STARSTRUCK: A Dark Bad Boy Romance (The Destroyers MC)

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STARSTRUCK: A Dark Bad Boy Romance (The Destroyers MC) Page 25

by Zoey Parker


  Letting go of my edge would have been bad for business, so I let people believe what they wanted to believe. As long as they couldn’t find any signs of wrong-doing, I was in the clear, but I stayed sleazy and hard in the eyes of the law and, more importantly, my patrons. Image was everything.

  The ad I had put in the local underground paper turned up quite a few girls to take the positions I needed filled at The Bounce House Gentlemen’s Club. So far none of them had been right. There was never any shortage of girls who were willing to bare it all for money in the city. The streets were a rough place, especially for young women.

  But that didn’t mean every girl who found herself on the street belonged on my stage. There were shelters, churches, and other places for women whose talents and looks didn’t quite fit what I needed.

  I had lost count of the girls who had come through my office, and I was starting to lose interest when the petite strawberry blonde with bright blue eyes came in. She wore jeans that were a little loose and a t-shirt that hinted at the curve of her breasts.

  What caught my attention most of all was the innocence in her face. She looked young. There was no way she was old enough to be on my stage. She was young and undefiled, and there was no way she needed to be there. I couldn’t help her, and I certainly wasn’t about to hire someone who looked underage, not with the cops keeping a close eye on the place. Still, there was something about her.

  My ex-wife had strawberry blonde curls like this innocent doll-faced princess in front of me. There was something similar in her eyes, too, something that took me back to when I had first fallen in love with my ex-wife, before she had turned into the heinous bitch who had left me holding just my balls in my hand at the end of our marriage.

  I didn’t want to let another innocent little beauty get ruined by this life. She was hot, but she was not a dancer. She might have been good in bed, but I did not want to put her on the market like that.

  “And who might you be?” I asked, forcing myself to form words.

  “My name’s Lucy,” she said meekly.

  There was a sadness in her voice, but there was also determination. She didn’t sound like she had much confidence, but she made it clear that wasn’t going to stop her from trying. That was an admirable quality in a person.

  “Is Lucy your real name or your stage name?” I asked. It was a legitimate question in my line of work. I didn’t want to call her by her real name at work. Besides, if I hadn’t asked, I would have assumed a name like Lucy was a cute little stage name for a good girl gone bad, just like the one in front of me.

  “I don’t have a stage name. I’ve never done this before,” she answered bashfully.

  I adjusted myself in my pants. Those were the words every man wanted to hear from a girl. Professionally those words were a red flag, but, personally, they drew me in. I wanted to see what this pretty little tart could do before I told her no and sent her packing.

  My office was only for the first part of the interview process. I usually talked the girls up a little bit and tried to get a feel for who they were. I wanted to know if they were going to fit in or be problematic with my other girls. I didn’t do that with Lucy. I wasn’t planning on keeping her around. I just wanted to get a look at her.

  I had my phone plugged into a speaker set on my desk. I reached over and hit play to start some music for her to dance to. The rhythmic bass in the little desktop speakers didn’t quite drown out the PA system in the main room, but it gave her a little something to work with, not that I expected much from her. She stood stiffly and looked like me with wide, scared eyes.

  Her inexperience showed all over her face. She was probably the type who made sure her blinds were closed before she got ready for bed. She probably slept in a full nightgown with a high neck to keep herself perfectly hidden. She was so virginal and puritan, I didn’t expect much more from her than I was already seeing.

  “Go ahead and show me how you dance,” I urged her, sitting back in my chair. I had one hand down on my lap, cupping the growing bulge in my pants. My other arm rested on the arm of the chair, holding my chin in my hand.

  “Shouldn’t I have a pole or something?” she asked nervously, glancing around the room.

  Her nervousness was heartbreaking. “Just show me what you can do first. It’s not all pole dancing out there. I want to see how you handle your body.” I wanted to handle her body. I wanted to see what she was trying to hide under those clothes. I stroked myself through my pants, thinking about what I could do to a girl like Lucy.

  I reached over and skipped to the next song on my playlist. The energy suddenly picked up. It was a much fiercer dance number than the previous song. I watched as her hips started to sway slowly to the beat. I told myself she needed to warm up and reminded myself to be patient with her. After all, she did say it was her first time.

  Once she found her groove, she started moving her body like she was begging me to touch her, like she was inviting someone to join her or take her right there in the office. The other someone in the room was me, and I was having a very hard time staying on my side of the desk. I didn’t touch my girls. It was part of being careful and keeping work clean.

  But Lucy wasn’t one of my girls.

  She pressed herself against the desk and started working her hips like she was trying to grind on someone behind her. I watched in awe as this unlikely little thing moved her body like the pros out there on the stage.

  I stopped the music and she stood up straight, pushing her strawberry curls out of her face.

