And Daisy: Violet

Violet and Daisy decided to solve the problem themselves.

But Violet and Daisy were pretty. They wore nice hats. They went to church. And then, on a dark road, they beat a man to death with a strap because they thought life was a movie. Violet And Daisy

But what if I told you that in 1920s New York, two real-life teenage sisters—stylish, soft-spoken, and obsessed with silent film stars—became the most unlikely hired killers the world had ever seen? Violet and Daisy decided to solve the problem themselves

Yes, you read that correctly. Two fresh-faced young women from the Lower East Side were operating as a contract-killing duo, and nobody suspected a thing because, well... look at them . Society couldn’t fathom that "girls" could be violent. That gender bias was their greatest weapon. Their downfall began with a man named William "Bill" Ghent, a former boxer and general ne'er-do-well. According to the sisters, Ghent had been a family friend—until he started blackmailing their father. Ghent knew a secret about their past, and he was squeezing the family dry. They went to church

It was brutal. It was personal. And it was incredibly sloppy. Here is where the story shifts from "crime drama" to "psychological thriller."

But the sisters had a side hustle: murder for hire.