Savannah

Title: Savannah’s Last Sunset

The strip clubs in Vegas were louder that summer, but the Gigolo wasn’t listening. He had one thing on his mind — Savannah. Shannon Michelle Wilsey. Blonde hair like neon champagne, eyes that could melt steel. She was dead now. The papers called it a suicide. The Gigolo called it bullshit.

Savannah had been more than an adult film star. She’d been the kind of woman who could walk into The Rainbow on Sunset and have rock gods tripping over their leather boots. One of those gods was Axl Rose.

The Gigolo had heard the stories — how she used to sit at the piano while he worked on songs, laughing, drinking, kissing between chords. And then one day, she wasn’t laughing anymore.


The FBI Meeting

The Gigolo pushed his chair back in that Vegas lounge, fixing his eyes on the two G-Men.

Gigolo: You remember that Guns N’ Roses song — “I Used to Love Her”? The one where he sings, “I had to kill her”? You think that’s just some cute little joke? Or maybe he’s telling the truth with a smile on it?

The agents didn’t answer.

Gigolo: And “November Rain”? Whole damn video’s about a wedding that ends in a funeral. Axl crying over his dead wife in the casket. Savannah dies less than two years later, and you don’t see a connection?

Agent #1 shifted in his seat.

Agent #1: We don’t comment on ongoing—

Gigolo: Ongoing? So it is ongoing. You’re not just filing this under “tragic Hollywood overdoses” or “glamour girl gone wrong.”


The Rumors

On the Strip, the talk was ugly. Some said Savannah knew too much about the rock scene — not the fun stuff, but the deals in backrooms, the pills passed like communion wafers, the unrecorded fights that ended with real bruises.

Others swore she’d threatened to go public about Axl — about nights that weren’t as romantic as the videos made them seem.


The Break

Weeks later, the Gigolo found himself on the Sunset Strip, staring up at the giant Guns N’ Roses billboard. “Use Your Illusion” was still selling. He thought about the illusion Savannah had lived in — the promise of eternal youth, money, fame. All of it gone in a puff of gunpowder.

A stranger sidled up. Long hair, leather jacket, the look of a roadie who’d seen too much.

Stranger: You want the truth? “I Used to Love Her” wasn’t written about a dog, no matter what they say. And “November Rain” — that’s the closest you’ll get to knowing what happened to her. But the ending? That’s not art. That’s a confession.

The Gigolo lit a cigarette. The night air felt colder. He realized the deeper he went, the more this smelled like a love song played backwards — sweet at first, until you hear the devil in it.

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