Velvet Chains

Velvet Chains

KeyKirita · Completed · 111.0k Words

691
Hot
691
Views
0
Added
Add to Shelf
Start Reading
Share:facebooktwitterpinterestwhatsappreddit

Introduction

I said no to the wrong man.
One fleeting meeting, one polite rejection—and now he’s everywhere. Watching. Waiting. Whispering my secrets in the dark.
He didn’t just follow me. He invaded every corner of my life: destroyed my relationship, ruined my safety, broke every rule I thought protected me.
Now he’s in my dreams, in my nightmares, in the trembling space between fear and craving.
His gifts are wicked temptations. His threats curl around my throat like a promise.
Each time I resist, his obsession deepens—and the harder I fight, the more I want what I know I shouldn’t.
He says I’ll beg for his touch. That I’ll wear his chains like a second skin.

Her “no” was the sweetest provocation I’ve ever tasted.
I’m used to taking what I want—money, power, loyalty, women. But her? She’s different. Untouchable. Defiant. Mine.
She thinks she can run. She thinks love will save her, or that the world will protect her from a man like me.
Let her try.
I’ll tear her life apart, one thread at a time.
Her boyfriend? Gone.
Her rules? Broken.
Her body? Quivering for me, even when her lips spit defiance.
She can hate me all she wants—so long as she screams my name when I break her open and make her beg.
Because in my world, surrender is the only escape—and her pleasure will be her undoing.
She’ll wear my mark, my chains, my name on her lips.
I warned her:
Velvet chains look soft, but once you’re in them, you never break free.

If you like:

Obsessive, possessive mafia heroes who’ll ruin your world.
Dark, forbidden power play and morally gray everything
Forced proximity, luxury, violence, and erotic tension.

Chapter 1

The hotel lounge pretends it isn’t a hallway to a hundred little kingdoms. Carpets swallow footsteps. Gold ribs of light frame the ceiling. The bar is a mirror that lies—everyone looks better, richer, more dangerous in its reflection.

I’m laughing at something unfunny from a vendor with a lanyard and a bolo tie, nodding like my head’s on a hinge. There’s a low cello hum in the HVAC, the clink of ice against glass, the gentle warfare of networking. My shoes hurt. My smile does, too.

He appears the way expensive men do: not by stepping into the room, but by altering its temperature. A shift, subtle enough that no one name-tags it. The hair along my arms rises. I glance without meaning to.

He’s at the far end of the bar, back to a column striped with onyx. Black suit, not overly flashy, but the fit is forensic. White shirt open at the throat, no tie. He’s not one of us. No badge. No schedule tucked under his hand. He’s a distraction in a world that measures productivity in minutes.

His gaze catches mine like silk snagging on a ring. There’s a pass between us—an invisible tug that asks if I want to play. I drop my eyes and pretend the cocktail napkin in my hand is urgent.

“Lena?” Priya ghosts to my side, saving me. Her hair is in a braided crown. She already changed from conference flats into stilettos she can actually run in. “You promised me a bathroom gossip break.”

I exhale. “I’m fulfilling my promise right now by not throwing myself off the mezzanine.”

“Please don’t, you still owe me coffee for covering your breakout session Q&A. Two people tried to sell me their apps in the question line.”

“Did you tell them we don’t buy apps in the question line?”

“I told them we buy drinks at the bar. Speaking of, yours looks empty.”

“It is.” I lift it. A few flecks of lemon pulp stick to the sides like confetti after a dull party.

“Then come on,” she says. “The faster we drink, the faster we can leave.”

We wedge ourselves toward the bar, bodies brushing, perfume mixing into a high, bright sweetness. The closer I get, the louder my body gets—the pulse in my throat, the ridiculous awareness of my lipstick. I don’t look at him again. I can feel him already, the way a storm is felt before it’s seen.

A couple slides away from the marble. I fit my empty glass in the gap like I’ve solved a puzzle. The bartender—a woman with a pixie cut and the calm of a war veteran—sweeps in.

“What can I get you?”

“Another French 75,” I say. “Please.”

