
The night, Club Eden, swallowed Raven Knight whole as she entered, she wasn’t wearing red, but she should’ve been. Red was for warning and sin. And sin was exactly what she was walking into.
Instead, she wore fitted black slacks that clung to her hips, a satin top that shimmered like spilled oil, and heels borrowed from Talia, the friend who swore Eden was “just a club.” Her press badge hid inside her purse, like a loaded gun she couldn’t afford to draw.
No one got inside Club Eden without a story, and tonight, hers was a lie dressed in silk. She wasn’t Raven Knight, investigative journalist for The Mirror. She was Raye Kincaid, an aspiring dancer from nowhere, with big eyes and a bigger dream.
A perfect disguise for a woman walking into the devil’s den.
The moment she crossed the velvet-draped threshold, sound hit her like a heartbeat. Music, slow, thick, seductive, throbbed through the floor. Perfume and smoke mixed with the sharp bite of whiskey. Every surface glowed in gold or red. The kind of red that warned you not to touch, but made you want to anyway.
Men in suits lounged like kings. Women in lace and diamonds floated between them, all slow smiles and dangerous curves. A chandelier of black crystal hung above the crowd like a frozen storm.
Raven paused, pulse flickering. Every sense screamed, You don’t belong here. But she lifted her chin and stepped forward. She had to see him. The devil himself, Jaxon Morreau.
The man who owned Eden, and three corpses that no one could prove were his doing. A name whispered in the underbelly of the city. A face that didn’t exist in photos, only in rumors. Tall. Cold. Beautiful. Cruel.
Her heels clicked against the marble, the sound too loud in her ears. A bouncer scanned her once, eyes, body, purse, and waved her through without a word.
That was the first warning. No ID. No questions. Just a nod. Like the club already knew who she was.
The bar stretched before her like a runway of dark glass. Dancers moved on poles at either end, their bodies liquid gold under the lights. The crowd pulsed around her, half lust, half worship. Every movement was deliberate. Controlled. Dangerous.
Raven’s pulse spiked. Her journalist instincts hummed. This place wasn’t just a club, it was theater. A ritual. And the man behind it was god.
She moved past the bar, pretending to look for the dressing rooms, phone hidden in her palm, camera app open. One photo. That’s all she needed. One glimpse of Jaxon Morreau, and she could blow open an empire.
“New?” a woman’s voice purred beside her.
Raven turned. The dancer in front of her had cinnamon skin and red-painted lips that gleamed under the lights. Her name tag read Kira, but her eyes said: I see through you.
“Yeah,” Raven lied easily. “Raye. First night.”
Kira’s smile didn’t reach her eyes. “Then a warning, Raye. Don’t wander. Not unless you’re invited.”
“Invited by who?”
Kira tilted her head toward the golden staircase coiled in the center of the room like a serpent.
“By him.”
Before Raven could ask, the lights dimmed. A soft bell echoed through the air. The music stopped.
The crowd went silent. And every head turned toward the stairs.
Jaxon appeared like a shadow wearing skin, tall, sharp-suited, dangerous. His presence hit harder than the bass ever could. The kind of man who didn’t walk into a room, he owned it simply by existing.
Raven froze. Every cell in her body screamed run, but her feet refused. His gaze swept over the club, detached, calculating, then it landed on her.
A jolt of heat shot through her spine. It felt like being seen and stripped all at once.
He started down the stairs with slow, predatory precision. The crowd shifted around him like the sea parting for its god. No one spoke. No one dared. The music shifted, low, dark, dangerous. His eyes never left hers.
When he reached her, the air between them tightened. His voice, when he spoke, was low and deliberate, like silk dragged across steel.
“Name.”
“Raye,” she said, as steady as she could.
“Raye what?”
“Kincaid.”
His gaze lingered, sharp and knowing, like he could taste the lie. Then a slow smile curved his mouth. Not kind. Not curious. Possessive.
“I don’t remember hiring you.”
She forced a shrug. “Audition night. Talia said...”
“Talia doesn’t run my club.”
He stepped closer. The scent of him, leather, smoke, danger, curled around her. “Where are you really from?”
Raven met his eyes, pulse racing. “Does it matter?”
A pause. A flicker of amusement, or maybe a threat. Then a low chuckle slipped from him. “You’ve got a sharp mouth. I like that.”
“I’m not here to be liked.”
“No,” he said softly, leaning in until his breath touched her cheek. “You’re here to be watched.”
Before she could move, his hand slipped around her waist, gentle, firm, claiming. “Come with me.”
She should have said no. She should have run.
But her body betrayed her, following before her mind could protest, up the stairs, past the stares, through a door that closed behind her with a sound that felt final. Like a lock clicking shut.
Raven’s breath hitched as her heels sank into the plush carpet. The air up here was cooler, quieter. The pulsing music below became a heartbeat under glass. A panoramic view of the city glittered through floor-to-ceiling windows.
This wasn’t a lounge, it was a throne room, and the man who stood in it didn’t just rule it. He was it.
Jaxon Morreau didn’t look at her right away. He poured himself a drink, the ice clinking softly in the glass. His movements were unhurried, deliberate, the kind of grace that only men born into power possessed. His tailored suit moved with him, black on black, but the faint glow from the city outside caught on the silver watch at his wrist.
“Scotch?” he asked, voice smooth as velvet, dangerous as the drop outside the window.
“No, thank you.” Her tone was polite, but tight.
