Chapter 3

Ella Walker POV:

The moment the door to room 207 clicked shut, Javier's carefully constructed composure shattered. He spun me around, pressing me back against the cheap wood, his body caging mine. His breathing was heavy, ragged in the small, stale-smelling room.

He loomed over me, his face close, his eyes dark with a mixture of excitement and something that looked a lot like nervousness. He was trying to be the aggressor, the one in charge. But he didn't move. He just stared, his chest rising and falling rapidly.

Pathetic. He was a virgin, or close to it. All swagger and no substance. In my 28-year-old life, I'd dealt with men who could eat this boy for breakfast.

I broke the tense silence, my voice a low, suggestive murmur. "Don't you want to get cleaned up first? We've got all night."

I let my eyes trail down his body, a deliberate, appraising look. "Who should go first? You… or me?"

He watched me, his suspicion warring with his arousal. He was probably wondering how a supposedly shy, impoverished girl knew how to play this game so well. But lust was a more powerful motivator than logic.

"Me," he decided, a smirk returning to his face. "You wait right here."

He tossed his backpack onto the bed. It landed with a heavy thud. He thought he was being casual, but he was just an overeager puppy. "Don't worry, I'll be quick."

"I'm in no hurry," I said, my voice dripping with false promise.

The bathroom door clicked shut. The sound of the shower starting was my cue.

I didn't hesitate. I moved to the bed and unzipped his backpack. Inside, nestled between a chemistry textbook and a crumpled jersey, was exactly what I was looking for: a small, silver digital camera. His weapon. My prize.

Next, I picked up the receiver of the motel's rotary phone. The dial tone buzzed in my ear. I remembered the number from a flyer tacked to a telephone pole, one I'd seen a thousand times on my hungry walks home. A local "entertainment" service. Quick, discreet, and always looking for cash.

A bored-sounding woman answered on the second ring.

"Room 207, Azure Inn," I said, my voice low and urgent. "I need your prettiest girl. And I need her now." I hung up before she could ask any questions.

My final target was his wallet. I found it in the front pocket of his jeans, which he'd thrown carelessly on a chair. I flipped it open. It was thick with cash. Hundred-dollar bills. Of course. Javier's father, the local car dealership magnate, spoiled his son rotten. Javier never wanted for anything.

That was about to change.

I counted out the money. Two thousand dollars. It was more than I'd seen in my entire eighteen years. This wasn't theft. It was a collection on a debt. A down payment for a stolen youth. I took out a thousand for myself—enough for a security deposit on a new life. I left five hundred in the wallet and pocketed the other five hundred. A service fee.

Just as I tucked the money into my bra, the safest place I could think of, a soft knock came at the door.

Perfect timing.

I'd just opened the door and ushered a bewildered-looking woman in a cheap leopard-print dress inside when the shower turned off. I pressed the five hundred dollars into her hand. "He's all yours. He'll pay you the rest when you're done."

I turned off the main light, leaving only the dim, sleazy glow of the bedside lamp. The room was plunged into shadows.

"Ella?" Javier's voice called from the bathroom. "Why's it so dark?"

Silence.

I heard him step out of the bathroom. The bed creaked as the woman, clearly a professional, got into position under the covers.

"Ella?" he called again, his voice trembling slightly. He was trying to sound confident, but the tremor gave away his excitement. His bare feet padded across the worn carpet. He was a moth drawn to a flame.

He reached the bed and bent down, his silhouette outlined by the dim light from the window. "Are you under there?" he whispered, his voice thick with anticipation.

From my hiding spot in the dark corner by the door, I watched, a predatory smile on my face.

He reached out and yanked back the comforter.

What happened next was a blur of motion. A shriek from Javier, not of pleasure, but of pure shock. The woman, true to her profession, wrapped her arms around him, pulling him down onto the bed with surprising strength.

A tangle of limbs, a chaotic silhouette against the dim light from the window.

Click. Flash.