“Negroni for me,” Priya adds.

“Coming right up.”

Someone to my right moves, a slow lean that sends a faint slipstream across my bare shoulder. The suit. I know it without turning. I sense him the way the glass senses the condensation bead down its side. He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t need to. I feel watched without the slime of being watched. There’s intention, not lechery. A difference you learn to read to survive.

The bartender returns with a coupe, its sugared lemon twist like a little flag. I pass my card. The glass is cold enough to numb my fingertips.

“Work thing?” a voice says, warm and unhurried.

I turn because of the way he asks it—like he already knows the answer and is inviting me to lie. Up close, he’s worse. The suit is midnight. His hair is dark, cut close on the sides, the top combed back but not lacquered into submission. Eyes deep enough to store a season. A thin white scar tucks into his left brow, quiet as a signature. He’s thirty-something. Maybe more. Not young-money eager; old-money sure.

I aim my smile like a safety. “The lanyards give it away?”

“Among other things.” His gaze flickers—my badge, my hands, the way I set my elbow on the bar, the faint sheen at my collarbone. Cataloging. Not in the way of a creep counting trophies—the way a chess player counts spaces ahead.

“Let me guess,” I say, because my mouth likes danger more than my life does. “You’re not here for the killer keynote on synergistic pipelines.”

He laughs. It’s not loud. It has weight. “I prefer my pipelines literal.”

“So…oil?”

“Something like that.”

“You don’t seem very flammable.”

“Not in public.”

The line lands somewhere between ridiculous and chilling. It shouldn’t work on me. I’m not nineteen. I don’t fall for suits with dimples and dangerous hobbies. I sip to buy time. Dry champagne and lemon bite my tongue. Don’t gawp, Lena. Don’t be a story you tell later that starts with I knew better and ends with I did it anyway.

“I’m Lena,” I say, then hate myself for saying it, because names are doorways.

“Lena,” he repeats, and my name sounds different wrapped in his voice. Less casual. As if he’s tasting it. “Nice to meet you.”

“And you are?”

“Buying your next drink.”

“That’s not a name.”

“Careful,” he says, and he smiles like the warning is a kindness. “People give pieces of themselves away when they think they’re still whole.”

“Poetic.”

“Practical.”

Priya returns from settling up at the other register. She takes one look at him, then at me, then raises both brows so high they threaten to flee her face. I shake my head slightly. Not a yes. Not a no. A don’t start.

“Hi,” she tells him, friendly as a flight attendant during turbulence. “We were just leaving.”

“Were you?” he asks me, not her.

“Yes,” I say, even though I wasn’t. “We have an early panel.”

“Of course.” He nods, as if I’ve told him a secret about my blood type. “Enjoy the rest of your night.”

I expect him to turn away, bored. He doesn’t. He repositions, casual enough to be deniable, so that moving past him means passing close. Not touching—just the implication of touch. His attention folds around me like air warmed by a lamp.

We move. My shoulder grazes a whisper of wool. That close, I catch him: clean skin, expensive soap, a shadow of smoke that isn’t from the bar. My chest tightens like it wants to be greedy. I hate that my body is a little traitor with hot opinions.

“Goodnight,” he says in my ear, and it isn’t a flirt. It’s a note under a door.

We weave back into the current. Priya waits until we’re three paces away. “You have to stop making prolonged eye contact with storms.”

“I wasn’t—”

“You were. And if that man isn’t a storm, he’s at least a private island with a helipad and a history.”

I grin into my glass. “Is that your professional assessment?”

“It’s my professional assessment that men like that come with NDAs and a second passport. Was he wearing a badge?”

“No.”

“Then he’s either a sponsor or a shark.”

“Those categories overlap.”

“They’re concentric circles.” She leans in. “Okay, give me exactly fifteen seconds of fun speculation before we go back to being good girls who care about cross-functional alignment. What’s his deal?”

“Maybe he really does prefer literal pipelines.” I lick lemon sugar from my thumb, then realize I’m doing it and shove my hand down. “Construction. Energy. Import-export.”

