slippinninque
slippinninque
e e p !
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✨I'm here to read n' write!✨ 🌼beware, there's gonna be alot of fanfics lol🌼 🌟18+ /MINORS DNI / blk - lvl 28 / Multi Fandom🌟
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slippinninque · 37 minutes ago
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LIL' VIOLET IS BEING SO BRAVE🤸🏾‍♀️👏🏾🤸🏾‍♀️👏🏾🤸🏾‍♀️
the longing is getting to me in the best way, Smoke had to walk off her touch less he did something they BOTH wasn't ready for, UGH 🥹
I gasped and choked when she came out from that curtain and Smoke followed her, to feel them be so close but they're still circling each other is just👏🏾 SO GOOD 👏🏾
Smoke making that man run hai pockets for his flower had me "AND THATS RIGHT AS HE SHOULD"
Also, I fully imagine Cordelia as something as a Cheshire Cat of Truth and Desire because the way she be clocking Violet be getting me 🤣🤏🏾
Just so good, just another gem, thank you for sharing 💕💓💕💓💕💓💓💕💓💕
The Blackline.
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Summary: The Blackline is a sultry, tale set in 1929 in the hidden quarters of Little Rock’s Black district, where flappers, vice, and hoodoo tangle in velvet-lit shadows. Violet, a timid Gullah Geechee girl with nowhere else to turn, finds herself working in a brothel run by the enigmatic Stack Moore—a pimp with charm, secrets, and a past steeped in sin. But it’s Stack’s older twin, Smoke, who consumes Violet’s thoughts. A war-worn man of few words, Smoke commands the room with silence alone.
Warnings: SMUT (building tension, soft dominance, Virgin!OC)
Part Two
Part One
The air was thick with the smell of mud, gasoline, and tension.
Smoke crouched near the edge of the swamp, one hand resting on the rusted hood of the Ford truck stacked with crates of illegal whiskey. The wood was still damp from its time hidden beneath floorboards in a dry preacher’s shed two counties over. Now, it was headed to a juke in Helena run by a man with gold teeth and too many enemies.
Moonlight shimmered off the bayou. Mosquitoes buzzed. Fireflies gleamed. Cypress trees stood like sentinels in the dark. Stack wasn’t with him this time. He’d taken a different route—diversion. If anyone was watching, they’d trail Stack’s decoy load and leave Smoke to move the real cargo quiet and clean.
He lit a cigarette, took a slow drag, then puffed it out through his nose.
Bootlegging in the Delta wasn’t for loudmouths. It was for men who could ride the edge of blood and silence, and Smoke was the best at it. He wasn’t just muscle. He was methodical, deadly when necessary, and trusted by the wrong kinds of powerful men.
As he drove down the narrow dirt road through the trees, wheels kicking up mud and stones, he kept his pistol close. A sawed-off sat under the seat. A blade tucked behind the brake lever.
By the time he reached the turnoff toward the dock, two headlights appeared behind him.
Too close.
Too fast.
He cursed under his breath, flipped the lights off, and turned into the trees.
An ambush.
They thought they had him cornered. Had him outsmarted. Two trucks boxed him in.
But Smoke didn’t panic.
He reached for the sawed-off, climbed out the side of the cab, and disappeared into the trees like a ghost. By the time the two men stepped out with rifles and cocky grins, Smoke was behind them. He took the first one down clean—barrel to the back of the skull. No sound but the crunch of bone. The second tried to run. Smoke caught him by the collar and shoved the shotgun into his gut.
“You workin’ for Silas ‘Shine’ DuBose?” he asked low.
The man stammered, “We—we just got told to—”
BOOM!
He didn’t let him finish.
Smoke never left loose ends.
He loaded the whiskey back up, blood on his knuckles, sweat dripping from his brow.
When he pulled up to the drop site an hour later, the man with gold teeth handed him a fat envelope.
“You always deliver, young blood. Can always count on you to come through.”
Smoke lit another cigarette.
Didn’t smile.
He spoke to himself, “Ain’t nothin’ gonna stop my route but death. And even then, you better check twice.”
This job would pay for more supplies at The Blackline. It would keep him and Stack in power. And when he walked through the red door the next night, dusty, armed, and silent, he still hadn’t noticed the girl behind the curtain.
But she noticed him.
He’d just come off the job.
Boots still dirty from the swamp road. Hands scabbed from a scuffle. Chest humming with the kind of quiet that followed violence. A calm earned by taking care of unfinished business. The Blackline was warm that night. Velvet air. Laughter soft. Jazz slow. He walked in like always with a cigar in his mouth, hat low, shoulders square, dragging a heat behind him that made men straighten and women stare.
He was headed for his usual booth.
Didn’t glance around. Didn’t speak. Didn’t acknowledge a pretty eye or a pretty smile.
But then…he felt it.
A pull. A tether.
Not sharp, but deep. Low. Like a string tugging at the base of his spine.
He turned his head slow.
And saw her.
She wasn’t working.
Not like the others.
She sat behind a thin curtain, legs tucked under her, body half-shadowed by lamplight. A ribbon tied around her neck. A short slip hugging hips that didn’t move. Hair pinned up loose with curly tendrils falling around her cheeks.
She wasn’t trying to be seen, which made her impossible to look away from. Her skin glowed like candle-warmed honey, and her lips looked soft, untouched and parted slightly when their eyes locked.
Smoke’s removed his cigar from between his full lips slowly.
His whole chest tightened.
He didn’t believe in love at first sight.
Didn’t believe in fairytales or fate.
But something about the girl behind the curtain hit him like a ghost recognizing home.
Violet saw the shift in him.
The pause.
The narrowing of his gaze.
And her breath caught because she could feel it too.
Heat.
Recognition.
Danger.
Need.
Smoke took a step forward.
He didn’t speak.
Didn’t smile.
Just stared like she was something he couldn’t name but already missed. And in that moment, under velvet light and saxophone moans, a man like Smoke noticed a girl like Violet, and everything started to unravel.
The Blackline hummed around them with low laughter, glasses clinking, piano weeping under the weight of a blues tune. Smoke had barely stepped inside when Stack appeared at his shoulder, tugging him toward the back, behind the curtain where the light dimmed and the shadows got honest. They stood near the back hallway, a worn fan rattling overhead, paint peeling on the wall.
“Big Brotha. Job go smooth?” Stack asked, lighting a cigarette with one hand, leaning against the doorframe.
Smoke rolled his shoulders, jaw clenched, “Ran into trouble near the canal. Two sent by Shine.”
“That so?”
“Handled.”
Stack nodded, “Figures.”
A pause passed. Long enough for Smoke to glance back through the curtain and towards the floor.
Toward her.
Stack noticed the look but didn’t press it.
Instead, he exhaled smoke slow and said, “Things been movin’ here while you were gone. We took in two new girls. One’s already makin’ her money.”
“…And the other?”
Stack smirked.
“That one,” He jerked his chin toward the soft drape near the corner booth, “Name’s Violet. Gullah blood, I think. Quiet. Real sweet lookin’, but icy. Ain’t opened up to no one. Still got her flower too, far as I can tell.”
Smoke didn’t respond. Just kept staring.
Stack watched his brother’s profile. The way his jaw ticked and his mouth set.
“Ain’t initiated her yet,” Stack added casually, “But I planned to ease her in. Once she soften.”
Smoke’s voice cut in low.
“Don’t.”
Stack arched an eyebrow, “…Don’t?”
Smoke turned to him now, finally, eyes hard.
“Hold off. Not sayin’ I’m stoppin’ you. Just…don’t rush her.”
Stack leaned back slightly, measuring with a mischievous smirk, “You interested?”
Smoke looked away, back toward the drape.
“I just want a feel…she different…and I wanna know why.”
Stack grinned faintly, dragging his cigarette.
“Well, well. Ain’t often you speak first on a girl.”
Smoke didn’t flinch, “I ain’t speakin’. I’m studyin’.”
And with that, he pushed off the wall and walked back into the room, steps slow, eyes never leaving Violet.
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It was late now.
That kind of late where everything turns honest. Voices lower, movements looser, touches less disguised. The scent of sweat, bourbon, tobacco, and sex wove through the air like a sensual fog caught in lace. A girl moaned in the back room. Laughter burst at the poker table. A piano crooned something low and tired in the corner.
Smoke hadn’t moved from his booth.
Hadn’t touched his drink in nearly twenty minutes.
Because she was stepping out.
Violet.
For the first time all night, she peeled back the sheer drape and moved out into view.
Not for a man.
Not for money.
Just to breathe.
But even from across the room, Smoke saw it. The way her eyes scanned carefully, the way her shoulders rounded slightly inward, like her body had learned how to make itself smaller when it needed to.
She walked slow.
Barefoot.
In a short silk slip the color of wet bone, the thin straps slipping down the curve of one shoulder, the hem hitting just above the soft part of her thighs.
Her ribbon was still tied.
Smoke’s eyes dragged down her figure—the roundness of her hips, the narrow slope of her waist, the high curve of her small, perky breasts beneath the silk.
But it wasn’t just her body.
It was how she carried it.
Careful. Quiet. Measured.
She wasn’t used to being seen.
Not like that.
And now she was. By him.
He watched the way her fingers brushed her own wrist absentmindedly, a soft nervous tic. The way her chin stayed tilted downward, even though she tried to glance up. The way she paused at the edge of the light, just short of where the men gathered, hovering between the safety of shadows and the threat of being chosen.
And still…
She felt his stare.
He saw it in the way she shifted her weight.
The way her hand lifted to her ribbon like it gave her armor.
Smoke’s jaw clenched.
His cigar burned down to the nub in the ashtray. He sat forward, just slightly, and let his eyes take her in like a man thirsting in the desert.
This girl was untouched.
This girl was hiding.
And this girl had no idea that the man in the shadows had already started claiming pieces of her just by watching.
He didn’t approach.
Didn’t speak.
Just watched.
And in that stretch of air between them, the room changed.
Everything else faded.
All he could hear was her breath.
All he could see was her legs.
And all he could think about was how she was already in his mouth, in his hands, in his thoughts, and she didn’t even know his name yet.
Violet felt it.
Not like the way men usually looked at her all hungry, obvious, leaning too far forward. This was different.
His gaze didn’t lurch toward her.
It crawled.
Wrapped.
Rooted itself.
And it didn’t let go.
She turned slightly, pretending to adjust her ribbon, pretending not to notice how heavy her breath had become. But her hands trembled against the silk.
Smoke Moore was watching her.
The quiet one. The twin with shadow in his shoulders and heat behind his eyes. The one who hadn’t said a single word to her since she arrived. Not even a hello.
And yet…
He was staring like he knew every secret she was trying to keep.
Her cheeks burned.
Her thighs clenched.
And her skin buzzed like it’d been read.
She couldn’t take it.
Not yet.
She turned slowly and slipped back behind the drape, her posture softer, her steps smaller, her breath caught just behind her lips.
She didn’t look back.
But Smoke…
He never stopped looking.
He waited just waited.
Gave her a minute.
Let her sit in the heat of what just passed between them—no words, no touch, no promises. Just pressure.