  “Why’d you stop it?” she asked, out of breath.

  “I think I’ve seen enough,” I told her. I couldn’t even imagine what she would have been like on the pole. She would have blown everyone away. Hell, she could have probably pulled more money than the other girls without even using the pole. There were girls out there who didn’t use it much, but I was sure if she touched it, the world itself would have had an erection.

  I sure as hell had one. I hunched over the desk and thanked her for coming in.

  “I thought I did pretty well,” she argued.

  “Yeah, I’m sorry I put you through that. I really shouldn’t have, but I think I’ve got enough girls now,” I lied. I didn’t have any new girls. I was going to have to choose from a far less qualified but more experienced batch simply to keep from having the cops on me for an underage dancer. Even if I accepted that she was of age, she didn’t look it, and appearances were everything. A young dancer would have certainly brought in some business, though probably the wrong kind.

  “Okay,” she said quietly, lowering her head.

  “Thank you for coming in,” I told her as she turned and walked away. I wanted to get her number to call her for myself, but I told myself to let her go. Like so many others, she was bound to find her way.

  I heard all manner of sad sob stories from girls who came through my office, but Lucy was possibly the saddest of all, and she hadn’t told me anything about herself other than her name. She crumbled as she walked away. All the wind had been pulled from her sails.

  I sighed. I wanted to help her, but the club wasn’t the place for her. I couldn’t help girls who couldn’t help me. I tried to tell myself she was just another lost soul.

  “All right, work,” I told myself out loud in my office, forcing my attention back to the interviews. I didn’t have time to let every single girl get on the stage, and I was doing these interviews during business hours instead of the middle of the afternoon. As long as I was there, I was going to see my prospective dancers. I was working my remaining girls to death to cover for the three I’d let go.

  I adjusted myself for the next girl and called her in. I saw several more before calling it a night on the interviews. I told the remaining girls I had already hired the girls I needed. It was such an easy lie to use. Most of them didn’t even question it. They simply sighed or rolled their eyes and wandered on down to the next place.

  That was fine by me. I had a
stack of papers and a nice collection of photos in my phone to go with them. I figured that when I went back through that stack, I was bound to find my new girls. I closed my door and sat back down behind my desk. I was underwhelmed by the selection and overwhelmed by the sheer number of girls I was about to dig back through.

  Chapter 2

  Lucy

  I walked out of The Bounce House strip club and crossed the parking lot. It was as dead outside was it had been inside. The so-called ‘gentlemen’s club’ was in a seedy, rundown section of town, but I had heard on the street that a lot of money passed through it. Some of the girls made bank night after night.

  I saw the ad in the local independent newspaper. The ad requested girls who were a cut above the rest and not afraid to bare it all. I had never done anything like that, but I had run out of options. Stripping was my last stop. There was nowhere left to go.

  When I had left my parents’ house, I went to Dylan’s house first, but the windows were dark and there were no cars in the driveway. I peeked in and saw an empty house. I wondered how he’d picked up his family and relocated so quickly, but it wasn’t important. What mattered was he was gone. He probably wasn’t leaving his wife. He’d probably taken her with him.

  With what money I had in my checking account, I checked into a cheap hotel room. I didn’t need anything fancy or expensive, just a bed and a shower. Carpet and wallpaper leftover from the age of disco didn’t hurt either. The musty room featured stained curtains, a dirty window that could only barely be seen through, and an air conditioner in the wall that clanged and knocked whenever it came on.

  It was a roof over my head, and it was incredibly orange, which was better than the world outside. The city was just different shades of gray smudged together like a charcoal drawing. At night, it lit up with old yellow-brown street lights that merely emphasized the pools of darkness between them. Still, it was color.

  From my 1970s hotel room, I had attempted to find a job. I had a handful of marketable office and people skills. I was a Harvard undergrad studying business and economics. All the opportunities in the city should have been open to me, but there was one problem: my dad knew every major businessman in the city.

  He had gone ahead and taken the liberty of making sure there were no job opportunities available to me because I was pregnant out of wedlock. I had even been turned away by a few receptionists before even speaking to anyone because they simply knew who I was thanks to my dad. I was beginning to see the downside of being the daughter of a successful, wealthy, and powerful man like my father. He had everyone’s strings in his hand and could easily pull them, one by one.

  I had taken dance classes back in high school. It wasn’t ballet or anything like that. My parents knew I never would have gone for anything that artsy. I learned real dances, like the waltz, tango, salsa, and dances like that. I learned how to move my body and use it to express myself. We had even focused on some popular dances, and not just traditional or formal dance styles. I knew how to handle myself enough to dance on the stage at a strip joint.

  I figured I only had a few months to dance before the baby started to show, so I was going to work and save up enough money to get back on my feet by the time I started showing. At that time, I was probably going to have to figure something else out, but I was going to work on that while I was dancing. I had to take it one step at a time.

