of glass. They knew where she lived. They knew she was young. And they knew Silas

was interested. The knowledge was a cold knot of fear in her stomach. It meant her

carefully constructed world, the one where she compartmentalized her life into the

club persona and her South Central reality, was beginning to fray. The casual

exchange of information, the sharing of her humble address like a piece of gossip,

fueled a morbid curiosity in men like Silas and his associates. They saw her not as a

person with a life and dreams, but as a puzzle to be solved, a vulnerability to be

exploited. The feeling of being watched intensified, no longer confined to the smoky

embrace of the club, but extending into the shadowed streets of her neighborhood,

into the very sanctuary of her home.

Despite the outward appearance of a young woman struggling against the tides of

circumstance, Angie possessed a steely resolve that few had ever glimpsed. Her

carefully cultivated persona of vulnerability was a survival tactic, a necessary shield in

a world that preyed on weakness. She played the part of the innocent dancer, caught

in a web of economic necessity, a role that lulled her predators into a false sense of

security. But beneath the surface of that seemingly fragile existence lay a sharp

intellect, a keen instinct for self-preservation, and a preparedness that bordered on

meticulous. She was a ghost in the machine, a phantom navigating the treacherous

currents of power and desire, her true strength hidden, waiting for the opportune

moment to reveal itself. Her calm demeanor was not a sign of meekness, but a

calculated strategy, a quiet promise of defiance against any who dared to

underestimate her. The city, with its glittering promise and its dark underbelly, was a

stage, and Angie was playing a role, but she was also the playwright, the director, and,

when necessary, the executioner of her own fate.

The air in her small apartment felt thick with unspoken anxieties. Maya traced the

condensation on her water glass with a trembling finger, her gaze distant. "He asked

me about you again today, Angie," she whispered, her voice barely audible above the

distant hum of traffic. "Where you went to school. If you had family around here. I

lied, of course. Said I didn't know much. But he has this way of looking at you, like he

sees right through you." A wave of despair washed over Maya's face. "I can't do this

anymore, Ang. I can't keep pretending. We need to leave. Now. Before he decides he

wants more than just... curiosity."

Angie reached across the worn Formica table, her fingers closing around Maya's. She

could feel the tremor in Maya's hand, the raw fear that mirrored her own. "I know,

baby. I know. We will. We just need to be smart about it. A little more time." Time was

a luxury they couldn't afford, a fact that gnawed at Angie with relentless persistence.

Silas's interest was escalating, a slow, insidious creep that threatened to engulf them

both. His requests for Angie's presence in the VIP rooms had become more frequent,

more insistent. Each time she was summoned, a knot of dread tightened in her

stomach. She would walk into that room, the air thick with the scent of expensive

cologne and something far more dangerous, and feel his eyes on her, dissecting her,

assessing her, marking her as his.

The club, once just a place of employment, was transforming into Silas's personal

hunting ground. His presence was a constant, palpable weight in the atmosphere, a

subtle pressure that seemed to amplify the hushed tones and watchful eyes of his

associates. They moved around him like a pack of wolves, their loyalty unquestioning,

their gazes sharp and proprietary. Angie felt like a specimen under a microscope,

every movement scrutinized, every interaction analyzed. The illusion of casual

coincidence, the carefully orchestrated 'chance' encounters that Silas's men

arranged, were becoming harder to ignore. A designer handbag she'd admired in a

shop window suddenly appeared in the club's lost and found, a specific brand of

expensive perfume appearing on a table near hers, a strategically placed flyer for an

art exhibit she'd mentioned wanting to see. These weren't random acts; they were

calculated moves, designed to test her reactions, to draw her further into his orbit, to

subtly assert his control.

The knowledge that Silas and his network were now actively probing into her life

outside the club was a terrifying escalation. They were gathering information about

her routines in South Central, her quiet life in the weathered apartment building, the

intimate details of her relationship with Maya. This wasn't a fleeting interest; it was a

calculated pursuit, fueled by a possessive desire to understand the allure that drew

him, to peel back the layers of the girl who captivated him from afar. He believed he

was meticulously mapping out his prey, unaware that he was observing a

meticulously crafted illusion, a deliberate misdirection designed to conceal a far more

dangerous reality. He saw a young, vulnerable girl, isolated and easily manageable. He

saw a target. He didn't see the steel beneath the silk.

Maya's apprehension had escalated into genuine fear. She confided her worries to

Angie constantly, her voice laced with a desperation that tore at Angie's heart. "He

watches you, Ang. He watches you like a hawk. And it's not just his eyes. It's the way

his men... they linger. They ask questions. I saw one of them near our building the

other day. Just... watching." Maya's concern was a driving force, a constant reminder

of the precariousness of their situation. She saw the predatory glint in Silas's eyes, the

way he commanded the attention of everyone around him, and feared that Angie's

perceived innocence was a dangerous invitation to men like him. "We have to go,"

Maya pleaded, tears welling in her eyes. "Please, Angie. We can go anywhere. Just

away from here. Away from him."