“He’s either a sheikh, a mafia heir, or both. Don’t sleep with him.”

“Priya.”

“I’m serious. The look he gave you was…not safe.”

“Nothing about this conference is safe. Remember the shrimp skewers?”

“I’m going to get you a glass of water,” she says, like she can rinse me of it.

“You’re not my handler.”

“Tonight I am.”

We do another lap, say our goodnights, promise to meet downstairs at eight like we’re not going to text at seven-fifty in sweatpants and terror. By the time I slip out of the lounge, the lobby is a mosaic of travelers dragging their lives behind them in wheeled bags. A rotating door exhales outside air that smells like rain stalled over concrete.

I take the escalator up to the mezzanine to cross to the other elevator bank. The lights up here are softer. Conference posters line the wall like polite propaganda. The hum of the lounge recedes to a muffled luxe heartbeat.

“Nice save,” a voice says.

He’s leaning on the mezzanine rail, half in shadow, like the hotel grew him there. My own shadow lurches. I stop because there’s nothing else to do. There’s no one up here. The carpet eats noise, and the glass eats witnesses.

“I thought you weren’t flammable in public,” I say, sounding braver than I feel.

“This is quieter than public.” His eyes tip down over the lounge. “Your friend is protective.”

“She’s practical.”

“So am I.”

“By warning me about my own name?”

“By telling you that the things we offer without thinking cost most.”

“And what do you offer without thinking?”

He smiles, then lets the smile go, like it was a coin he flipped and didn’t like the way it landed. “I don’t do much without thinking.”

We stand there, a pitch held between breaths. I should leave. I don’t. The rain smell pushes closer, a promise on glass. Somewhere below, laughter spikes and fades. Up here, the world stops at the edge of the rail.

“I’m not interested,” I say finally, as if I need to say it aloud to make it true. “I have a boyfriend.”

“Does he make you laugh?” He asks it like small talk, which makes it worse.

“Yes.”

“Does he notice when your smile doesn’t reach your eyes?”

The question slides under my ribs. Anger stirs, sharp enough to be useful. “You don’t know me.”

“Not yet.”

My pulse drums a warning. “Is this a game to you?”

“I don’t play,” he says, and I hear the lie, or maybe the truth.

“Then what is this?”

“What it looks like.” He steps closer—not enough to crowd, just enough to pull my focus like a tide. “A man who saw something he wants and is telling you that.”

“I said no downstairs without saying it,” I tell him, jaw tight. “Here’s me saying it.”

He nods as if I’ve given him coordinates. “Noted.”

“Good.” I turn.

“Lena,” he says, and my name in his mouth makes me stop against my will. “You didn’t ask for my name.”

“I don’t need it.”

“You’ll want it later.”

I manage a laugh that sounds normal. “Confident.”

“Accurate.”

“I’m walking away now,” I announce, for myself.

“Be careful on the marble,” he says, like we’re already intimate, like he knows my bones.

I walk. Not fast enough to look scared, not slow enough to look stupid. In the glass of the elevator doors, I catch him behind me, reflected as if he’s a possibility instead of a person. He doesn’t follow. He only watches, hands in pockets, like patience is a thing he collects.

The doors open to an empty box of mirrors. I step in. My face looks like mine—competent, a little flushed. I hate that part of me, the part tuned to a frequency it shouldn’t hear, wants to write this off as nothing. Just a conversation. Just a man. Just a night.

The elevator hums up. The moment I hit my floor, I text Priya: In room. Alive. Storm dissipated.

She replies with three knife emojis and a GIF of a cat with a bazooka.

I lock the deadbolt, throw the latch, and set my glass down like I’m disarming something. The room smells like hotel soap and the faint ghost of whoever checked out hours ago. I lean against the door. My heartbeat is a moth in a jar.

I go to the window. Rain has turned the city into a million little mirrors. I rest my forehead against the glass and tell myself a story where I will never see him again.

I’m good at telling stories that get me through the night.

