THE WOLF IN THE VELVET DEN
She told herself it was just a job.
A stage, a song, a handful of bills to keep the lights on for one more month. But the moment Selen Vale walked into The Velvet Den, she knew the place had teeth.
The air was heavy—thick with perfume and something older, something that hummed beneath the music. The girls backstage joked and laughed, but none of it sounded real. Even their smiles looked borrowed.
Selen’s smile wasn’t fake, just tired; the kind that came from holding yourself together because falling apart wasn’t an option.
When her turn came, she stepped under the red lights and took a deep breath. The crowd blurred. The bass rolled through her bones. She moved the way survival teaches you to—slow, careful, pretending it doesn’t hurt. And for a few minutes, she almost believed she could disappear into the rhythm.
Until the world changed.
It was like the air had forgotten how to breathe. A chill crept down her spine, sharp and certain, pulling her eyes toward the darkened balcony above.
That’s when she saw him.
Lucien Blackwell sat alone, half in shadow, half in the glow of a dying light. He didn’t belong here. His presence was too precise, too still—a man built for control, not chaos. Yet he watched her as if she were both.
Their eyes met.
The song kept playing, but it might as well have stopped.
For one impossible second, she felt something inside her responding: not attraction, not fear, but recognition.
Like her body had known him long before she did.
By the time the song ended, he was gone.
No applause. No trace. Just the sound of her own pulse crashing in her ears.
Backstage, Mara handed her a drink and said, “First nights are always rough. You’ll get used to it.” Selen only nodded, staring at her reflection in the cracked mirror. She didn’t look like herself anymore. Something in her eyes looked… awake.
Outside, rain started to fall — soft at first, then heavier. The city lights bled into one another, and for a moment, Selen swore she saw movement in the reflection of a nearby window.
A shape. A flicker.
Eyes that caught the light just long enough to make her heart skip.
She blinked. Gone. Just her, and the sound of her own footsteps echoing against wet pavement. Still, as she walked, the feeling stayed — a pulse behind her ribs that wasn’t entirely her own.
Like something had turned its head toward her, and hadn’t yet decided whether to follow.