Angie's heart ached for Maya, for the terror that gripped her. She knew Maya was

right, that running was the safest option. But a deeper, more primal instinct warred

with that desire for escape. It was the instinct of self-preservation, honed by years of

navigating the dangerous streets of South Central. She had learned that sometimes,

the only way to truly be free was not to run, but to stand your ground, to fight for

your own territory. She continued to play her role, projecting an image of youthful

innocence and a need for protection. This carefully constructed persona was her

shield, her camouflage. It allowed her to deflect unwanted attention while

simultaneously gathering intelligence. She observed Silas and his network, learning

their patterns, their weaknesses, the subtle dynamics of their power. The illusion of

her own vulnerability was her most potent weapon, keeping her predators focused on

a target they believed they could easily manipulate, thereby underestimating her true

capabilities. She was a hunter disguised as prey, and the game was far from over.

Tucked away in the dusty confines of the attic, a space usually reserved for forgotten

Christmas decorations and the faint scent of mothballs, lay Angie's ultimate secret. It

was an AK-47 assault rifle, a formidable weapon that remained unseen, undisturbed.

This was no mere decoration; it was a functional, well-maintained instrument of

protection, a tangible symbol of her foresight and her refusal to be a passive victim.

Its presence was a stark testament to her preparedness, a silent promise of defiance

against any who dared to threaten her existence or cross her path with malicious

intent. The cold steel and polished wood represented a hidden strength, a core of

resilience that belied her outwardly youthful and unassuming appearance. It was the

embodiment of her determination to control her own destiny, a secret she guarded

fiercely, a contingency plan against the encroaching darkness.

Angie's preparedness extended far beyond the mere ownership of such a weapon. She

possessed the knowledge and the skills to wield it effectively, a consequence of

experiences she rarely spoke of and a deliberate, ongoing effort to ensure her own

safety. Her daily life, while appearing mundane to outsiders-the long hours at the

club, the quiet evenings with Maya, the careful budgeting of her meager

earnings-was punctuated by moments of intense focus and practice. In the quiet

solitude of her small apartment, or in the forgotten corners of her mind, she

maintained her vigilance, constantly honing her reflexes, her understanding of

tactical scenarios, her ability to remain calm under pressure. She knew the weight of

the weapon, the feel of the trigger, the disciplined breath required for accuracy. This

street smarts, this ingrained understanding of survival, was not a learned skill in a

classroom, but a hard-won education from the unforgiving streets of South Central.

Growing up in a neighborhood where vulnerability could be a death sentence had

instilled in Angie a deep, almost instinctual understanding of survival. She had

witnessed firsthand the consequences of being unprepared, the devastating ripple

effects of violence and exploitation. She had learned the hard, brutal lesson of

self-reliance, the understanding that help might not always come, and that

sometimes, the only person you could truly count on was yourself. This ingrained

mindset, this pragmatic approach to life that prioritized action over dependence,

fueled her preparedness and her unwavering resolve. It was the bedrock upon which

her carefully constructed facade was built. Her strength was not the overt, boisterous

kind that announced itself to the world. It was a quiet, internal fortitude, a core of

steel that remained unshaken even when surrounded by chaos and danger. She

possessed an emotional resilience that allowed her to compartmentalize fear and

focus on practical solutions, a mental discipline that was as vital as any physical skill.

This inner strength was often misinterpreted as passivity or weakness by those who

didn't truly know her, a mistake that could prove fatal for her adversaries.

