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Fell For The Mafia stepbrothers

Isabutterfly
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Hailey traded the glittering pole for paintbrushes and pastries, transforming her past as a stripper into a vibrant art studio and café. Life was sweet, especially with her two boyfriends, the half-twin brothers, Christian and Haiden. Haiden, the playful chef, showered her with affection and gourmet meals. Christian, with his brooding intensity, made her heart race with a single glance. Both were fiercely protective, a trait she attributed to their deep love for her. But beneath the surface of lattes and laughter, a mystery was brewing. Whispers followed Christian and Haiden, hushed conversations that stopped abruptly when she entered the room. Their absences grew longer, their explanations vague. One night, a shattered vase and a chilling phone call overheard in the dead of night shattered Hailey's idyllic world. The men she loved, the men who claimed to cherish her, were entangled in something dangerous, something dark. Were Christian and Haiden simply successful businessmen, or had Hailey unwittingly fallen for something far more sinister? And could she escape the shadows they cast before they consumed her entirely?
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

Trigger Warnings for this book: sexual content, violence, weapons, danger, panic attacks, anxiety, blood, very graphic descriptions, accidents, and more. If uncomfortable please DON'T READ! Thank you. 

The clock on the wall, barely visible through the haze of cheap perfume and desperation, probably read somewhere between 8 and 9 PM. Honestly, I couldn't be sure. Time seemed to blur and warp within the sticky confines of "The Velvet Room." My life felt the same way, a hazy, distorted mess.

I'm Hailey, and at 23, I was a dancer. A stripper. Call it what you want. It wasn't exactly my dream job, not the aspiration I scribbled in crayon as a kid. But dreams don't pay the bills, and right now, my reality was a sequined bra and a G-string under the flickering neon lights.

It was ironic, I suppose, that I found a strange kind of peace here. Most people would recoil, judge, whisper about wasted potential and moral decay. But for me, stepping onto that stage was like entering a sanctuary. Maybe it was the rhythmic pulse of the music, the freedom to move my body without judgment, or the simple fact that for a few minutes, I was in control. Whatever it was, The Velvet Room was my escape.

I didn't care about the leering eyes, the sweaty palms reaching for my skin, the hushed whispers and crude comments. They were just background noise. All I focused on was the music, the movements, the story I could tell with my body. Dancing had always been my refuge.

Growing up, my parents were locked in a perpetual battlefield of divorce and resentment. Our house was a war zone, littered with broken promises and shattered dreams. I was an only child, a lonely observer in a drama I couldn't control. But when I danced, I could create my own reality. I could be graceful, powerful, ethereal, anything I wanted to be.

It started with ballet lessons, then jazz, contemporary, and eventually, the raw, sensual energy of pole dancing. Each discipline helped me express the emotions I couldn't articulate, the pain and confusion that simmered beneath the surface.

Sometimes, I wondered if I could have done more, achieved more. Should I have pushed harder in school, pursued a "respectable" career? But then I looked around at the faces of the other girls, each with their own stories of hardship and resilience, and I knew I wasn't alone. We were all just trying to survive, to find a little bit of dignity in a world that often seemed determined to strip it away.