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Mafia Doll Novel Cover

Mafia Doll

Within a dark criminal empire, a woman is held prisoner by a cold mafia leader who views her as a decorative possession. Forced to endure a life of treachery and brutality, she fights to regain her freedom. However, a dangerous and unpredictable attraction develops between the tyrant and his captive. To survive this lethal environment, she must use her intellect to navigate the narrow boundary between total compliance and her inner power.
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Chapter 2

“Can I help you?”

The deep voice makes me turn. The doorman—broad-shouldered, perched on a stool—sizes me up with one eyebrow raised. His suit fits a little tight, but this isn’t the time for jokes.

“Hi… I’m looking for Pamela.”

“And you are?”

“Her cousin. Vanessa. She gets off now.”

His expression softens just a fraction. He pushes the door open with one hand and jerks his chin for me to go in.

The hit of music goes straight through my chest. Red lights, smoke, bodies moving pressed together like the beat is breathing them. I get it instantly: this isn’t just a bar. It’s night territory.

I take a second to get my bearings. To the left, a long bar; in the back, the dance floor; above, a mezzanine with couches and curtains that don’t hide a thing. In the center, a chrome pole over a small circular stage. The light falls like colored blades and slices the darkness into strips.

She appears out of the shadows as if someone had said my name to summon her. Pamela. Her blond hair—the same one Auntie tamed with dye—flares under the spotlight. The music drops to a pulse that marks her hips. She’s in minimal lingerie, topless; the light skims her torso in flashes. She circles the pole like she’s known it all her life: hands up, the sole of her foot climbing the metal, an arch of her back that draws out shouts and bills. From the direction of the spotlights, I know she can’t see me. I, on the other hand, see her completely. I recognize her by the mark on her lower back and by something even harder to bear: that way of smiling at nothing so she won’t break.

I freeze. A cold gnaws at me from inside. Maybe I came to confirm a rumor; instead, I find a certainty.

When the song ends, someone scoops up money from the edge of the stage. Pamela slips through a black curtain at the side, swallowed by the penumbra. I move on instinct, not courage. I skirt the floor toward the hallway. An employee in a black T-shirt blocks me without even looking at me.

“Backstage, no,” he says, mechanical.

“I need to see Pamela. I’m family.”

“Backstage is for staff and customers with wristbands.”

“It’s an emergency.”

“It isn’t.”

I feel a current of anger and fear surge up. “What do I have to do to—?”

“Buy time.” He points at an acrylic price menu behind him without lifting his back from the wall.

I don’t have that money. I don’t have that time. I push a little harder, literally. “Five minutes. Just five.”

He barely turns his torso. “I said no.”

Someone brushes past my shoulder, pushes a door that beeps. I slip into the gap like it’s air: I stick to his back and cross before the lock sounds again. The employee catches my wrist too late; I yank free like it burns.

The hallway is narrow, old carpet, photos stuck up with tape that no longer sticks. Muffled laughter leaks from behind numbered doors. Other doors thrum with different music, like each room has its own night. I walk fast, don’t think. I knock on the first, the second. No one opens. At the third, the inner curtain lets out a thread of sweet smoke. I push in.

Pamela is there, dancing for a man in a private room, under a light dimmer than the rest of the club. There’s a couch, a table with glasses, a slack curtain, and the minimum distance between her body and his. I won’t describe more. I don’t need to. The way the client leans in, that hand getting too possessive, and Pamela’s response so deliberately seductive are enough.

“Pam,” I say, and my voice sounds like someone else is speaking for me.

She turns, incredulous. In that flash of surprise, there’s shame, anger, relief, all at once. She covers herself as best she can with a garment waiting on the table, pulls her knee off the couch, and lowers her gaze. The man complains without raising his voice, with that tone that pretends to be polite and only confirms a habit: that everything is at his service.

“This isn’t your shift here,” he says, looking at my clothes, not my eyes.

“It’s not your call who comes in,” I answer. The line comes out steady, though my legs are shaking inside.

Pamela steps forward and puts her body between the client and me, as if she could soften the hit.

“Vanessa, please,” she whispers, and now she does look at me, exhausted and scared.

The employee from outside shows up with another guard. The scene freezes for a second: four people and a silence heavier than the music outside. I raise my hands without a fight, but I don’t move.

“I’m leaving,” I say, but I point at my cousin. “She’s coming with me.”

The client makes a gesture of annoyance and reclines on the couch, like this is a minor hiccup in a long night. “Finish your… business outside. Scram.”

Pamela nods as she slips on a robe. Her chin trembles; she pulls herself together with a sloppy knot. One guard starts to say something; the other stops him with a brief look—the look of someone who’d rather avoid an unnecessary problem.

We walk out together. The hallway swallows us, and the club’s noise slams back in. We walk tight, shoulder to shoulder, to a side door that leads to a flight of stairs and then to an exit with a gulp of cold air.

We stop there, half outside, the city dimmed like a backdrop. There’s no speech that fits what I saw. No question that doesn’t sound like an accusation.

“I thought you were a waitress,” I say at last, without edge, barely a thread of voice.

Pamela closes her eyes. Breathes. Nods once, slow, like surrendering to a truth she’d rather bite.

“I didn’t want you to see me like this,” she says. She doesn’t add more.

“This isn’t safe,” I add. I don’t add more either.

We don’t hug. We don’t cry. We just stand there, two girls in our twenties frozen in a service doorway, trying to figure out how you straighten a path when you’ve already taken the curve.

“Let’s go,” I say.

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