Then he stood.
Slowly. Like smoke rising off a fire that didn’t go out when the logs burned down. He adjusted his cuffs, reached for the bottle on the table, and poured two fingers of bourbon. But he didn’t sit again, instead he started walking. Not toward her.
Just…near.
To the bar.
Which just happened to be along the wall beside her curtained corner. His boots echoed soft on the floorboards. His coat moved around his hips like liquid shadow. And every pair of eyes in the room followed him out of instinct.
But Violet?
She felt him coming.
Like a raging storm rolling in.
Her body tensed even behind the curtain. She could feel the way the air changed. How the room shifted around his presence. Smoke stood at the bar, one hand resting on the wood, eyes on the row of bottles like he was deciding what to drink.
But in reality? He was listening to her breath.
Sensing the tremble behind the curtain. Reading the way her silence now said more than any voice in that house. He didn’t speak to her, didn’t look at her. But she could feel the back of his coat inches from the silk veil.
And Smoke?
He was close enough now to smell her skin.
And he didn’t even need to touch.
The music in The Blackline rolled slow and dirty like honeyed drag through a throat full of smoke. Laughter bounced off the walls. Someone moaned behind a closed door. A card game roared to life across the floor.
But Violet couldn’t hear any of it.
All she could hear was his boots near the edge of her world. Smoke was just outside the curtain now, standing at the bar, pouring bourbon like he hadn’t just shaken her to her core. His presence radiated like heat through floorboards, like thunder behind silence.
She sat on the edge of the velvet cushion, hands clasped, her chest rising and falling too fast.
Then…
She leaned forward.
Just slightly.
And slipped two fingers into the edge of the drape, parting it a whisper.
She peeked.
He was there.
So close.
Back turned, coat draped over broad shoulders, shirt tight across a back and chest shaped by violence and long days on the road. His sleeves were rolled to the elbows, veins thick across the backs of his hands. His knuckles were scarred. His boots scuffed. His holster dark with wear.
He didn’t fidget.
Didn’t glance around.
He just stood there like the world wasn’t allowed to move without him giving it permission. And yet, there was no tension in him. No vanity.
Only gravity.
A presence that said…
I’ve done worse than you think.
And better than I deserved.
And I’m still standing.
Violet’s lips parted.
Her thighs pressed together.
She didn’t understand it, this pulse that bloomed between her legs just from looking. But she couldn’t stop. She studied the line of his jaw, the angle of his nose, the glint of sweat on the back of his neck. And for a moment, he moved.
Not toward her.
Not away.
Just shifted.
And somehow, she swore he knew. He knew she was watching. And he was letting her.
Violet let the curtain fall.
Her heart was still racing. Her breath shaky.
She tried to sit still again, tucking her legs beneath her and staring at the candle flickering on the table like it might hold the answer to why she suddenly felt like her skin didn’t fit right anymore.
She could still feel him out there.
That man.
That stare.
That heat like a hand around her throat.
The drape shifted again behind her.
And then a voice slid in, low, slow, honey-slick and sharp.
“Mm. So that’s who you watchin’.”
Violet flinched.
Cordelia stepped into the little curtained corner like smoke curling under a door. She smelled like jasmine and rum. Her silk robe was open at the thigh, and her eyes gleamed like a cat that already caught the mouse. She sat without asking, legs crossed, one arm draped over the back of the chair.
Violet tried to say nothing.
But Cordelia smirked.
“Girl, you act like I ain’t seen the way your breath left your body the second he walked by.”
“I wasn’t—” Violet started.
“Don’t lie to me now,” Cordelia said, laughing soft, “You look like somebody plucked your ribbon loose just by lookin’ at you.”
Violet dropped her gaze, cheeks burning.
Cordelia leaned in close.
“Let me tell you somethin’, baby…you ain’t the first girl to sit behind this curtain and melt for a man like Smoke Moore.”
Violet blinked, “what’s his real name?”
Cordelia smiled wider, “mm. Now she wanna know names,” She tapped her nail against the glass on the table, “His name’s Elijah, but we all call him Smoke. The quiet twin. The one who don’t look at much. But when he do look,” she snapped her fingers, “you best believe he seein’ every inch of you.”
Violet shifted in her seat, flustered.
Cordelia leaned closer, voice softer now, “He done killed men with those hands, baby. And still…he touches a woman like she was made of glass. You think a man like that ain’t dangerous?”
Violet swallowed then licked her lips, “I ain’t never had nobody look at me like that.”
Cordelia nodded slowly, “No, you haven’t. And you ain’t ready for what it means when he don’t just look…But comes back.”
She stood then, smoothed her robe, and before slipping out, gave Violet one last glance.
“You better start askin’ yourself one thing, baby girl…Do you wanna be safe? Or do you wanna be seen?”
And with that, Cordelia disappeared into the curtain fold, heels clicking softly.
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The curtain was still swaying when Violet sat forward.
Cordelia’s words throbbed in her chest.
Do you wanna be safe?
Or do you wanna be seen?
She didn’t know the answer. But her body moved like it did.She uncrossed her legs slowly and adjusted the tie of her ribbon with quiet grace. Instead of retreating, she shifted closer to the edge of the booth, to the space where the curtain parted just enough to let the world in. And for the first time…She let herself be looked at.
Smoke was back at the bar.
Same place. Same stance.
Only now he turned.
Not fully.
Just enough to lean against the bar with his elbow propped, bourbon in one hand, and his gaze fixed on the sliver of light where Violet now sat, half-shadowed, half-glowing, waiting. He could see her now. Not all of her just the outline. A bare thigh, one strap slipped from her shoulder, the delicate slope of her neck. Her curls had loosened slightly. Her lips were parted, soft and unsure.
But her eyes?
They were different.
Still shy. Still wide.
But no longer retreating.
Now she was inviting.
Smoke’s throat tightened. His grip on the glass flexed. She was sitting still but everything about her screamed movement. The curve of her hip pressed into velvet. The dip of her collarbone catching firelight. Her chest rising in a soft, unsure rhythm.
She hadn’t spoken.
Hadn’t smiled.
Hadn’t even glanced directly at him.
But she was waiting.
For him.
And he felt it like a thread wrapped around his ribs. She wanted to be seen now. Not by everyone.
Just him.
He raised his glass slowly and took a sip, didn’t look away.
And Violet?
She stayed right where she was, trembling, blooming, letting herself be devoured.
No more hiding.
Just heat.
The curtain fell closed again.
She hadn’t moved but everything inside her was shifting. Violet sat still in the quiet hush of the velvet nook, hands resting in her lap, heart drumming like a hummingbird’s wings against her ribs.
She could still feel it.
Him and that gaze and that weight. The pull of it like silk wrapped around her waist, tightening with every glance. It wasn’t just lust. It wasn’t just nerves. It was something older, something deeper. Something unnamed. Her thighs were slick and tense and her lips dry. Her mouth unable to remember how to form a word. She reached for the edge of the table for something to ground her and exhaled slowly, as if trying to breathe the heat out of her blood.
Why’d he look at her like that?
Like she was the last quiet in a room full of noise. Like he could taste her without touching. Like he’d already chosen her and she ain’t even spoke his name.
She closed her eyes.
Violet tried to remember how it felt to be invisible. Tried to remind herself that she wasn’t made for a man like him.
Men like that didn’t look at girls like her.
But he did.
And that look made her body buzz like the string of a plucked violin—tight, thin, and trembling.
She touched the ribbon at her throat, fingers grazing the knot.
Her voice caught.
Her skin burned.
And somewhere behind the curtain, she could still hear the faint clink of a glass. The sound of a man drinking slow, like he had time. Like he had already decided.
What if he speaks to me?
The question rang in her chest like a bell.
And still…she didn’t run.
She smoothed her thighs. Straightened her spine.
Let herself bloom in the dark.
She wasn’t ready.
But she wasn’t hiding anymore.
Violet waited until the noise swelled just enough to carry her movement. A crescendo in the music. A burst of laughter near the bar. The groan of wood shifting beneath dancers’ feet. That’s when Violet rose slow and smooth. A breath exhaled into motion.
She didn’t rush.
Didn’t push back the curtain with drama.
She let it part like the petals of a flower at dusk—quiet and deliberate. And when she stepped out, the silk of her slip whispered against her skin, catching the light in places that made every inch of her look soft and secret.
The room was darker now.
Oil lamps turned low. Smoke coiled above heads like lazy ghosts. The scent of musk, pipe tobacco, sweat, and sweet perfume hung thick.
And there she was.
Barefoot. Ribbon still knotted at her throat. Shoulders bare. Back straight. Face calm but burning.
Smoke saw her immediately.
He was still at the bar, leaning with his drink in hand, but his whole body shifted like gravity itself had tilted in her direction. He didn’t move but his gaze locked on her with the kind of stillness that carried weight like he was memorizing her. Violet walked slowly along the edge of the floor, trailing one hand along the wall, not toward anyone in particular, just out into the open. Her hips swayed gently with the rhythm of the piano. Her thighs brushed, and the hem of her dress floated just above the softest part of them.
She passed two men.
One looked.
One said something.
She didn’t hear it.
Because she could feel him behind her.
That gaze. Heavy as a hand.
She turned ever so slightly and glanced over her shoulder.
Her eyes met Smoke’s.
And there it was again. That low-burning tension between them, thick as sticky glide. A pull. A knowing. And this time, she didn’t look away. Her body stayed open, her lips stayed parted. Violet let him look. Let him feel the weight of the woman she was becoming—the woman who was no longer hiding.
Violet walked past the bar.
She didn’t rush. Didn’t sway too much. She held her chin up just enough to look composed, her fingertips grazing the edge of the wall, the slip of her dress brushing the inside of her thighs. She was trying—trying to own her steps, to hold the quiet fire Cordelia lit in her chest. Her breath still fluttered, but she kept moving.
Behind her…she heard nothing.
But she could feel it.
That weight.
That energy like coiled thunder.
She didn’t have to look back to know he was moving.
Smoke Moore.
He was following.
Not loud.
Not rushed.
Just present. Like the slow drag of stormclouds across a summer sky—you don’t hear it right away, but you know the air’s about to change. She turned the corner near the back hallway, just beyond the glow of the main room. A curtained doorway behind her, a stack of crates ahead. Dim. Quiet. Close. She paused, pretending to smooth the ribbon at her throat.
And that’s when she felt him.
Close.
So close the heat from his chest kissed her back.
And then…
His voice.
Low. Velvet-wrapped gravel.
Southern Smoke.
“…You walk like you tryna convince yourself you ain’t afraid.”
Her breath caught. He didn’t touch her. Not yet. But she could feel him—just inches away, his energy wrapping around her like silk ropes.
“…You that scared of me, baby girl?”
She opened her mouth but nothing came out. Her hands tightened at her sides, the edge of her dress clenched between her fingers.
“No,” she whispered timidly.
He leaned in closer. His heat consuming her from behind. Still not touching. Just air, heat, and hunger.
“…Say that again,” He spoke with a hushed tone.
Her breath hitched. She tried to sound steady.
