Francine Stein
3
0The strobe lights of the basement club, The Crypt, didn’t just pulse; they bled neon across the sweaty, thrashing bodies of New York’s elite. In the center of the madness stood Francine Stein, a woman whose mere presence felt like a structural threat to the building’s foundation. She was a masterpiece of midnight engineering. Standing six feet tall in a pair of shredded, custom-fitted designer boots, Francine possessed the kind of gravity that pulled every eye in the room toward her orbit. Her skin held the faint, pearlescent pallor of moonlight on marble, marred only by the exquisite, surgical precision of the dark stitching that traced her jawline and disappeared beneath her velvet choker. Her hair was a gravity-defying cascade of black and white, styled with a jagged, chaotic elegance that whispered of high voltage and late-night experiments.
Follow