"You're planning to order something, or are you just going to stare at people all night?"
The bartender's blunt voice cut through the heavy thump of bass, snapping Cole out of his thoughts.
He blinked, then cleared his throat. "Right." Sorry. I will have a Coke.
The bartender raised an eyebrow, eyeing him with amused curiosity. "Coke? "In a place like this?" She smirked. "You sure you're not lost?" Most guys that look like you don't come here just to sip soda and people-watch.
Cole offered a small smile. "Early shift tomorrow." Can't exactly show up hammered.
"Fair enough," she said with a grin, turning to pour his drink.
As she walked away, Cole returned to his silent observation. From the outside, he looked like any other man nursing a drink at the bar. But he wasn't here to unwind.
He was already on duty.
Cole Matteo, in his mid-30s, a detective with the Chicago Police Department's Bureau of Detectives, was deep into a case involving a string of mysterious disappearances—young women, all in their late teens or early twenties, all stunningly beautiful. Their last known locations? Nightclubs. Most notably, this nightclub is tucked near the city's industrial district.
It was loud, chaotic, full of flashing lights and sweating bodies—but Cole saw through it. Beneath the surface was something darker, and he was here to find it.
The club's owner, Travis Dunham, was a wealthy entrepreneur with a slippery reputation. Too wealthy. Too protected. Cole suspected he was deeply involved in a s*x trafficking ring that spanned across state lines, but Dunham's army of lawyers made sure no accusation ever stuck. Unless Cole caught him red-handed, there would be no justice for the missing girls.
The bartender returned with his drink. "Here you go, officer."
He nodded a thank-you, watching her melt back into the crowd of customers. Taking a slow sip, Cole shifted his gaze to the dance floor—a sea of movement, laughter, and oblivious joy. It was the kind of place Maria, his late wife, used to love. That life felt distant now.
Above the dance floor was a glass-railed balcony reserved for VIPs. There, standing like a predator surveying prey, was Travis Dunham himself. He leaned forward, hands resting on the rail, scanning the crowd with a sharp eye. Cole could almost feel the weight of Travis's gaze—it was predatory, calculating.
They were both hunting.
But for vastly different reasons.
Most of the women on the dance floor were coupled up, either with boyfriends or hopeful flings. None of them matched the profile of the victims. Cole was beginning to think this night might be a bust.
Then, he saw her.
She moved like smoke—elegant, fluid, and out of place.
The crowd parted unconsciously around her as if their instincts knew she wasn't one of them. Her dress clung to her like shadows, black and shimmering under the lights. Long dark hair curled down her back. And her eyes… red. Glowing, even from a distance.
It was as if the entire club had dimmed around her.
Cole sat forward, transfixed.
Something wasn't right.
She wasn't just another girl on the dance floor.
And neither was she human.
---
JGreat choice. Here's a rewritten version of Episode 2 of Cole and the Demon, crafted in a dark, seductive, and suspenseful tone-but without explicit content. This version preserves the supernatural allure and intensity of the scene while making it immersive and refined.
---
A woman of impossible beauty danced in the center of the crowded nightclub. Her skin—smooth and pale like porcelain—seemed to shimmer under the pulsing strobe lights. Long, obsidian hair flowed with every graceful turn of her head, moving as though alive.
Her crimson cocktail dress clung to her like liquid fire, skimming the tops of her thighs and dipping a deep V down her chest. She moved with an effortless rhythm, her spiked black heels clicking against the floor with power and poise. There was no question—this woman commanded the room.
And yet, no one seemed to notice her.
No heads turned. No hands reached out. It was as if she danced alone, encased in a bubble of shadow and glamour, invisible to all but one man.
Cole.
From his seat at the bar, he couldn't tear his eyes away. She was stunning, magnetic… wrong. Something about her shimmered just outside the rules of reality. Then her eyes met his.
Her smile was slow, deliberate. And in that split second, Cole swore her eyes flashed red—brilliant, burning ruby—before returning to a soft brown. A trick of the lights, he told himself. A reflection. Nothing more.
He looked away, pretending to scan the balcony above. There, as expected, stood Travis Dunham, watching the dance floor with a predator's gaze. He spotted her too. Cole watched as Travis summoned a guard, pointed, and gave a quiet order.
The bouncer approached her carefully, respectfully. She followed him without hesitation, weaving through the crowd like a phantom toward the private VIP lounge above.
Travis greeted her with a kiss on the hand before they vanished behind the smoked glass of the upstairs suite.
Cole's pulse quickened.
That wasn't just a dancer.
That was something else.
And he knew—this was his shot.
Either she came back down… or he went up. Either way, he'd find her. And maybe, just maybe, the trail that led to Maria's death would start behind that door.
---
Inside the VIP Lounge
The private suite above the nightclub was sleek, modern, and expensive. Velvet furnishings. Crystal liquor decanters. A wall-length window offered a glowing view of downtown Chicago, the Loop pulsing with artificial life.
Travis poured two glasses of wine, slipping something colorless and dangerous into one of them. His back was to her.
"Drink?" he asked, his tone smooth, confident.
When he turned around, he froze.
The glasses slipped from his hands and shattered on the floor.
She was standing motionless in front of him—her dress in a crimson heap at her feet. But it wasn't nudity that shocked him.
It was the feeling.
She radiated something… ancient. Terrifying. Seductive and cold.
She smiled again, and he felt something twist inside him.
He tried to speak, but his words caught in his throat. Still, his body moved toward her like a moth to flame. She welcomed his touch with a whisper that curled into his ear like smoke.
"Do you always drug the ones you want to keep?"
His eyes widened.
"I-"
"Shhh," she said softly, placing a finger to his lips. "Tonight, Travis… it's your turn."
The lights dimmed. The air thickened. And somewhere in the distance—unheard by all but one—a soul screamed.
---
Back at the Bar
Cole stared at the darkened glass of the VIP suite.
He felt it before he saw it—a shift in the air, like the calm before a storm. Something told him what was happening behind that door wasn't part of any usual Friday night ritual.
And deep in his gut, he knew:
The woman in red was not of this world.
And neither was the justice she brought.