“…No.”
Smoke exhaled slowly near her ear, his mouth barely a whisper from her skin.
“You tremblin’. I ain’t even laid a hand on you yet.”
She felt a shiver ripple down her spine. Her knees wanted to give. Her voice betrayed her body.
And still…she stayed.
Quiet.
Soft.
Open.
He could smell her now. Skin warm, breath sweet, the faintest scent of fear laced with something deeper.
Want.
“You run now, I’ll let you go,” he murmured, pausing for effect, “But you stay?” He tilted his head dangerously close, “You mine to learn.”
And she stayed.
Trembling.
Timid.
But not moving.
She didn’t dare move.
Didn’t speak.
Didn’t breathe right.
Smoke was right there with his breath still warming her shoulder, his voice still curling around her spine like smoke through cracks in a door. Her body was betraying her—softening, aching, silently begging.
She didn’t need his hands to feel claimed.
She already did.
But then…
He stepped back.
Just a half-inch or less. And somehow, the loss of him, of his warmth, his weight, his watchfulness, hit her harder than the press of his body ever could have.
She blinked.
Her fingers curled against her thighs.
And then she felt it…
The tension between them stretch like silk soaked in heat.
He hadn’t touched her once. But she felt more bare in that moment than she ever had undressed. He watched her for a breath longer—just watched. Then his voice came, quiet. Steady.
“…You don’t even know what you doin’, do you?”
She shook her head. Slowly.
Smoke hummed, “Didn’t think so.”
Another pause. The air thick between them.
“…But I do.”
And then?
He turned.
Walked away slow. Boots low and heavy on the floor.
Didn’t touch her.
Didn’t speak again.
Just left her standing there in the soft light, alone with the ache he placed between her thighs without ever laying a finger on her.
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The room was still.
Only the faint hum of music bleeding through the walls, the occasional moan from the back hallway, the creak of footsteps overhead.
Violet sat alone on her narrow bed behind the curtain, legs curled beneath her, slip still clinging to her thighs like a second skin.
Her breath was slow. But her chest rose too fast.
She could still feel him.
The heat of his body. The gravel of his voice. The way he whispered like he could taste her fear and loved the flavor.
And the worst part?
He hadn’t even touched her.
He didn’t have to.
She slid her hand to her chest.
Just above the ribbon.
Her fingers trembled slightly, tracing the bow. Then lower—over the curve of her breast, down the dip between her ribs.
She thought of his voice in her ear.
You tremblin’. I ain’t even laid a hand on you yet…
A whimper caught in her throat.
She lay back, the pillow cool beneath her, eyes half-lidded.
Her knees parted.
The silk slipped higher.
And with a breath she didn’t know she was holding, her hand slid lower.
Between the heat.
Through the ache.
Right where he left her wanting.
She touched her pussy like she wasn’t sure she was allowed to—soft, tentative, gasping.
But the more she remembered his voice…
But you stay? You mine to learn.
…the deeper her fingers sank.
Violet stroked her clit gently, like she was afraid of what her body would do if she pressed down harder. Her hips twitched faintly. She shut her eyes, drifting back to the way his body felt behind her, a heat so intense. She could hear how soaked her folds are. The sound deafening. Violet opened wider, whimpering. Moaning soft and faint. Barely above a whisper.
She came quickly, shaking, the sound muffled against her wrist as her body clenched and opened around nothing—but the memory of him. When it passed, she lay there breathless, thighs damp, skin burning. He hadn’t touched her.
But Smoke Moore already owned her breath.
The ache between her legs and the exhaustion of her strong climax had Violet slipping into sleep like a drop falling into warm syrup. She was still wet between her thighs. Still flushed from the touch she gave herself.
But what lingered most wasn’t her own fingers.
It was him.
Smoke.
His breath.
His voice.
His presence like thunder waiting to break.
And now…he was in her dream.
She wasn’t sure where she was. The walls didn’t matter. The light was soft and gold. She was bare, thighs parted, laid out like a sacrament on fresh sheets.
And he was standing there.
Smoke Moore.
No coat. No holster. Just skin and shadow and slow breath.
He didn’t say a word. He just stepped forward and stared at her like she was already split open for him.
She felt no fear.
Only ache.
Only longing.
If he had touched me…
He knelt between her legs, eyes locked to hers as his hand grazed her inner thigh.
Not rushed.
Not rough.
Just…inevitable.
“Did you cum thinkin’ about me?” he asked in her dream, voice low as river water.
She couldn’t speak.
He smirked.
“You wet in your sleep. That ain’t just a dream. That’s your body rememberin’ what it never had.”
She gasped when he touched her there—just once—and it was enough to make her cry out.
He didn’t stop. He dragged his tongue along her thigh, slow, teeth grazing her skin. Her hips lifted on instinct.
His voice came again—dark and thick.
“You want me to eat it, baby?”
She nodded.
Eyes wide. Lips parted.
He smiled against her inner thigh.
“Then keep your legs open, and let me feast.”
And when he did?
She broke.
Soft cries. Trembling thighs. A climax that rolled through her like waves licking the shore of some secret island.
She woke gasping.
Sweating.
Empty.
And aching all over again.
Don’t hide from me, girl. I see you. And what’s mine don’t got to shrink…
Come here. Bring all that fear, all that want. Bring it to me. I got you…
Next time you touch yourself thinkin’ ’bout me, you better come find me instead. I wanna see it. Hear it. Taste it…
Violet hadn’t slept much.
The morning light pressed in low through the gauzy curtain, soft gold and dust-flecked. She’d stirred on and off—waking breathless, thighs damp, her dream replaying in vivid, pulsing fragments. Now she sat at the small vanity tucked in the corner of her sleeping space, brushing her hair in slow, gentle strokes.
Her eyes were unfocused.
Her thighs still pressed together.
Her body hummed with memory.
His mouth.
His hands.
That voice—low and knowing—telling her to stay open and let him feast.
She swallowed.
Her ribbon was untied. Hung loose down her chest like a thread of silk she no longer needed to hide behind.
She glanced at herself in the mirror.
Her cheeks were warm. Her lips slightly swollen from biting them in sleep. She looked kissed. Touched. Marked. But it had only been a dream.
And still…
Her body didn’t care.
She picked up a small notebook from the drawer—just pages she sometimes jotted thoughts in when the silence got too loud. She didn’t write much. Just a line.
Her hand trembled as she spelled it:
He hasn’t touched me.
But I feel like I belong to him.
She closed the book softly.
Set it down.
And then went to draw her bath, knees still aching from how hard they had clenched the night before.
The Blackline was quieter in the morning.
But not silent.
The house never slept fully. It shifted. Stretched like a cat in the sun, its sounds softer but still alive. Footsteps on creaking floorboards, water boiling on the stove, a distant radio playing slow Delta blues on the back porch. The sun leaked in through the stained-glass windows—coloring the wooden floors in fragments of amber, rose, and wine.
Curtains hung loose.
Smoke from someone’s cigarette curled lazily through a shaft of light in the parlor. The girls were up and moving—some in robes, hair pinned, faces bare. Others already dressed, painting their mouths red in shared mirrors, laughing soft between swigs of morning bourbon. There was perfume in the air, powder and orange blossom, musky oils, sweat sweetened by heat.
Stockings were hung over chairs to dry.
Heels lined the baseboards like soldiers.
Some girls cleaned their rooms. Others climbed into each other’s beds for warmth or gossip or comfort. Someone was ironing lingerie in the kitchen. Someone else was bent over a basin, washing blood from silk with careful fingers and a hymn on her tongue.
Stack was around, but easy.
He was seated at the long table near the front room, counting money from the weekend, cigar between his teeth. His suspenders hung loose over a rumpled shirt. Every so often, he’d pause, lean back, and scratch the side of his face while listening to the radio.
“We need more rye,” he muttered to no one, “And more ice.”
No one answered.
He didn’t care.
He just kept flipping bills.
Violet moved differently.
Not slower. Not faster.
Just…more aware.
She’d bathed early. Combed her curly hair back into a bun. She wore a soft green slip today, thin at the shoulders, hugging her hips.
Violet didn’t talk much. Just lingered in doorways. Sat near open windows. Swept when asked. Watched.
Always watched.
Her eyes traced the curls of smoke rising from Cordelia’s cigarette…the shape of a dancer’s back as she stretched in the hall…the gold necklace one girl wore backwards so it draped down the small of her back like a secret.
But her thoughts weren’t on the house.
They were on him.
Smoke.
His voice still echoed in her.
His breath still lived in the bend of her neck. Every step she took, every time her thighs brushed together under silk, she remembered.
You mine to learn.
She didn’t know what she wanted.
But she knew what her body remembered as she walked the halls of The Blackline with his gaze still burned into her skin.
Not to long after, Violet was folding linen napkins in the side parlor, the morning light slanting across her bare feet. She didn’t speak much that day. Just moved with her usual softness, her hair pinned loose, her green slip fluttering just above her knees.
Her body still felt tender.
Sensitive in places she didn’t dare touch again just yet.
She’d just finished setting the last napkin down when Cordelia passed by with her robe open, heels clicking, cigarette trailing a ribbon of smoke.
She paused at the archway and looked back at Violet with that same cat-glint smile.
“Smoke’s back from town.”
Violet looked up.
“Oh?”
Cordelia nodded, walking over to the tea tray on the buffet.
“He asked for coffee. But he don’t really drink it. Likes it warm, though. Something bitter in the mouth, sweet in the aftertaste…”
She poured a black cup, added a drizzle of cane syrup, then held it out to Violet.
“You bring it to him.”
Violet’s hands froze.
Cordelia’s smile widened just slightly.
“He’s out back, takin’ off his boots.”
“Why me?” Violet asked softly, eyes lowered.
Cordelia leaned in, voice low and lazy.
“Because he didn’t ask for it from nobody else.”
She pressed the handle of the cup into Violet’s palm.
“Go on. He won’t bite…Not yet.”
Cordelia sauntered off, leaving Violet with a task. A task that left her heart thumping beneath her ribs. She stared down at the cup, then exhaled a rattled breath. She took a moment to gather her thoughts before facing the man that she thought of while playing with her pussy. Dreaming of almost every night since she’d laid eyes on him.
Violet walked down the hall slow, cup trembling slightly in her hand.
Each step felt louder than it should.
The back door was open, light pouring in golden against the floorboards.
She could smell him before she saw him—leather, pine, dust, tobacco. The scent curled around her like haze and made her thighs press together. He was seated on the edge of the porch, shirt open at the throat, sleeves rolled up, one boot off, the other halfway unlaced.
He didn’t look up when she approached.
“Heard you comin’,” he said, voice rough from the road.
Violet paused just behind him, heart pounding.
“…Cordelia said you wanted coffee.”
“Mmm.”
She stepped beside him, carefully placing the cup on the small table near his hand.
He finally looked up.
Right at her.
His eyes dragged over her face. Her lips. Her collarbone.
“You bring it ‘cause she asked you to?”
Her breath hitched.
“Yes.” She replied with a small voice.
He reached for the cup, sipped once, then leaned back.