I shower too hot, scrub too hard, wash him out of my skin though he never touched me. I put on cotton things that make me feel unsexy and therefore secure. I sit on the edge of the bed and call my boyfriend, because that’s what people in love do. The call goes to voicemail. I leave something bright, something simple.

After I hang up, the room is louder with silence. I pull back the duvet and climb in, phone facedown, lamp dimmed to a halo. I close my eyes.

I see a black suit. A scar in a brow. A mouth that says careful like a caress.

When I finally sleep, it’s shallow and annoyed. I dream in gold ribs and mirrored bars, all the exits hidden behind velvet ropes.

✧ ✧ ✧

She says no like she’s rescuing herself. She doesn’t realize I’m the one who offered the rope.

Lena.

Names have edges. Hers is a clean one. It fits in my mouth and sits there like a secret pressed under my tongue.

I let her go upstairs without following because a man who can’t wait isn’t a man anyone should fear. But I’m not patient because I have to be. I’m patient because I like the way waiting sharpens my wanting.

At the mezzanine rail, I watch the lounge churn—badges and budgets, men who think I’m one of them, women who know I’m not. My phone buzzes once, a discrete tremor in my pocket.

“You’re late,” I tell the man who takes the space beside me without being seen. He wears his suit like a uniform because it is.

“Traffic,” he says.

“There are helicopters for that.”

“Not over this hotel.” A pause. “You want the car brought around?”

“Not yet.” I look at the elevator digits crawl up, then down. Somewhere between those numbers is a woman rinsing me down a drain. “We’ll give it a minute.”

He follows my gaze without lifting his head. Good training, better instinct. “You want me to pull her info?”

I smile, small enough to pass for polite if anyone is watching. “I already have it.”

“Sir.”

“Don’t say sir.” Old habits calcify. I allow it tonight. “There’s a conference registry. I could get everything I need with two calls and a coffee. But coffee is boring.”

“Understood.”

“She’s got a boyfriend,” I add, and watch the man try to figure out if I’m warning him or myself.

He waits, which is why he’s still breathing.

“Name?” I ask, because I said I wouldn’t give it, and now it amuses me to change my mind.

He clears his throat. “Mr. R—”

“Lower,” I say softly.

He adjusts his volume the way other men adjust their ties. “Roman.”

It ripples through me like heat uncurling from a match. Roman. People have been careful with it for a long time. A name that makes doors open and other doors lock.

Below, someone laughs too hard at a joke that didn’t earn it. Music sifts in, the hotel’s curated version of intimacy.

“Find out what room,” I say. “No phone calls. No records. We keep the water still.”

“Of course.”

“And,” I add, because it pleases me to be generous when I’m about to be cruel to someone else, “send flowers to 2318 tomorrow morning. White ones. Clean. No card.”

“Roses?”

“Too obvious. Gardenias.”

He grunts a quiet disagreement that he has the sense to swallow. “Yes, Roman.”

I lean on the rail. The elevator numbers descend. She’ll be asleep soon, telling herself she’s safe because sleep is a door you can close from the inside. Most people don’t know the hinges are on the wrong side.

My phone buzzes again. A different number. A different problem. I ignore it for three beats longer than I should, just to see if it will change without me. It doesn’t. They never do.

I answer, old business entering my voice like smoke under a door. “Talk.”

While I listen, I watch the mirrored bar hold its lies. I think about how she said my words like a dare. I think about how she walked away like it was a choice that would hold.

When the call ends, I tuck the phone away and look at the elevator again.

Lena.

I could have told her then. Given her what she pretends not to need. Names are doorways, yes. But they’re also keys. And I like the sound a lock makes when it turns in my hand.

“Car,” I say at last.

The man beside me murmurs into his sleeve and becomes motion. I wait a heartbeat longer, letting the room fold me back into its pattern. Then I turn away from the rail and walk toward the private exit that keeps me out of photographs and into other things.

Behind me, the bar keeps lying. Above me, rain needles the glass. Somewhere in the vertical distance, a woman sleeps with the latch thrown, and I let her, because velvet is softest right before it tightens.

