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Last Night In Soho Access

She was haunting the catwalks. The songs. The girls who finally learned to scream back.

But Jack was a mirror with a crack. His compliments turned to corrections. His arm around her waist became a grip on her wrist. In one dream, he slammed a taxi door on her ankle. “You’re nothing without me,” he hissed. And Sandie—beautiful, bright Sandie—apologized. Last Night in Soho

Ellie took the mannequin. She dragged it down the stairs, through the alley, to the cellar door. Mrs. Bunting stood in the doorway, but her face flickered: now old woman, now Jack, now Sandie. She was haunting the catwalks

The room was small but perfect: a sash window overlooking a neon-lit alley, a mannequin in the corner, and a brass bed that seemed to hum. That night, Ellie fell asleep beneath a peeling floral wallpaper and dreamed of a girl named Sandie. But Jack was a mirror with a crack