The night smelled like money and smoke.
Gold light spilled from the private club onto the pavement, slicked by rain, turning the street into something unreal...too polished, too loud, too alive for her heart to keep pace. Music throbbed behind the doors, a low, decadent pulse that felt sinful even before she stepped inside.
"Just one hour," her friend said again, fingers tight around her wrist. "No one will even notice you."
That was the lie.
She was already noticed...by herself. By the way her breath had shortened. By the way her palms were damp, her thoughts scattered. This was not her world. She knew it the way one knows fire will burn, even without touching it.
She had left her hijab behind tonight.
The absence sat on her like a missing limb.
Her dress was modest by the club's standards long sleeves, high neck, dark fabric that clung without revealing but without the familiar weight of cloth around her head, she felt exposed. Seen. As though the night itself had eyes.
Just one hour, she told herself. Then I leave.
Inside, the club unfolded in velvet and glass. Chandeliers glimmered like captive stars. Laughter cut sharp and careless through the air. Perfume, alcohol, heat everything tangled together until it made her dizzy.
She stayed close to her friend, head lowered, steps cautious. Every instinct told her to turn back. She knew what was sin and what was not. She knew where lines were drawn. She had spent her life walking carefully between them, not perfect, not pure but aware.
Aware enough to be afraid.
"Relax," Sarah laughed, already lighter, freer. "You look like a deer about to bolt."
"I can't relax, Sarah," Layla whispered, her voice tight. "This is a bad idea. I know it's a very, very bad idea."
Sarah stopped and turned to her, eyes sparkling. "Calm down, Layla. Look at you." She gestured dramatically. "You look gorgeous with your hair open. Honestly, it's a crime you keep it covered all the time. Now come on...don't be a party killer."
Before Layla could protest again, Sarah dragged her toward the bar.
Her heart drummed violently against her ribs.
The club wasn't crowded yet, it was still early and the bartender gave them his full attention, leaning forward with an easy smile.
"How can I help you?" he asked, winking at both of them.
Sarah ordered without hesitation.
"Same for her?" the bartender asked, already reaching for another glass.
"No," Layla interrupted quickly. "Just water. Ice water, actually. Thank you."
The bartender blinked, surprised, then shrugged.
As the glass was set in front of her, cold and innocent, Layla wrapped her fingers around it, and drained the glass in a single gulp, but the water did nothing to calm her.
The trembling in her fingers refused to stop. Her chest felt tight, breath shallow and uneven. She knew this idea was nothing short of madness...pure, reckless madness, yet she had still dared to come. Foolishly mistaking this for freedom.
Ya Allah, she prayed silently, guilt curling heavy in her heart.
Across the room, Sarah suddenly waved at someone. Someone Layla didn't know.
Without a word, without even a backward glance, Sarah rushed toward the other side of the club.
Layla's heart leapt straight into her throat as her friend disappeared into the crowd. Trying to steady herself, she looked around and immediately wished she hadn't.
Bodies were pressed together, moving in slow, intimate rhythms...hands roaming, mouths close, laughter spilling too easily. She gulped, her pulse pounding violently in her ears, loud enough that she felt like everyone could hear it.
She turned, looking for Sarah...toward the side of the room where she'd gone.
Nothing.
No Sarah. No familiar face.
Her chest tightened.
This was it.
The final nail in the coffin.
Fear settled into her body, heavy and cold. Her hands felt shaky, her legs weak, like they might give out any second.
She pushed herself up from the bar. She was leaving. Right now.
She didn't care that this was a luxury club or how Sarah had gotten the passes. None of it mattered anymore.
She couldn't stay.
This place wasn't for her. It never had been.
But in her panic, she chose the wrong path one that carried her deeper into the club instead of out of it.
Her steps slowed when the corridor ended and two staircases rose before her. One climbed upward, disappearing into light. The other descended, swallowed by shadow.
She searched her memory, clinging to logic. They had taken the elevator to the first floor when they arrived. Down must lead to the ground floor, she told herself.
To the exit.
To safety.
She chose the stairs going down.
It was a mistake.
The space below opened into something darker, quieter, and far more intimate. Maroon velvet curtains draped the walls, rich and heavy, softening every sound, as though the world here preferred secrets.
A chill traced her spine.
Then she saw a door.
It was all glass, smooth and seamless, but the other side was pitch-black nothing visible beyond it. Still, to her trembling mind, it looked like salvation.
Her legs unsteady, she moved toward it as if drawn by hope alone.
The moment she opened the door, the air changed.
The sharp, suffocating smell of cigarette smoke and alcohol rushed out to meet her, wrapping around her senses, stealing her b
reath.
Layla froze.
Whatever lay beyond that door was not escape.
It was an entirely different world.
___________________
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