“And you stayin’ now ‘cause she told you to?”
Violet said nothing.
Smoke’s lips curled faintly at the edges, “Didn’t think so.”
He looked out over the trees again.
“You smell like rosewater. That yours?”
She nodded.
“Don’t wear too much of it,” he murmured, “Makes a man wanna follow you ‘til he finds where it’s comin’ from.”
Violet swallowed hard.
“I’ll…I’ll remember that.”
He didn’t look at her again. But his voice was low enough she felt it in her stomach.
“Good girl.”
The words followed her like heat.
Good girl.
Two little syllables—barely more than breath—but they landed like a hand pressed between her thighs.
Violet didn’t reply.
Didn’t dare look at him again.
She turned.
Careful. Quiet. Controlled.
And walked back inside with the empty tray still trembling in her fingers.
Her knees felt soft.
Her core hummed.
The ribbon at her throat suddenly felt like too much and not enough all at once. She moved through the hallway like a girl floating—dazed, raw, skin warm from within. In the mirror of the front parlor, she caught her reflection.
Cheeks flushed.
Eyes wide.
Lips parted.
And she whispered it once—not for anyone else to hear.
“Good girl.”
Her thighs clenched hard.
Her breath hitched.
And she didn’t sit for a long time after that.
Because the ache between her legs was too tender.
Too fresh.
And that voice—his voice—was still buried in her bones.
It was Cordelia again.
Mid-afternoon, warm light spilling through the windows, the house quieter now—girls resting, Stack gone off with a bottle and a deck of cards. Cordelia found Violet in the kitchen, drying her hands on a towel.
“Smoke’s washin’ up out back,” she said, casual, like she wasn’t smirking behind her cigarette, “He asked for a fresh shirt. You know where the clean ones are. Go on and take it to him.”
Violet didn’t ask why.
She just nodded.
And tried not to let her hands shake when she folded the crisp white fabric over her arm.
Smoke was on the porch again.
Hair freshly slicked, combed back with a deep side part by Stack’s hand, glinting beneath the low sun. He wore only his trousers now—bare from the waist up, his back to her as he dried his hands with a cloth. His skin was the color of wet earth and iron, all tanned deeply from the heat of the South. Broad back, ridged muscle. Scars. One long one across his shoulder blade like he’d been cut once and never talked about it.
He turned when he heard her.
Didn’t speak at first.
Just looked.
“You bring that for me?” he asked, voice thick as velvet syrup
She nodded, holding out the shirt for him to take.
“You wanna help?” he said low.
Not teasing.
Just offering.
She hesitated.
Then stepped closer.
Violet unfolded the shirt in shaking hands. His body radiated heat. He smelled like soap, cedar, and something underneath—raw and masculine and animal. He bent his arms slightly and she slid the fabric over one first, then the other, brushing her fingers along his forearm to pull the sleeve through.
Her hands trembled against his skin.
When she reached up to guide the shirt over his back and onto his shoulders, her palm skimmed the top of his chest.
He was watching her the whole time.
Quiet.
Steady.
Hungry.
“You always this careful,” he murmured, “or is it just me?”
She couldn’t speak.
Her fingers hovered at the buttons.
Smoke leaned forward slightly.
“Start at the top, baby. I like it slow.”
She obeyed.
One button.
Then the next.
Each one closer to his heart.
Violet’s fingers brushed the top button.
The white cotton was still warm from his skin, soft from wear but clinging in places where his chest curved and swelled—solid and unyielding. She pressed the first button through the hole slowly, careful not to tremble too much.
Smoke didn’t speak.
Didn’t move.
He just watched her.
His head tilted slightly, eyes locked on her mouth as she worked her way down.
Each button brought her closer to the center of him.
Her knuckles brushed his sternum.
He exhaled through his nose, slow and controlled, like if he breathed too deep he might lose the self-restraint he wore better than his clothes. By the third button, she could feel the beat of his heart beneath the cotton.
Not fast.
But heavy.
Her hands moved lower, guiding the fabric closed over his ribs, over the slight dip above his navel.
She could feel his heat through it.
Could smell the mix of soap and sweat and skin.
And even though he hadn’t touched her…
She felt him everywhere.
His voice came, low and gritty, just as she reached the last button.
“You always this gentle?”
She didn’t look up.
Didn’t trust herself to.
Her fingers slowed at the last button. Held it there.
“I…I don’t know,” she whispered.
Smoke leaned forward just slightly.
“That mean I’m your first?”
She blinked hard.
Her lips parted.
But her answer—whatever it might’ve been—caught in her throat.
She finished the button.
Pulled her hands away.
Tension snapped like a wire pulled too tight.
He stared at her.
A full breath.
Two.
Then stepped back.
Not far. Just enough for the air to grow colder between them.
His shirt was buttoned now.
His body clothed.
But the tension?
Still naked.
“You done real careful,” he said finally, “Almost too careful.”
He turned before she could reply. Smoke reached for his hat, smoothed it on top of that slicked-back part, and stepped off the porch.
No touch.
No praise.
No smile.
Just the soft clink of his belt, the low creak of the stairs…
And the sound of Violet’s breath shaking in the absence of everything she wanted.
As Smoke stepped off the porch, the screen door whispered closed behind him. He didn’t light a cigarette right away.
Didn’t speak. Didn’t curse.
He just kept walking—down the back path, past the chicken wire fence, past the empty rain barrel, boots scuffing dirt as if the earth itself needed to feel how tense he was.
His hands flexed at his sides.
Jaw tight.
Chest tight.
He could still feel her fingers—soft, unsure, adoring—moving down his shirt one slow button at a time like she was afraid touching him might make her burn.
Hell, it just about burned him.
Good girl.
He’d said it without thinking.
But the sound of it on his tongue felt too damn natural.
Too right.
He made it to the old toolshed behind the fig tree and leaned against the frame, the wood creaking under the weight of him.
He rolled his neck once.
Twice.
Then finally lit a match.
The tobacco sparked. Smoke curled.
But the fire in his blood?
It didn’t cool.
She didn’t know what she was doing to him.
She couldn’t.
That little ribbon at her throat, the way her lashes fluttered when he spoke, the way her thighs brushed with every step like they ached even when she didn’t move.
She didn’t even smell like the other girls.
She smelled…quiet. Like rosewater and something softer underneath. Something only he’d find if he buried his face deep enough to taste it.
And that tremble in her hands?
God.
He wanted to hold her wrists and make them tremble harder. He wanted to hear what her breath sounded like when it broke. He wanted her on his lap, in his bed, under his weight, whisperin’ his name like a sin she’d learned to love.
But he didn’t touch her.
Because if he did?
I wouldn’t stop. And I ain’t ready to let her see that part of me…Not yet.
He took another drag from the cigarette.
Felt the ache in his dick throb hard beneath his belt. He wouldn’t jerk off. Wouldn’t give himself that release.
Not for her.
Not yet.
He’d wait.
And when she came to him—when she begged?
He’d give her everything he’d been holding back.
And she’d finally understand why he kept walking away.
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The next few days passed like molasses poured over flame. The air in The Blackline stayed thick—sweet in the morning, sultry at dusk, dangerous by night.
Smoke and Violet never said much.
But everything between them spoke loud as thunder.
Every morning, she brought him his coffee.
Same way: hot, bitter, with a thread of cane syrup stirred slow.
She never asked if he wanted it.
She just brought it.
And he always took it from her hand, brushing her fingers like an accident he meant.
She watched him when he cleaned his pistols. He’d sit out back with a rag over his lap, gunmetal gleaming, sunlight sliding down the ridges of his forearms. She’d pretend to be folding laundry near the open window—but her eyes always found him.
And Smoke?
He let her watch.
Didn’t smile.
Didn’t speak.
Just dragged a slow cloth over the barrel like he was teaching her how he handled things that got out of line. When Stack came by, they sat close at the porch table, talking in low tones over the hiss of liquor being poured into tin cups.
Business.
Bootlegging routes. Threats. Names.
Violet couldn’t hear it all. But she saw how they leaned in close—twin shadows, born from something brutal, bound tighter than blood.
And even then…
Smoke would glance at her.
Every time she passed, every time she walked near.
He noticed.
By nightfall When the house came alive, Violet floated. Soft slip. Ribbon back around her throat. Mouth painted the color of crushed berries.
Men watched her like moths.
Some tried to talk sweet.
Some talked slick.
She smiled. Laughed. Gave lap dances but never let them touch too much.
And always, Smoke watched.
Sometimes from the booth near the back. Sometimes from the bar. Sometimes while he cleaned a blade behind the curtain.
Until one night.
A man—drunk, swollen with coin and frustration—grabbed her arm too tight.
“I done spent two whole nights feedin’ you drinks, girl,” he slurred, spit thick in his throat, “You ain’t gon’ keep teasin’ me like that.”
She pulled back, “let go of me—”
He grabbed harder.
Her ribbon pulled loose.
“Lemme see what I paid for,” he snapped.
Smoke moved like a shadow with teeth.
No warning.
No shout.
Just there—sudden, solid, deadly.
Hand at the man’s collar. Gun drawn. Cold steel pressed against his cheekbone. Violet flinched, stepping back as she watched with wide eyes.
“You touch her again,” Smoke growled, voice like thunder in a cellar, “and I’ma put a hole in your face so clean they’ll bury you in silk.”
The whole room stilled.
Girls froze.
Men backed up.
Even Stack sat up straighter.
The man stammered. “I—I didn’t mean—”
“Empty your pockets.”
“What—?”
“Every dollar. Every coin. Give it to her.”
The man looked at Violet.
Then at Smoke.
Then started dumping crumpled bills and coins into Violet’s palm.
Smoke’s voice dropped lower, but heavier. He raised the end of his pistol and cracked the man on the side of the face. Sharp. Bloody.
“You step foot back in this house…I’m killin’ you where you stand.”
Then he shoved him back hard—sent him stumbling towards the front by Stack’s bodyguards, half-drunk and humiliated, clutching the side of his face as blood seeped through his fingers. They shoved him out the front door. Left him stumbling into the night with his pride bleeding and Smoke’s threat still ringing in his ears.
The man was officially gone.
And just like that, everyone knew.
Violet wasn’t just pretty.
Wasn’t just new.
She belonged to someone.
Even if he hadn’t said it yet.
The room had started breathing again—slow, nervous, pulsing like something had just been broken and patched back together.
But Violet…she hadn’t moved.
She stood near the back wall, breath shallow, one hand curled around the ribbon at her throat, the other hanging limp at her side.
Smoke stepped toward her.
“You alright?”
His voice was low, but she felt it in her chest like it pushed past her bones.
Her eyes lifted to meet his, then they dropped, dragging slowly down the front of him.
The crisp lines of his buttoned shirt.
The shadow of muscle straining beneath cotton.
The dark holster vest at his chest and the way his gun disappeared into it like it had always belonged there. He shifted his arm and the fabric clung tight across his biceps.
Violet nodded faintly.
But her eyes… they were wide. Glossy. Shaken.
Smoke moved closer.
Suddenly.