  Before going in to get an interview, I got some bad news from the hotel manager. My account had been frozen. I had no money to continue paying for the room. On my way out to The Bounce House, I had to pack all my things up and carry them with me. I had left my pack outside the office before going in to see the sleazy owner.

  I couldn’t believe he hadn’t given me the job after the way he had watched me. I saw the hunger in his eyes. He stared at me with his gray eyes and his shiny black hair slicked back. He scrutinized my every move from his leather desk chair. He’d kept one hand under the desk the whole time. I was sure he’d been touching himself while I stood in front of him.

  His office was dark. There was one hard white light on his desk, but everything else was black, and not the black of my parents’ living room. Their black created a contrast to show just how sterile everything was. The black of his office emphasized the dead-end feel of his establishment. The place was as seedy as the world outside.

  It hadn’t been much of an interview either. He didn’t ask me about myself other than to get my name. He hadn’t even introduced himself to me. It was like I was supposed to accept that he was who he said he was just because he sat behind the desk with a perverse hunger in his eyes.

  I didn’t get a look at him from the waist down, which was probably a good thing, but I saw a few pieces of ink on his forearms. His vest looked like a biker vest with patches on it. The one patch I could read said Blade, so I figured that was his name, or at least what the gang called him.

  After I walked out of his office, I cried.

  I sat down on the curb at the edge of the parking lot and cried. Everything came crashing down on me at once. I had lost my virginity to a man who more than likely never cared about me at all. I was preparing to have a baby instead of starting my senior year of college. I had been kicked out of my house. I couldn’t find a job. I’d lost the one place I had to stay.

  I was alone, and I was at the end of my rope. There was only one option left that I could see, and I didn’t want to take it. I didn’t want to sell my body to make ends meet. I’d heard stories about women getting stuck on the streets that way. It seemed like the way to make a good bit of money at first, but the story always seemed to go the same way. Once they started, they found it harder and harder to get back above it. That wasn’t going to be me.

  I felt like there was a time limit on anything I was going to do. I had a baby on the way, and I didn’t foresee myself continuing to work immediately after it was born. It. I wasn’t even far enough along to know my baby’s gender. I was having to call my unborn child it.

  I wept in the dirty, oil-stained parking lot under an old yellow streetlight. It was the first time I had cried since the whole thing began. I never cried; it was a sign of weakness in our home, and my dad insisted he wasn’t going to raise a weak daughter. Well, I wasn’t home anymore. A nice private cry in the parking lot of a strip joint wasn’t going to upset anyone who wasn’t there to see it.

  The world was not what I had expected. Leaving my parents’ house, I had strange, romanticized notions of what the streets were like. There was always a way to make a buck. People who were down on their luck would stick together and help each other out. The people were colorful even if nothing else was.

  But that wasn’t what I had encountered at all. Everyone I had met was out for themselves. They had no time to worry about anyone else while they were trying to get off the streets. There was always a way to make a buck; it was called prostitution. It was the lowest of the low, the most desperate act, and it was illegal. I wasn’t about to have my baby behind bars. Most of the people I had met were not colorful. They were as gray and dirty as the city streets they walked.

  I figured I had hit rock bottom. I cried because I didn’t know what else to do. I could have gone home, but my dad would have shipped me off to family in Washington to have an abortion. At the end of summer, I would have returned to college as if nothing had happened, and I would have been expected to carry on like normal. Except I would have known what had happened, and I would have carried that guilt and shame with me without being able to divulge my truth to anyone.

  I wanted to scream. I wanted to get up and run away, but there was nowhere else to go. I just sat there and waited. I didn’t really know what I was waiting for. A miracle, maybe.

  In all the time I sat out there crying into my hands, not a single person walked by. No cars drove by. It was almost silent other than the far-off sounds of traffic, the interstate highway that cut through downtown, and the occasional siren. But all the city sounds were off in the distance. Nothi
ng was going on where I was. I was at the end of everything. There was nothing beyond where I sat.

  It was a horrible feeling. Nothing in my colorful, hopeful life had prepared me for this. I looked around me at empty parking garages, abandoned cars, and deserted gray streets. It was surreal. I tried to tell myself that if I were sitting in the empty parking lot of a strip club, I was better off than the girls inside trying to perform for an empty room. At least I wasn’t stuck having to work for nothing. I still had the opportunity to get off my ass and try to find another job.

  Who was I kidding? I couldn’t even get a job dancing. I pulled my knees up to my chest and wrapped my arms around my legs. I buried my face between my knees and sobbed.

  I did one thing wrong, one thing, and my whole life was ruined. I was supposed to be finishing school, dammit! I was supposed to be getting ready to go out into the world and pave my own way through it, not crying my eyes out in front of a strip club. And I certainly wasn’t supposed to be pregnant and alone.

  Chapter 3

 

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