The camera's flash illuminated the scene in a brilliant, damning burst of light.

I had my picture.

Javier scrambled back, his eyes wide with horror and disbelief. He looked from the woman, who was now sitting up and looking annoyed, to me, standing by the door with his camera in my hand.

"That wasn't part of the plan," the woman complained, pulling the sheet up to her chest.

"Just wait," I told her, my eyes fixed on Javier. I raised the camera, letting him get a good look at it. I smiled, a cold, sharp smile that didn't reach my eyes. "Well, well, Javier. Looks like I got my picture."

The shock finally wore off, replaced by a wave of pure fury. "You bitch!" he roared, trying to untangle himself from the sheets and the woman. "What the hell is this?"

"This," I said, my voice calm and even, "is a two-thousand-dollar photograph. You can have it, and the camera, for that price."

I tossed his wallet onto the bed. "I've already taken my half. There's five hundred in there for your new friend's services. Consider the rest a finder's fee."

I turned to the woman. "He's all yours. Get your money from him."

With that, I slung my backpack over my shoulder and walked out, not looking back.

"Ella! Get back here, you fucking bitch!" Javier screamed, scrambling off the bed.

He was stopped by the woman, who grabbed his arm. "Hey! Where do you think you're going? You owe me five hundred bucks, pretty boy!"

Their shouts and curses followed me down the hallway. I didn't slow down. I pushed open the heavy motel door and stepped out into the cool night air.

I closed the door behind me, shutting out the chaos.

Enjoy your first taste of humiliation, Javier, I thought. There's plenty more where that came from.

Chapter 4

Ella Walker POV:

Walking home under the dim streetlights, the thousand dollars tucked securely in my bra felt like a warm, protective shield against my skin. It was more than just money. It was a lifeline. It was my ticket out.

In my first life, I had been eighteen and desperate. My body was the only currency I had, the only thing of value I possessed. So I'd sold a piece of it to Javier Mack for fifty dollars. Enough for a week's worth of food and a pack of sanitary napkins.

The consequences were swift and brutal. That humiliating photo, taken on his phone, spread through the school like a virus. I lost my name. I became "Fifty-Dollar Ella." The picture was a ghost that haunted the digital hallways of our high school, passed from phone to phone with snickering commentary.

Boys would slip notes into my locker, crude offers scrawled on scraps of paper. Ten dollars. Twenty. Five dollars just to look. The girls, my supposed peers, treated me like I was contaminated. They would shrink away if I got too close, whispering behind their hands, their eyes filled with a mixture of scorn and pity.

My life, which was already a quiet kind of hell, plunged into a deeper, more public circle of it. There was no physical violence, no overt bullying. It was worse. It was a death by a thousand silent cuts, a public shaming that flayed me alive, day after day.

I would not make that mistake again. I couldn't.

At twenty-eight, I was a fortress. The taunts of teenagers were like pebbles thrown against a granite wall. The name "Fifty-Dollar Ella" had no power over me anymore. But here, now, in this fragile eighteen-year-old body, with the wounds still fresh, I was vulnerable. I still cared. And because I cared, I had to be ruthless.

Javier Mack deserved what he got. It was a simple equation of cause and effect. He had built his reputation on the backs of people weaker than him. It was time he learned what it felt like to be the one on the ground.

I hummed a little tune as I walked, my steps light. A thousand dollars. It was enough. Enough to survive until the SATs. Enough to buy food, toiletries, new study materials. Enough to keep my head above water while I fought for my future.

After the exams, I would be gone. I would leave this town and never look back. Just like I did before. But this time, I wouldn't be running away in shame. I would be walking toward a future I had meticulously engineered for myself.

The past was a scar, but it was a scar I had learned to live with. It had been sanded down by a decade of struggle, of clawing my way up from nothing to become a woman who answered to no one.

But that was the 28-year-old me. The 18-year-old me was still bleeding. And she demanded justice.

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