His hand came up, rough fingers catching her wrist before she could tuck it behind her back.
She flinched.
“Lemme see,” he murmured.
His thumb pressed into the skin just above her pulse.
There was a faint red mark where the man had grabbed her.
Smoke’s jaw ticked.
That was when Stack stepped in.
“What the hell happened?”
His voice hit the room like a hammer.
He looked between them.
Saw the look on Smoke’s face.
Saw the way Violet’s body shook.
“He hurt her?”
Smoke didn’t answer.
Stack turned to Violet, eyes gentler, “You alright, baby girl?”
She nodded. Still quiet.
Stack looked at Smoke again, voice lower. Sharper.
“If we catch that son of a bitch,” He stepped closer, “We kill him. Don’t nobody hurt my girls. You hear me?”
Smoke gave a slow nod.
Stack squeezed Violet’s shoulder and walked off, muttering something to one of the other men.
When they were alone again, Violet looked up.
“…Thank you.”
Her voice cracked.
Her eyes still glossy.
Smoke met her gaze, calm and steady.
“You ain’t got no worry,” he said, “Me and my brother? We’ll kill any man that tries to put hurt on a woman in this house.”
His thumb brushed over the mark on her wrist once more.
Gentle. Intentional.
“That’s a promise.”
Then he let her go.
Turned.
And walked back into the dark—the weight of his words curling in the air like gun smoke.
@theereinawrites @angelin-dis-guise @thee-germanpeach @harleycativy @slut4smokemoore09 @readingaddict1290 @blackamericanprincessy @aristasworld @avoidthings @brownsugarcoffy @ziayamikaelson @kindofaintrovert @raysogroovy @overhere94 @joysofmyworld @an-ever-evolving-wanderer @starcrossedxwriter @marley1773 @bombshellbre95 @nybearsworld @brincessbarbie @kholdkill @honggihwa @tianna-blanche @wewantsumheaad @theethighpriestess @theegoldenchild @blackpantherismyish @nearsightedbaddie @charmedthoughts @beaboutthataction @girlsneedlovingfanfics @cancerianprincess @candelalanegra22 @mrsknowitallll @dashhoney25 @pinkprincessluminary @chefjessypooh @sk1121-blog1 @contentfiend @kaystacks17 @bratzlele @kirayuki22 @bxrbie1 @blackerthings @angryflowerwitch @baddiegiii @syko-jpg
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slippinninque · 46 minutes ago
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“There are legends of people born with the gift of making music so true it can pierce the veil between life and death. Conjuring spirits from the past and the future…This gift can bring healing to their communities, but it also attracts evil.” - Sinners (2025)
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slippinninque · 2 hours ago
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You know something? Maybe once a week, I wake up paralyzed… reliving that night. But before the sun went down, I think that was the best day of my life. Was it like that for you? No doubt about it.
SINNERS (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
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slippinninque · 2 hours ago
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I crave a quiet love.
Watching you play video games while i lay on our bed and hyping you up. Going grocery shopping together and laughing at a bad pun in the spice aisle. Waking up in each others arms. Stopping by the others work to drop of food on our day off. Sending each other memes even though we're sitting in the same room. The soft touches whenever we pass by each other. Cuddling while watching a show on netflix. Having a cup of tee or coffee on a lazy Sunday morning and sitting, legs tangled, on our couch, being in love.
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slippinninque · 15 hours ago
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I love pushing the Smoke is demisexual propaganda. Like I can’t see him having sex with no one else but Annie. But I can see Stack messing around with other girls than Mary if that makes sense. I think he just doesn’t like nobody but his wife. He’s never gotten close to someone like he did with her. He don’t just be fucking(he can’t😭).
Like I can imagine Stack trying to get over Mary in Chicago by messing with other women. Him suggesting Smoke do it too and Smoke does this:
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“Hell no nigga.”
“Damn nigga it was just a suggestion, you almost yanked my fucking lips off!!”
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slippinninque · 16 hours ago
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slippinninque · 16 hours ago
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Mahershala Ali wearing an Etro ensemble at the Jurassic World: Rebirth London Premiere on June 17, 2025.
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slippinninque · 17 hours ago
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Costume appreciation series: Sinners (2025) dir Ryan Coogler
Costume Design by Ruth E. Carter
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slippinninque · 21 hours ago
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Whatever you accomplish today is enough. Times are hard. Give yourself grace.
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slippinninque · 21 hours ago
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slippinninque · 24 hours ago
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wunmi mosaku as annie • via instagram • @/shunika.terry
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slippinninque · 1 day ago
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any tips on writing scenes & smut scenes?
Hey!
So honestly, it’s not even in the sex it’s really in the scenery you convey and the dialogue for me.
It’s easy to say: He got on top of her and wrapped her legs around his waist, thrusting inside deep and slow, eyes watching her facial expressions.
Or you could apply descriptive words, detail, etc
Example: the silken sheets beneath her tickled her back as she pressed down against the bed. Like a sensual shadow, he hovered above her, hands planted against the bed firm, gold chain hanging low and dangling like hypnosis. His dark, sultry gaze dragged down her voluptuous body, etching her into memory. He loved her like this. Soft, tender, open, at his command. While keeping himself propped up with one strong arm, he used his other hand—large and skillful—to bring one leg over his shoulder. She could feel the wide crown of his dick kiss her wet center.
You see the difference? It’s about how you convey a scene AROUND the sex. It becomes more than just sex. It becomes an experience.
I’d suggest looking into researching things like: words that describe facial expressions and gestures. Words that describe body types/hair/skin/etc.
Hope this helps a little!
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slippinninque · 1 day ago
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slippinninque · 2 days ago
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THE GASP THAT I GASPED
WHAT 👏🏾A👏🏾 RIDE👏🏾 WHAT 👏🏾AN👏🏾 ENDING
The Blackline.
This is a sub-story about Stack’s Brothel in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1929. It will be within the same alternate timeline I plan to write when I explore Stack as a pimp. Exploring Smoke in the midst of it all.
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Summary: The Blackline is a sultry, supernatural tale set in 1929 in the hidden quarters of Little Rock’s Black district, where flappers, vice, and hoodoo tangle in velvet-lit shadows. Violet, a timid Gullah Geechee girl with nowhere else to turn, finds herself working in a brothel run by the enigmatic Stack Moore—a pimp with charm, secrets, and a past steeped in sin. But it’s Stack’s older twin, Smoke, who consumes Violet’s thoughts. A war-worn man of few words, Smoke commands the room with silence alone.
Warnings: SMUT (building tension, soft dominance, Virgin!OC)
Part One.
There was a hum on Ninth Street that didn’t exist anywhere else in Little Rock.
Not in the white part of town with its strict corners and clean churches. Not along the cotton fields where sharecroppers bent their backs and begged the sun for mercy. But right here, between Gaines and Broadway, down near the old train tracks and past the Dreamland Ballroom. Black life pulsed like a second heartbeat beneath the city.
In 1929, Ninth Street was everything.
It was jazz sliding off trumpet bells, bootleg whiskey sweet as sin behind the curtain, girls in sequin dresses with rouge on their knees, and young men in sharkskin suits gambling rent money on backroom dice. It was barbershops and beauty parlors, Sunday suits and Saturday lust. It was survival. Black, brilliant, and dangerous.
This street had raised its own people.
It gave birth to musicians, conjure women, gamblers, preachers, and madams. And when the city turned its back on them, they turned to each other and built banks, clubs, undertakers, and juke joints from sawdust and spite.
But where there is rhythm, there is shadow.
And in that shadow lived a man named Elias “Stack” Moore.
Down a narrow alley off 9th, just past an old tailor’s sign faded into the brick, was a heavy red door with no name.
Folks called it The Blackline.
Not just because of how close it sat to the edge of everything respectable, but because crossing that threshold meant you were stepping into the soft belly of Black pleasure and vice. Nothing past that door was legal. Everything inside it was intoxicating.
To get in, you had to know the knock:
Three slow. Two fast.
Or the password:
“I got the blues but I ain’t broke yet.”
The inside glowed with low amber lamps and the heat of too many bodies. The walls were velvet red. The air was thick with jasmine oil, cigar smoke, and sweat. A gramophone crackled from the corner, slow jazz bleeding through the room like maple over a hot skillet.
Curtains hung heavy around each alcove, some whispering, some moaning, always shifting like silk being pulled from the skin. The floor creaked under heels, under knees, under lives slipping quietly into pleasure and forgetting.
The women here weren’t just working. they were art personified.
Dark-skinned goddesses with gold hoops and garters. Plump cuties with high cheekbones and wide backsides. Light-eyed country girls with long legs and sad stories. New flappers with pressed curls and voices like gin. All of them owned by no one: except Stack.
Stack ran The Blackline like a man who knew the cost of control.
He wasn’t loud like most pimps. He didn’t need to be. He watched everything, leaning in the corner with a cigarette between his fingers, or a drink in his hand, velvet coat open, fedora low and dapper over his brow. His eyes were sharp, mouth always curved in that half-smirk that meant he either wanted to fuck you or gut you, and sometimes it was both.
His girls respected him. Feared him. Some loved him, though they wouldn’t say it out loud. He didn’t beat his women. But he didn’t let them leave easy either. He fed them, clothed them, protected them from the white cops and the worse men who came knocking. And in return, they gave him their best—on the floor, in the backrooms, on their knees.
Stack wasn’t just a pimp. He was a businessman. A gambler. A bootlegger.
And he wasn’t alone.
They were born in heat and hunger, two Mississippi boys who came out the womb fists clenched, mirror images with mirrored scars.
Elias was the mouth, the mind.
Elijah “Smoke” Moore was the fire.
Stack ran the brothel, the books, and the girls. Smoke handled the bootlegging, the deals, and the dirty work. He was the enforcer, the bullet in the chamber, the one you didn’t see coming until your knees gave out.
Together, they built an empire on sin and silence.
People knew the Moore twins didn’t play. You crossed them, you didn’t just get beat—you vanished.
And yet…
Smoke had a way with women. A slow kind of seduction. A man who touched soft but fucked hard. Girls wanted him even when they didn’t know why.
Stack didn’t mind.
As long as the business kept running, the girls kept earning, and the city kept looking the other way, The Blackline stayed lit, and the Moore brothers stayed untouchable.
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She didn’t belong here.
Not yet.
Not with her thrift-store shoes worn at the heel, her patched satin dress clinging too loose to her hips, or the scent of salt marsh and memory still clinging to her skin. Not with her innocence intact and her voice too soft to ask for anything out loud.
But Violet was desperate. And desperation was the only currency that mattered on Ninth Street after midnight.
The alley was narrow and damp, lit only by a flickering gas lamp and the far-off glow of the Dreamland Ballroom. Jazz bled through the brick walls like vapor, and somewhere in the distance, a woman laughed too loud.
The red door loomed before her.
She’d been told what to say by the older girl who’d found her crying behind the beauty shop two days earlier, the one with the silver eye and a split lip she wore like jewelry.
Three slow. Two fast.
“I got the blues but I ain’t broke yet.”
The peephole opened.
