Eleanor Harper stood on the platform of Manchester Piccadilly Station, clutching a second-hand suitcase and a folder of university acceptance letters. At nineteen, she had aced her A-levels in a modest terraced house in a small town on the outskirts. Her mother Patricia, a widowed cleaner who worked double shifts, hugged her tightly.
“London’s full of wolves, love. Keep your head down, study hard, and make something of yourself. We’ve sacrificed too much for this.”
The train journey south felt endless. Ellie stared out at the passing fields, dreaming of a Business and Media degree at a respected London university, a good job, and lifting her family out of debt. She arrived at Euston Station overwhelmed by the crowds and noise. A cheap student accommodation in East London awaited — shared with Sophie Langford, a sharp, working-class Londoner who had seen it all.
Her first days were pure excitement: orientation, freshers’ events, and lectures. But reality crashed in quickly. The rent was £800 a month, her part-time café job paid minimum wage, and the maintenance loan barely covered basics. Patricia called nightly, hiding her own struggles with bills back home.
Sophie, noticing Ellie’s stress, took her out for cheap drinks. “This city doesn’t hand out favours, babe. You’ve got the looks and the brains — don’t waste them.”
University life intensified. Ellie met Jasmine Harrington at a freshers’ party in Shoreditch — a stylish girl always in designer knock-offs, with an aura of effortless luxury. Jazz introduced her to a faster crowd and shared stories of “hustling” to survive in London.
Bills mounted. Ellie’s landlord demanded two months’ rent upfront. A frantic call to Patricia revealed her mother had lost hours at work. Desperate, Ellie skipped meals and took extra shifts, but exhaustion affected her studies.
One evening, Sophie brought home shopping bags. “Met a guy who sorted me out. Older, generous. No strings if you play it right.” Ellie recoiled, but the seed was planted. Professor Edward Lang, a charismatic lecturer in his late 40s, noticed her potential in class and offered vague “mentorship.”
Marcus Blackwell, a charming mixed-heritage student from a similar background, approached her in the library. Their conversation flowed easily — he made her laugh and reminded her of home. For a moment, normalcy felt possible.
Financial pressure peaked. Ellie received an eviction notice. At a club night organised by Jazz, she was introduced to Richard Thornton — a successful, married hedge fund manager in his mid-40s with a penthouse in Canary Wharf. Charming and attentive, he paid for everything that night and slipped her £500 “for books.”
Ellie told herself it was just dinner. But dinners turned into weekends away. Richard bought her clothes, paid her rent, and promised introductions to industry contacts. Her grades stabilised as money worries eased, yet guilt gnawed at her. She lied to Patricia about a prestigious internship.
Sophie warned her: “These men own you eventually.” Jazz encouraged her: “Use what you have before youth fades.” Marcus sensed the change — Ellie’s new outfits, late nights — and grew concerned. A budding romance between them stalled as Ellie pulled away.