You may also like

After My Ex Kissed My Stepsister at the Gala Novel Cover
8.9
Betrayal shatters Elena’s world when her fiancé is caught in a scandalous embrace with her stepsister during a high-profile gala. This public heartbreak forces Elena to confront the dark secrets lurking within her family's elite social circles. As she navigates the fallout, she uncovers a web of deception that stretches far beyond a simple affair. Now, Elena must protect her heart while solving a mystery that threatens her future and her legacy.
Choosing The Imposter Over His Dying Wife Novel Cover
9.8
My fiancée sacrificed five years of her life to save my family, falling into a deep coma. But when she finally woke up, I didn't greet her with love. I greeted her with pure hatred. Convinced by my mistress, Hailie, that Ericka was a traitor faking her illness for sympathy, I became her tormentor. When she told me she had stage four cancer, I laughed and accused her of manipulation. I locked her in a freezing safe house. I forced her into a sauna until her skin blistered, then doused her failing lungs with ice water. I dragged her out of the hospital to kneel in the rain until she collapsed. Even when she fell from a balcony, broken and bleeding, I let my men beat her. I watched her waste away, believing every one of Hailie's lies over Ericka's desperate truths. It wasn't until I saw her cold, blue body on the rocks below the cliffs that the truth finally shattered me. The autopsy confirmed the cancer I mocked was real. A hidden recording revealed Hailie had framed her all along, admitting she treated me like a dog on a leash. I realized I had tortured the woman who saved my life until she bought her own grave just to escape me. I burned Hailie alive at Ericka's funeral, but death was too easy a punishment. I lived in agony, a scarred monster praying for the end. But when I finally closed my eyes in the fire, I didn't die. I heard a beep. I opened my eyes, and the date on my phone was three years ago. The day Ericka woke up.
Futuristic Corporate War Zone Novel Cover
7.4
In a city where data is power and truth is a weapon, some secrets are worth killing for. Mara Quinn is a ghost in the system, an underground journalist known only as Cipher, feared by corporations and hunted by those with everything to lose. When she breaches a classified network inside Axiom Industries, she uncovers something no one was meant to see: ORACLE, a predictive AI capable of shaping human behavior on a global scale. She expects retaliation. She doesn't expect Kael Draven. Cold, brilliant, and untouchable, Kael is the architect behind Axiom's empire, and a man who doesn't make threats he can't execute. Instead of silencing Mara, he offers her a choice: work under his watch, or disappear from existence entirely. Trapped inside his glass fortress known as The Spire, Mara is pulled deeper into a world of surveillance, manipulation, and power plays that stretch far beyond anything she imagined. But ORACLE isn't just a tool, it's already been used. Governments have fallen. Empires have shifted. And someone else is pulling the strings. As a rival syndicate closes in and a hidden war erupts across the city, Mara and Kael are forced into an uneasy alliance, one built on intellect, suspicion, and a dangerous, undeniable pull neither of them can ignore. Because in a world where every move is predicted... the only thing more dangerous than control is feeling. And the system is already watching.
HIS CONTRACT WIFE IS HIS RUIN Novel Cover
9.2
He married her to control her. To break her. To own her. Seraphina let him believe it. She plays the quiet wife- soft voice, lowered eyes, perfect obedience. But behind every smile... is a plan he was never meant to survive. Because this marriage was never about love. Not even power. It was revenge. And when Lucien finally uncovers the truth- when he realizes who she really is... he won't be fighting to keep her. He'll be begging to escape her.
His Unwanted Mute Wife: Now His Obsession Novel Cover
8.6
I was the mute fisherman's daughter who married the King of New York, only to become his prisoner. Dante Vitiello didn't love me; he used my silence as a weapon and let his mistress, Valeria, rule my home. When Valeria poisoned herself to frame me, Dante didn't look for the truth. He drained my blood to save her life, then threw me into a freezing dungeon to rot among the rats. He planned to marry her while I shivered in the dark, telling me I was nothing but gutter trash. With no voice to scream and no way to fight, I chose the only escape left. I swallowed a vial of lethal pufferfish toxin, trading my life for a coma that mimicked death. I wanted to haunt him. I wanted my cold body to be his punishment. But when I woke up a year later, the world had changed. I wasn't in hell. I was in a clinic, and Dante was lying on the floor with a bullet in his temple. He had discovered the truth too late. To wake me up, he had accepted a deadly game of Russian Roulette. He signed our divorce papers with a steady hand, then pulled the trigger to buy my freedom. The monster was dead. And for the first time, the silence belonged to me.
Reborn From Ashes: The Vengeful Socialite's Return Novel Cover
7.9
Estrella Ward gave five years of her life to her husband, draining her trust fund to save him from bankruptcy and raising his son as her own. But one night, she woke up in a freezing hotel room, drugged, with a stranger's bite marks on her skin. Her husband burst through the door with cameras, his vicious family, and her ten-year-old stepson, publicly framing her as a cheating whore. The horrifying truth soon surfaced: her husband had drugged her himself, selling her body to his Wall Street boss to secure a senior partnership. Estrella fought back with hidden security footage, blackmailing him into submission after discovering she was pregnant with his boss's child. But fate dealt a cruel blow. She was diagnosed with aggressive, terminal breast cancer. She refused to abort the baby to keep her leverage, but the cancer spread too fast. She died alone in a cold hospital room, her vengeance unfinished, while her husband and his cruel family celebrated. They thought they had successfully buried her and her secrets forever, escaping unpunished for destroying her life. But when she gasped for air and opened her eyes again, she wasn't in a cold grave. She was in a sterile hospital bed, looking at the perfectly manicured hands of Brooklyn Thompson—the notorious, empty-headed socialite everyone despised. Estrella's soul had survived the abyss. "You're going to pay for every drop of blood." She clenched her new fists, the fire of her vengeance burning brighter than ever.