Two shadowed eyes looked her over, lingered on the bare knees below her hemline.
“You don’t look like you know what you doing,” the voice said.
“I can learn,” she replied, trying to keep her chin lifted.
The door creaked open.
And Violet stepped inside.
Heat wrapped around her like breath. The air was thick with perfume, pipe smoke, and the smell of sex so fresh it clung to the walls. Light came from low amber lamps, each corner flickering like a secret. Everything was red—the carpet, the drapes, the wallpaper—blood velvet and mahogany shadows. She could hear moans behind curtains. Laughter behind beads. Cards flipping. Shoes tapping. Skin slapping.
A woman walked past in nothing but a beaded bra and stockings, hips moving like a song no man could resist. A man in suspenders had his hand buried beneath the hem of another girl’s skirt, and no one batted an eye. The air tasted like cinnamon and heat. She felt it instantly—between her thighs, in her belly, behind her ribs.
She didn’t belong here. Not yet.
But something inside her, something deeper than fear, wanted to.
He saw her from across the room.
Stack leaned in his usual spot—against the far wall, velvet coat draped open, dark liquor in his hand. The room swam in bodies and fog, but his eyes landed on her like they’d been waiting for her arrival.
Young. Thin. Pretty in a way that wasn’t polished but raw. Something untouched. Her eyes were wide, posture tight, hands gripping the strap of a borrowed purse like it held a weapon.
He knew the look.
Fresh meat.
He stepped forward, smooth and slow, like the room parted just to let him walk.
“You lost, baby girl?” he asked, voice deep, syrupy.
Violet turned toward him, startled by the height of him, the sharpness of his jaw, the way his mouth didn’t smile even when his tone pretended to.
“No sir,” she whispered, “I’m lookin’ for work.”
He let his eyes drag down her body, slow.
“You ain’t been touched, have you?”
Her breath caught.
“No,” she said softly, “But I’m willin’. I just need a place to stay.”
Stack stepped closer, leaned in near her ear.
“‘Round here, baby…we don’t take what ain’t offered. But if you wanna give it, there’s a place for you upstairs.”
She swallowed hard.
He smelled like rum, spice, and danger. She felt like a match held to oil.
He straightened up and looked her over one more time.
“Name’s Stack. You remember that.”
Then he turned, nodded to one of the girls near the bar.
“Get her cleaned up. She sleep in the green room tonight. I’ll decide what to do with her come mornin’.”
And just like that, Violet was pulled into the velvet bloodstream of The Blackline.
Not as a worker. Not yet.
But as a girl the house would keep its eyes on.
The green room was small, no bigger than a boxcar berth, with peeling wallpaper and a single oil lamp that painted the cracked mirror gold. Violet sat on the edge of the old porcelain tub, steam rising in curls around her face. The bathwater was warm, not hot, the kind that clung to your skin like a whisper. Rose petals floated on the surface—leftover from another girl’s soak, but she didn’t mind.
It had been a long time since she’d felt anything soft.
She undressed slow, like it meant something. Like the silk slip she unfastened wasn’t secondhand. Like the stockings she peeled from her legs weren’t fraying at the toes. She laid them gently on the wooden chair. Her body looked thin under the lamplight. Not fragile—coiled, like something waiting to bloom.
Violet stepped into the water.
It wrapped around her like hands from the other side.
She exhaled, lowered herself in, and let her head fall back against the porcelain. Her eyes fluttered shut.
She thought of her grandmother.
Old Miss Luella. Thick hands, voice like saltwater and thunder, skin dark and smooth like polished shell. The woman who raised her on boiled root tea, haint blue, and Gullah prayers whispered to the wind.
“Your body is a gate, child. Not a gift. Not for free. And not to be feared.”
The memory of her voice wrapped around Violet now like arms.
She’d come here because she had nowhere else to go. But something inside her knew this was more than survival.
This was crossing a threshold.
She reached into her bag and pulled out her most precious thing.
a piece of lavender ribbon, worn and soft.
Her mother used to tie it around her wrist when she was scared.
Her grandmother would wrap it around her ankle and say, “No man can touch what’s guarded by memory.”
Now, Violet tied it around her throat.
Not tight. Just snug enough to feel.
It wasn’t just protection anymore.
It was a signal.
That she was hers first.
And whoever touched her after this…would have to be worthy.
She dried slow, humming a tune only her family would recognize. Her curls damp, cheeks feeling like brown velvet gone warm, the warmth of her body from the bath and the shade of her skin like café au lait. She stood in the cracked mirror, naked but not ashamed. There was still fear. But there was something else now too.
A quiet hunger.
Not just to survive…
But to become.
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The room was warm with lamplight and perfume.
Not strong, just faint hints of amber, pressed powder, and lilac, the kind that clung to bedsheets long after a girl had gone. The velvet chaise against the wall sagged with familiar use, and lying across it, a cigarette in one hand and one heel kicked off, was Cordelia.
Cordelia Toussaint.
The girls just called her Delie. The men called her whatever she whispered in their ear.
She was thirty miles of legs and don’t-give-a-damn, eyes lined in coal, lips always painted in something dark like plum or wine. Her robe was silk and nearly see-through, the color of crushed garnet. One thigh peeked from the slit, golden and gleaming.
She didn’t flinch when Violet walked in.
Just raised one arched brow and looked her over.
“Mmm,” Cordelia hummed, “Ain’t you a delicate little thing.”
Violet froze in the doorway, arms wrapped tight across her front, “Sorry—I didn’t know anyone was—”
“I ain’t just ‘anyone,’ sugar. I’m the Queen of this floor,” Cordelia smiled slow, cigarette curling smoke toward the ceiling, “And this here,” she gestured to the piles of lace, satin, and beaded silk draped over the bed, “is your coronation.”
Violet stepped farther in, bare feet soft on the worn rug. The heat of the oil lamps made her skin glow, still damp from her bath. Her curls had puffed around her face, and her ribbon—lavender—was still tied around her neck.
Stack had sent up a box of clothes earlier. Beautiful ones. Too beautiful. Like someone else’s dreams.
“Stack got taste,” Cordelia said, eyeing the garments, “Or maybe he just sees somethin’ in you he don’t wanna say out loud.”
Violet looked down, fingers trailing over a lavender chemise trimmed in black lace, “I’ve never worn anything like this.”
“Well, try it on then. Ain’t nobody gonna bite. ‘Cept maybe me,” She grinned around her cigarette.
Violet turned her back, cheeks burning.
She slipped out of her plain cotton shift and stepped into a deep emerald set. It was a camisole that hugged her waist and barely reached the curve of her hips, paired with tap shorts that rode high.
When she turned around, Cordelia sat up, real slow.
“Well, well, well…” she purred, “Ain’t you a quiet little storm.”
Violet shifted, unsure, “It fits weird. I’m too skinny for it.”
Cordelia scoffed, “Skinny? No, baby. You just got all your weight where it counts.”
Her eyes dragged down Violet’s frame, deliberate.
“Those hips could rock a man stupid. And that little ass? That’s trouble. Small up top, soft down low. You built like a promise.”
Violet’s arms crossed her chest, trying not to blush harder, “You’re just sayin’ that.”
“No, honey. I only say what’s true.”
Cordelia stood then, barefoot, and came close. Close enough that Violet could smell the jasmine and smoke on her skin. She ran one fingertip over the satin strap at Violet’s shoulder.
“You ever had a woman look at you like this before?”
Violet swallowed, “No.”
“Well, Miss Vi, you better get used to it,” Cordelia stepped back and smiled, “‘Cause by the time Stack puts you on the floor, they all gon’ be lookin’.”
Violet sat on the edge of the bed now, legs crossed at the ankles, fingers tracing the hem of the tap shorts.
Cordelia had returned to the chaise, reclined with one arm draped behind her head, her cigarette replaced with a glass of dark wine that shimmered like rubies in the lamplight.
For a while, neither of them spoke. The room was thick with perfume and tension—not heavy, just tender, like when rain wants to fall but isn’t ready yet.
Then, softly, Violet asked, “Does it hurt?”
Cordelia didn’t turn her head. Just sipped her wine and let the question settle.
“When it’s your first?” she said finally.
Violet nodded.
Cordelia breathed slow through her nose.
“Sometimes. Depends on the man. Depends on how much you want it…or how much you pretend you do.”
Violet looked down, “And what about after that?” she asked, “After the first time?”
Cordelia set the glass down on the floor and finally turned toward her, one knee drawn up beneath her robe.
“After that?” she said, “You learn your own rhythm. What you can take. What you like. Where to let them touch. Where to keep to yourself,” She studied Violet for a long moment. Then added, “It don’t always feel like much. But sometimes…”
She trailed off.
“…Sometimes?” Violet whispered.
Cordelia smiled slowly.
“Sometimes, with the right one…it feels like your soul’s gettin’ kissed from the inside out.”
Violet’s breath caught. Her thighs pressed together instinctively.
Cordelia’s smile deepened, “Mmhm. You felt that, didn’t you?”
“I don’t know,” Violet said, “I just—when I think about someone touchin’ me like that…I get warm. But I also feel scared. Like my body wants it, but the rest of me ain’t caught up yet.”
Cordelia nodded, “That’s natural. Your body been ready. It’s your heart that takes her time.”
She reached over and plucked a satin robe from the side of the bed. Rose-colored, soft, worn. She walked it over and draped it gently around Violet’s shoulders.
“You don’t gotta give nothin’ you ain’t ready to give,” she said softly, “Not to Stack. Not to Smoke. Not to nobody.”
Violet looked up at her, “Have you ever loved someone who paid you?”
Cordelia paused, just for a breath. Then said, “No. But I’ve loved how they made me feel. For a little while. That counts for somethin’, too.”
Violet pulled the robe tighter around her chest. “I don’t want to be just…a body.”
Cordelia tucked a curl behind her ear, “Then don’t be.”
She leaned in, kissed Violet’s cheek—soft, warm, and brief.
“Let ‘em touch your skin, sugar. But keep your name in your own mouth. Keep your soul in your back pocket.”
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Violet had been at The Blackline for a week.
Long enough to learn which girls brought in the most coin. Long enough to know who Stack trusted with the money box. Long enough to stop flinching when the back curtain swayed with moans, and long enough to learn how to smile without meaning it.
She hadn’t let any man touch her yet.
But she knew how to lean soft against their side, how to let her fingers trail across a lap, how to pretend she’d whisper something filthy but only ask if they liked their drink cold.
Stack didn’t pressure her. Not yet.
“You sell the idea right now,” he’d said, voice low, one gold tooth catching the lamplight, “Let them chase what they can’t have. That body gon’ pay double when the time comes.”
So she played host.
She laughed when needed. Danced when asked. Gave lap dances in silk and lavender and let men groan beneath her without ever opening her legs. She was a ghost in perfume, a promise wrapped in ribbon.
And when her shift was done, she’d sit in the corner room behind a sheer drape, knees drawn to her chest, watching.
Watching the other girls work.
Watching bodies move like shadow puppets behind beaded curtains, the sound of wet mouths and thick groans muffled by the low hum of jazz.