He smirked. “A good liar always accepts the drink.”
“I’m not lying.”
He turned then, and the impact of his gaze hit like a physical blow. Eyes pale and unreadable, like winter light. He crossed the room, one step, then another, until the distance between them was gone.
“You’re lying about something,” he murmured, his voice so low it almost blended with the hum of the air conditioner. “Name. Background. Intent.” His hand brushed her jaw, not hard, but enough to make her heart stutter. “People come to Eden to be seen. You came to hide.”
She forced a breath. “Maybe I just wanted a job.”
He smiled again, slow and wolfish. “You don’t want money. You want danger.”
Her stomach twisted. He was too close. Too observant. Too right. “You don’t know me.”
He tilted his head slightly. “I know what it looks like when someone walks willingly into hell.”
The words hit harder than they should’ve, because for one terrifying heartbeat, she wanted him to keep seeing her, really seeing her.
He reached up, taking a strand of her hair between his fingers. “Journalist,” he said softly, as if testing the word. “Or dancer?”
Raven froze.
He let the strand fall, eyes darkening just enough to send a tremor through her. “Relax,” he murmured. “If you were a journalist, you wouldn’t have made it past the door. Eden eats liars for breakfast.”
Her lips parted. “Then why bring me up here?”
“Curiosity.”
He stepped behind her, his breath brushing her neck. “And instinct.”
Raven’s pulse tripped over itself. Every rational thought screamed at her to leave, but the heat flooding her skin said otherwise. He didn’t touch her again, not yet. He simply stood there, the tension between them coiled like a held breath.
“What do you want from me?” she whispered.
“What I want,” he said slowly, “is to know why a girl who doesn’t belong in my world keeps pretending she does.”
Her throat went dry. “Maybe I just like to dance close to danger.”
He leaned in, his lips close to her ear. “Then you should know that dancing with the devil has consequences.”
She turned her head slightly, their faces inches apart. “Are you the devil?”
His smile was soft. Chilling. “I’m worse. The devil bargains. I take.”
Something inside her sparked fear and fascination tangled together. She hated that her body responded, that her breath came faster. She hated the pulse between her legs that matched the slow rhythm of his voice.
“Tell me your real name,” he said.
She hesitated. “Raye.”
“Lie,” he murmured, eyes flicking to her lips.
“I told you...”
Before she could finish, his hand caught her chin, tilting her face up. His touch wasn’t rough, but it carried command. He studied her like she was a puzzle he fully intended to solve.
“You think you can play in my club, say my name, and walk away untouched?”
“I didn’t say your name.”
He smiled faintly. “You thought it. I felt it.”
Her heart stuttered. “You’re arrogant.”
“I’m honest.” His thumb brushed against her lower lip. “And you’re shaking.”
“I’m not...”
He pressed his thumb lightly into her mouth, silencing her. “Don’t lie to me, little thief.”
Her breath caught around the word. “Thief?”
“You came here to take something.” His tone was soft, but edged in steel. “Information, maybe. A secret. A piece of me.”
She swallowed hard, every nerve on fire. “And what if I did?”
“Then you should know,” he said, voice dropping an octave, “I always take something back.”
The air snapped like static. His hand left her chin only to rest briefly at the base of her throat, warm, controlled. Not choking. Just reminding her who was in control.
For a moment, Raven forgot why she was here. Forgot the files. The evidence. The risk. All she could feel was the heat of his skin, the scent of him, and the terrifying calm in his voice.
He leaned in until their mouths hovered a breath apart. “You want to know me, Raye Kincaid?”
“Yes,” she whispered before she could stop herself.
His lips curved, dangerous. “Then earn it.”
The kiss came without warning, deep, claiming, a promise and a threat in one breath. It wasn’t soft; it was possession. His hand tangled in her hair, pulling her closer until the world tilted.
When he finally pulled back, she was breathless, trembling, lips parted.
“Welcome to Eden,” he said quietly. “Everything here has a price.”
Her mind spun. “And what’s mine?”
He looked at her for a long, dangerous moment. “We’ll find out.”
He turned away, picking up his glass again like nothing had happened. “You’ll start tomorrow. Midnight.”
She blinked. “Wait, what am I starting?”
His eyes slid to hers, glinting under the low light. “Your audition.” And then the sound of his voice shifted, colder. “Don’t be late. My patience is… conditional.”
She opened her mouth to protest, to demand clarity, but he was already walking toward the door.
“Jaxon...” she said, before she could think.
He paused. Looked over his shoulder. “Don’t use my name so casually,” he warned, voice dropping low. “You haven’t earned that right either.”
The door clicked open, light spilling in from the hallway. He didn’t look back. “Tomorrow, Raye. We’ll see if you’re brave enough to keep lying.” And then he was gone.
Raven stood alone in the golden quiet, her pulse echoing in her ears. Every instinct screamed that she should leave, run, forget this place ever existed, but she couldn’t move, not yet, because as she glanced at the glass table beside the couch, she saw something glint beneath it, a black card with a silver serpent embossed across the surface.
The name engraved below it froze her blood, Jaxon Morreau, and beside it, an emblem she’d seen before, in the case files of a girl who’d vanished three months ago. Her breath hitched. Her phone buzzed in her purse, vibrating against her palm like an alarm. It was a message from an unknown number.
Unknown number: You shouldn’t have gone upstairs.
Raven’s blood turned to ice.


