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Lana Part 1 Lana — Rhoades

The bass dropped. The neon hummed. And Lana realized her past had just walked in the door, wearing an oyster-gray suit and holding all the answers she’d tried to bury.

Her real name wasn’t Lana Rhoades. That was a ghost, a persona she’d shed three years ago in a bus station bathroom in Nevada, leaving behind a sequined costume and a phone full of blocked numbers. Now, she wore tailored black slacks and a silk blouse the color of a fresh bruise. She was all sharp edges and quiet calculation.

Lana’s pulse didn’t change. She’d learned that trick in another life. “She’s dead,” Lana said. lana part 1 lana rhoades

He knew.

The neon sign of the "Blue Venus" flickered, casting Lana’s sharp cheekbones in alternating waves of electric blue and bruised purple. She wasn’t a dancer. Not anymore. She was the woman who counted the money, who knew which champagne bottles were real and which were just for show, and who had a list in her head of every man who owed the club owner, Silus, a debt. The bass dropped

The man smiled. It didn’t reach his eyes. “I’m looking for someone. She used to go by Lana Rhoades. Pretty, vulnerable, made men do very stupid things.”

Lana slid into the seat across from him, the leather sighing under her weight. “You’re either very lost or very stupid,” she said, her voice a low murmur over the thrum of bass. Her real name wasn’t Lana Rhoades

Tonight was different. A man in an oyster-gray suit sat alone in the VIP booth, nursing a single malt. He hadn’t taken his eyes off the stage, but he wasn’t watching the girls. He was watching the sightlines, the exits, the way Lana’s hand never strayed far from the panic button under the bar.