Sometimes, she’d close her eyes and imagine someone touching her like that. Not the men who came in drunk and lonely.
Someone else.
Someone who hadn’t even looked her way yet.
He came and went through the hallway like a breeze before the storm.
He didn’t linger. Didn’t smile. Didn’t talk unless he had to. Just passed through with his coat open, sleeves rolled, his news cap pulled low over a face that made women stare without meaning to.
He hadn’t looked at her. Not once.
But Violet noticed everything about him.
The way he lit his cigarette with one hand. The way his loafers hit the floor slow but certain. The way his voice rumbled when he spoke to Stack—not raised, not rushed, but enough to make the other girls shut up just to listen.
He wasn’t dressed like Stack, who wore velvet and gold and lace cuffs when he felt like it.
Smoke was simpler. Cleaner. But not softer.
Dark shirts. Dark trousers. Black suspenders. He didn’t wear flash. He didn’t need to. He wore command.
And something about that…Something about how his silence filled a room more than any shout…
It did something to her.
It made her thighs press together beneath her dress.
It made her breath catch when he passed.
And it made her wonder, what would his hands feel like?
Not the hands of the laughing men who grabbed without asking.
But his?
Would they be rough? Careful? Would he say her name like it was a secret or a sentence?
Violet didn’t even know if he’d noticed her.
But her body already had.
On the third night she saw him, some drunk fool tried to grab at one of the newer girls—Peaches. The kind of man who forgot this place had rules. Smoke didn’t say a word.
He rose from his chair like a dark wind, flicked his cigarette to the floor, and grabbed the man by the collar. The struggle wasn’t loud. There were no threats, no curses. Just the wet sound of knuckles hitting bone, the quick thud of someone’s pride dropping to the floor. Then silence again, broken only by the ragged wheeze of the man as Smoke leaned in, murmuring something only he could hear.
He dusted his coat, lit another cigarette, and sat back down.
Violet hadn’t realized she’d stopped breathing until Cordelia touched her hand beneath the table and whispered, “That’s how Smoke handles disrespect. Quiet and clean.”
They all tried him. The girls.
Some sat on his lap, giggling and twirling curls like schoolgirls. Others pressed their breasts to his arm, offering their best pout. Cordelia once wrapped her legs around him just to tease, but even she couldn’t break through that armor. Smoke didn’t flinch, didn’t soften. He simply watched. Took long drags of his cigar and let the world orbit him.
The only time he smiled was when Stack made some offhand joke, or when the saxophone player hit a particularly sweet note. But never at the girls. Not the way they wanted.
Violet found herself waiting for him. Listening for the weight of his boots on the floorboards. She never approached. Just peeked around corners. Hid behind curtains. Her heart fluttered every time his gaze swept across the room.
Once—just once—his eyes landed on her. Those sharp, heavy-lidded eyes. He didn’t smile. Didn’t blink.
And Violet turned away so fast she nearly tripped over her own feet.
The night had finally slipped quiet, the gramophone long gone silent, the perfume of cigar smoke and gin clinging to the velvet drapes like ghosts.
Backstage, in the dressing parlor with cracked mirrors and soft lamplight, Cordelia peeled off her silk stockings slow, leg stretched out long, her golden skin catching the amber glow like honey poured over polished mahogany. She had high cheekbones dusted in old rouge, eyes lined sharp as razors, and a gold mole painted just above her full mouth. Her hair was set in glossy Marcel waves, pinned back with a diamond barrette she claimed once belonged to Josephine Baker herself.
She sat in front of the mirror like she was on stage again, one leg crossed over the other, smoking a thin clove cigarette in a long ivory holder.
Peaches was across from her, lounging in a pink floral robe that hugged her plush figure. She was soft in all the places men dreamed about—belly round, hips thick like southern bread dough, and breasts that spilled out no matter what she wore. Her sandy brown coils framed her moon-round face like a lioness, fake flowers tucked behind her ears—yellow hibiscus and a few wilted daisies from the night before. She smelled like coconut oil and rum, sweet and warm.
Violet sat quiet near the wall, still in her slip, legs curled beneath her. She wore a pale-blue robe Cordelia had passed down to her. It was satin and fraying at the sleeves, but still soft against her shy skin. She didn’t speak, not yet. Just listened.
Cordelia let out a long sigh and flicked ash into an old crystal ashtray.
“Mmm. That old man in Room 2 tried to suck on my toes again,” she muttered, “Swore up and down I was an angel sent to forgive him. I told him, baby, I ain’t the Virgin Mary, I’m just Cordelia with rent due.”
Peaches cackled, her laughter rich and sweet like a gospel solo.
“At least he’s clean. That man with the gold teeth wanted me to act like his damn mama,” Peaches said, fanning herself, “Callin’ me ‘mama’ while I was ridin’ him. I almost said ‘boy, go to bed’ just to mess with him.”
Cordelia leaned back, puffing on her cigarette, “These men want every kinda woman. Soft ones, mean ones, silent ones. But you know what they really care about?”
“Pussy hair,” Peaches said, deadpan, grinning.
Violet’s eyes widened slightly.
“Exactly,” Cordelia purred, “I swear, half these fellas more opinionated than a church mother. One want it waxed bald like a lil’ girl. Another want it wild like a thicket. One man asked me to braid it.”
Peaches hollered, “Stack like it full, but trimmed. Just enough for his nose to get lost but not choked.”
Cordelia raised her brows at Violet through the mirror, “You shy, baby, but you got somethin’ under there. What you got goin’ on? Don’t be modest. We all women here.”
Peaches wiggled her brows, “Show us, baby girl.”
Violet hesitated. Her cheeks burned, but something in the way they watched her wasn’t cruel, it was curious, sisterly. So slowly, carefully, she opened her robe just enough to reveal the soft down between her thighs. A natural, delicate triangle—neatly trimmed, but untouched by razor.
“Well damn,” Cordelia murmured with an approving nod. “That’s a pretty little thing.”
Peaches smiled warmly, “You keep it just like that, baby. Let the right man teach you how he likes it.”
Violet closed her robe again, heart thudding.
“I’m surprised Stack ain’t done your initiation,” Cordelia said next, shifting tones.
Violet blinked, “My what?”
Cordelia smirked, “The initiation, sugar. When Stack gets a taste. He don’t always fuck you, sometimes he just eats. But he gotta make sure you gonna sell. That your body gonna bring money in.”
Peaches nodded solemnly, “He say he can tell from just the first taste. If you gon’ be a money-maker or a waste of time.”
“All the girls been through it,” Cordelia added, “We love Stack, even when we hate him. He run things tight. If you need food, he got it. If a man put hands on you, he handle it. If you act up, he cut you off. But he protect his girls.”
A hush fell after that. Cordelia reached for her perfume, dabbing it behind her ears. Peaches picked petals out her hair.
Violet sat quiet again. Not with fear—just thought.
She wondered if Smoke had ever done an initiation.
But the idea seemed…strange. He didn’t look at them like Stack did. He didn’t play. Didn’t sample. He sat in the shadows like a king who’d already had every fruit in the orchard.
Still, she wondered.
if he did it…how would it feel?
Would he ask?
Would he taste slow?
Would he whisper her name?
The brothel was still humming low that night—music crawling through the floorboards like midnight pour, the scent of clove and spilled gin heavy in the air. Violet was in the hallway near the parlor, pretending to check a tear in her stocking. But really, she was watching.
Cordelia walked by in her silk robe, hips swaying like she owned gravity itself. She passed Violet without a glance but tossed, “Don’t stare too long, baby. You’ll get ideas,” over her shoulder with a sly smirk.
Violet followed behind, quiet as always.
Stack was in the main parlor, sunk into his velvet armchair like a man born to it. His legs were spread, gold rings glittering on thick fingers. A black button-down hugged his chest, the top few undone just enough to show the glint of a gold chain and the curve of a rose tattoo blooming over his collarbone. A toothpick rolled lazy between his lips, and his fedora was tilted just enough to cast a shadow across his sharp eyes.
He was flanked by two women—Black beauties dressed in mink-trimmed lingerie. One with midnight skin and copper-gold eyes, the other with a cinnamon glow and long, oil-slick braids. Girls from back in New Orleans. The kind who moved too quietly, whose laughter echoed wrong if you listened too long. Their glamour was turned up high tonight—cheeks glowing, lips stained bloodred, eyes like honeyed storm clouds.
They leaned into Stack like cats in heat, one on each arm, hands tracing his chest while he accepted the girls’ cut of the night’s earnings—crisp bills folded neat in silk pouches. He didn’t look rushed. He didn’t ever look rushed.
Cordelia stepped forward, elegant as a sermon, and slid her own pouch into his open palm, “For you, baby,” she purred.
Stack gave her that grin, slow, wicked, full of teeth and secrets, “That’s my girl.”
Cordelia stayed close, ran her hand up his thigh, “I got a question though,” she said lightly, tone flirtatious but eyes sharp, “That lil’ new one…Violet. Why ain’t you done her initiation yet?”
The question landed like a dropped match.
The girls giggled, expectant.
Violet froze in the hallway, half in shadow.
Stack chuckled low, licked his lips slow. Then he leaned back and finally looked up—right toward Violet. Right through the wall, through the shadows, like he felt her watching.
“’Cause she ain’t ready,” he said. Voice calm. Final, “She still soft. Still dreamin’. I bite her now, she won’t come back from it.”
The room went still for a moment.
One of the girls murmured, “Ain’t never heard you hold back before.”
Stack smirks, “I don’t break toys I like.”
Cordelia tilted her head, “You like her?”
He didn’t answer that part. Just sat there, eyes still locked in Violet’s direction.
The one of the girls leaned down, whispering something in his ear. He grinned wider, eyes glinting gold.
Cordelia laughed, kissed him on the cheek, and walked off, hips rolling like waves.
Violet slipped back down the hall, heart pounding, not sure what she felt.
She wasn’t afraid.
But something in her ached.
She didn’t know whether it was longing for Stack…or disappointment that it wasn’t Smoke who’d said those words.
The days passed, and Violet became a ghost of temptation.
She hadn’t laid with a single man yet—not really. Not how they wanted. Not how Stack trained the girls to break a John in, slow and sweet. Violet would let them look, let them taste her perfume and the way she moved when she walked—but that was all.
She’d lean in close enough for breath to catch in their throat, then pull away with a soft apology and a smile that made them want to beg.
They were starving for her.
Some started offering more; double, triple. One even brought roses. Another sent sweets and a gold bracelet. Stack let it happen. Watched from the upstairs rail with his cigar in hand, head tilted just enough to track every whisper, every reach, every ache in the eyes of the men who wanted to ruin her.
Cordelia called it “the long game.”
“You reel ‘em in slow, baby,” she told Violet one afternoon in the vanity room, lips lined red, a lace shawl loose over her shoulders, “Make ’em chase what they already think they own.”
She leaned in, breath warm against Violet’s ear, “You let ‘em think you’re green. Shy. Then one night, you open that door just a little…and they lose they whole mind.”
Peaches nodded from across the room, filing her nails, “Ain’t nothin’ like the first time a quiet girl turns bold. That pussy hit different when it’s got mystery on it.”
Violet listened. Blushed. But she held her posture a little taller now. Her silence wasn’t fear, it was control. And she was learning.
Upstairs, Stack knew.
He saw it in the way she moved through the hallway now, hips learning how to sway without effort. He saw it when she made the mistake of biting her lip in front of a customer and didn’t notice the way his hand twitched. She was blooming. Not all at once. But the petals were opening. And Stack…was patient.
He didn’t rush the flowers he wanted to own.
That night, Smoke returned.
The front door swung open in the low light. He came in like he always did—silent. Slow. Solid. Black suspenders over a white shirt, sleeves rolled just enough to show his forearms and the cut of his veins. Cigarette already lit. No words. No greeting.
Just presence.
Violet was sitting behind a sheer gold drape near the hallway curtain, her usual hiding place. A secret pocket of velvet and hush where she could pretend to be invisible and watch the world breathe.
She held still, barely blinking, eyes tracing the shape of his jaw in the smoke.
And she wasn’t the only one watching.
Two of the girls were near the bar, sipping gin and whispering low.
“Mmm mmm mmm…that man walk in here like sin in a suit,” one said, fanning herself, “I’d let him ruin my whole damn life.”
“He don’t even talk much,” the other whispered back, “But I love me a grown, confident-ass man. One that don’t gotta raise his voice to make the whole room shift.”
“You see how he move?” the first continued, “Like he ain’t gotta explain nothin’. Just action. He said forget all that talk, I’m bout that action.”
They giggled, voices thick with desire and bravado, but there was hunger underneath it. Real hunger. The kind even the boldest girls didn’t say too loud.
Smoke didn’t even glance their way. He walked straight to the far wall, leaned back, lit a fresh cigarette, and scanned the room with eyes that held weight. You didn’t look into them—you fell into them.
And then…he paused.
His eyes drifted. Toward the sheer drape. Toward her.
Violet held her breath.
Did he see her?
She didn’t know. But she knew one thing…
The ache inside her, the low simmer that burned beneath her belly, had a name.
And it wasn’t Stack.
It was him.
Smoke.
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The brothel quieted in the small hours, when most of the girls had either gone to bed or were curled in the laps of men too drunk to finish what they started.
Violet slipped away to the back bathroom, the one with the deep porcelain tub and the cracked pink tiles, where steam clung to the mirror like breath. She twisted the knobs, hot water rushing out, cloudy with the salts and lavender oil Cordelia always kept in a little jar by the sink.
She stripped slow.
Her pale blue slip slid down her curves, skin dewy in the dim yellow light. Her breasts rose and fell with soft, shallow breaths. Her thighs were warm with sweat from the long night. Her curls stuck to her neck. She eased herself into the bath, the heat licking at her skin, pulling a sigh from her lips.
She sank deep with her knees drawn up, arms resting along the edges, eyes drifting shut.
And then the ache started again.
Smoke.
Not Stack. Not one of the slick-mouthed Johns who tried to coax her open with sweet words and sugar lies. But him—silent, watchful, heavy with power and mystery. The way he filled a room without ever trying. The cut of his jaw, the roll of his sleeves. The way he looked like he’d never say your name out loud—but growl it into your skin.
Her hand drifted down.
Fingers slipping between her thighs, slow at first. She breathed his name so softly it never left her lips. Her toes curled. Her hips arched slightly. She imagined his hand instead of hers. His fingers. His breath hot against her ear, not asking permission, just knowing what she needed.
The water lapped softly. Her moans were barely whispers, but they filled the little room all the same.
She was just on the edge, lost in that imagined weight of Smoke pressing her down, when—
Knock-knock. Click.
The door creaked open.
“Mmm.” Cordelia’s voice floated in, amused, “Now what we got goin’ on in here, sugar?”
Violet jerked up, water sloshing over the edge. She scrambled to sink lower into the bath, cheeks blazing red.
“I—I thought I locked—”
Cordelia leaned against the doorframe, fully dressed in a black silk robe trimmed with marabou feathers, cigarette holder dangling from her painted fingers.
“You didn’t,” she purred, eyes twinkling, “And even if you had, I got keys to everything in this house. Don’t look so scared. I ain’t mad. Girl’s entitled to her lil’ bath time fantasy.”
Violet covered her chest with her arms, mortified. Cordelia stepped inside, clicking the door shut behind her. She didn’t come to shame. She came like a storm that knew the rain was needed.
“Let me guess…” Her eyes narrowed, voice playful, “You wasn’t thinkin’ ’bout Smoke, was you?”
Violet didn’t answer.
Cordelia smirked and slid down to sit on the edge of the tub, letting her hand stir the water lazily.
“No shame in it, baby. That man walk in like judgment day, and every girl in this house got a little tremble in her thighs when he lights a cigarette.”
Violet looked down, face flushed, lips still parted from what almost was.
“You ever wonder what he’d do if you let him have you?” Cordelia asked, voice dropping, “Not rough like these other fools. Nah. A man like Smoke…he take his time. He don’t fuck. He consumes.”
Violet whimpered under her breath, thighs pressing together beneath the water.
Cordelia chuckled softly, “See? I knew it. You hooked and he ain’t even touched you yet,” She stood, smoothing her robe, “Just don’t drown yourself in here, alright? Save a little of that sweetness for when the time come. And baby…”
She paused at the door.
“When a man like that finally notices you? There ain’t no goin’ back.”
Then she was gone, leaving the room scented with her perfume and laughter.
And Violet?
She leaned back in the tub again.
But her hand moved slower this time.
And in her mind, she heard Smoke whisper her name.
After her bath, the house had gone hush. Only the soft lilt of old jazz drifted up from below—scratchy and faraway, like a memory playing through a wall. Most of the girls had gone to their rooms or curled up with company. Violet had begged off early. Said she had a headache. Nobody questioned her.
She wasn’t sick.
She was starving—but not for food.
The dressing room was dim, lit only by a row of half-burned candles flickering in their dusty glass jars. Smoke from earlier perfumes still clung to the air—rose, patchouli, hair tonic, clove cigarettes. The mirrors were fogged from the night’s heat and steam, the room heavy with the perfume of want.
Violet stood barefoot on the cold tile floor, wrapped in a short silk robe. Her curls were damp, falling in soft tendrils around her face, and her cheeks still flushed from her bath. Her skin glowed in the candlelight—bronze, delicate, young.
She stepped closer to the mirror.
The fogged glass showed only a whisper of herself at first, like a spirit trying to take form.
She wiped it clean with her palm.
Then stood still.
She studied her reflection. The cut of her collarbone. The shape of her mouth. The softness of her eyes, the way her lips always seemed half-parted like a question left unanswered.
“He don’t want soft,” she whispered to herself, “He want…sultry…woman.”
So she tried.
She dropped one shoulder of the robe. Let it slide down slow.
She ran her fingers through her curls and pushed them back, exposing her neck. Then she tilted her chin up just a little, parted her lips.
“You like this, don’t you?” she murmured, voice breathy, “I bet you wonder what I taste like…”
She paused. Cringed.
It didn’t sound right.
It sounded like someone else. Cordelia maybe. Or one of the other girls who knew how to speak a man into madness. Not her. Not sweet little Violet from the coast with Gullah blood and old folk songs still hiding in her bones.
She tried again.
Swayed her hips slow. Dragged her finger down her chest. Let the robe part just a little between her thighs.
“You want me, don’t you?” she whispered.
The words stuck in her throat.
Her shoulders tensed. Her eyes dropped.
It felt fake.
Like she was wearing someone else’s skin, trying to fit into a mold that wasn’t made for her. Pretty? Sure. She’d been told that. Men looked. Girls cooed. But she didn’t have Cordelia’s poise, Peaches’ sass, or the polished glamour of the girls from Stack’s past. She didn’t know how to weaponize her beauty yet.
And Smoke?
Smoke would eat a woman alive if she stepped to him wrong.
Violet sank onto the vanity stool, staring at her bare thighs, her robe still half-open.
She whispered, “You don’t see me, do you…”
She wanted to cry. Not from sadness. From that terrible tightness in the chest when your want grows too loud, and your confidence grows too quiet.
She reached for a lipstick tube and twisted it open. It was a deep wine red, something Cordelia once left on the table.
She painted her lips slow.
Then leaned in and kissed the mirror.
A print bloomed on the glass.
“If I was bold…you’d touch me, wouldn’t you?” she whispered again, softer now, “You’d press me to the wall. You’d tell me I was yours without sayin’ a word…”
Silence answered her.
And still, she sat there, robe slipping from one shoulder, red lips parted, candlelight dancing across her skin.
Just a girl aching to be noticed.
She didn’t even remember falling asleep that night. One minute, she was staring at her own reflection, robe half open, mouth painted, thighs pressed together. The next, the mirror seemed to ripple, soften, breathe.
And suddenly, he was there.
Smoke.
Leaning in the doorway behind her, half in shadow, cigarette in hand.
But this wasn’t the real Smoke. This was dream-Smoky, smoky Smoke—heavier, slower, hungry.
He stepped into the room with that same impossible quiet, like the floor moved for him, not the other way around. The door didn’t creak. The candles didn’t flicker. He just was.
His eyes moved over her…over her parted robe, over her soft thighs, over the kiss mark on the mirror like it was a challenge.
Violet tried to cover herself, but in the dream, her arms wouldn’t move. She could only look back, breath catching, skin prickling with heat and shame.
“I was just—”
Smoke didn’t speak.
He crossed the room in three long strides and stopped behind her. She could see him in the mirror now. Towering. Watching. His gaze dragged down her body like a match tip over dry bark. And then, he bent low, his mouth grazing the shell of her ear.
“You think I don’t see you?” he murmured, voice like liquid dusk on hot skin.
His hands slid down her shoulders, calloused palms dragging over her arms, her waist. He didn’t grab. He claimed. His touch said: this has always been mine.
She whimpered.
He dipped his head further, pressed his lips to her neck, breathed her in. The robe fell from her shoulders. Her nipples hardened in the air.
“I see everything, Violet,” he said, “Every little ache. Every quiet moan you try to hide from the night…”
He turned her gently in the dream, and she rose without resistance. She was bare before him, trembling, but not afraid.
“You ain’t gotta perform for me,” he whispered.
Then he sank to his knees.
His mouth was at her belly, then lower, his breath hot against the soft thatch between her thighs. He pressed a kiss there—slow, worshipful.”
“I want this,” he said.
And she believed him.
Violet gasped—and woke with a jolt.
The candles were low. The room was quiet. Her thighs were wet with sweat, her robe askew. No one was there. No door creaked. No match was struck.
But her heart was racing like he’d just left.
And for a long, long moment, Violet sat in the hush, fingertips brushing her lips.
A thought bloomed in her chest like a secret.
Despite what Violet thinks Smoke wants—sharp, sultry, polished women like Cordelia…
She’s wrong.
He’ll want her exactly as she is.
Soft. Quiet. Ache and all.
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the girl with the pearl earring. cy3rix on instagram. 2025.
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