Last Chapters

You Might Like 😍

After the Affair: Falling into a Billionaire's Arms

After the Affair: Falling into a Billionaire's Arms

1.1m Views · Ongoing · Louisa
From first crush to wedding vows, George Capulet and I had been inseparable. But in our seventh year of marriage, he began an affair with his secretary.

On my birthday, he took her on vacation. On our anniversary, he brought her to our home and made love to her in our bed...

Heartbroken, I tricked him into signing divorce papers.

George remained unconcerned, convinced I would never leave him.

His deceptions continued until the day the divorce was finalized. I threw the papers in his face: "George Capulet, from this moment on, get out of my life!"

Only then did panic flood his eyes as he begged me to stay.

When his calls bombarded my phone later that night, it wasn't me who answered, but my new boyfriend Julian.

"Don't you know," Julian chuckled into the receiver, "that a proper ex-boyfriend should be as quiet as the dead?"

George seethed through gritted teeth: "Put her on the phone!"

"I'm afraid that's impossible."

Julian dropped a gentle kiss on my sleeping form nestled against him. "She's exhausted. She just fell asleep."
Omega Bound

Omega Bound

1.1m Views · Completed · Veronica White
Ayla Frost is a beautiful, rare omega. Kidnapped, tortured, and trafficked to rogue clans and corrupt alphas to do with as they pleased.  Kept alive in her cage, broken and abandoned by her wolf, she becomes mute and has given up on hope for a better life until one explosion changes everything. 

Thane Knight is the alpha of the Midnight Pack of the La Plata Mountain Range, the largest wolf shifter pack in the world. He is an alpha by day and hunts the shifter trafficking ring with his group of mercenaries by night. His hunt for vengeance leads to one raid that changes his life. 

Tropes:
Touch her and die/Slow burn romance/Fated Mates/Found family twist/Close circle betrayal/Cinnamon roll for only her/Traumatized heroine/Rare wolf/Hidden powers/Knotting/Nesting/Heats/Luna/Attempted assassination
Falling for my boyfriend's Navy brother

Falling for my boyfriend's Navy brother

1.1m Views · Ongoing · Harper Rivers
Falling for my boyfriend's Navy brother.

"What is wrong with me?

Why does being near him make my skin feel too tight, like I’m wearing a sweater two sizes too small?

It’s just newness, I tell myself firmly.

He’s my boyfirend’s brother.

This is Tyler’s family.

I’m not going to let one cold stare undo that.

**

As a ballet dancer, My life looks perfect—scholarship, starring role, sweet boyfriend Tyler. Until Tyler shows his true colors and his older brother, Asher, comes home.

Asher is a Navy veteran with battle scars and zero patience. He calls me "princess" like it's an insult. I can't stand him.

When My ankle injury forces her to recover at the family lake house, I‘m stuck with both brothers. What starts as mutual hatred slowly turns into something forbidden.

I'm falling for my boyfriend's brother.

**

I hate girls like her.

Entitled.

Delicate.

And still—

Still.

The image of her standing in the doorway, clutching her cardigan tighter around her narrow shoulders, trying to smile through the awkwardness, won’t leave me.

Neither does the memory of Tyler. Leaving her here without a second thought.

I shouldn’t care.

I don’t care.

It’s not my problem if Tyler’s an idiot.

It’s not my business if some spoiled little princess has to walk home in the dark.

I’m not here to rescue anyone.

Especially not her.

Especially not someone like her.

She’s not my problem.

And I’ll make damn sure she never becomes one.

But when my eyes fell on her lips, I wanted her to be mine.
The Prison Project

The Prison Project

847.4k Views · Ongoing · Bethany Donaghy
The government's newest experiment in criminal rehabilitation - sending thousands of young women to live alongside some of the most dangerous men held behind bars...

Can love tame the untouchable? Or will it only fuel the fire and cause chaos amongst the inmates?

Fresh out of high school and suffocating in her dead-end hometown, Margot longs for her escape. Her reckless best friend, Cara, thinks she's found the perfect way out for them both - The Prisoner Project - a controversial program offering a life-changing sum of money in exchange for time spent with maximum-security inmates.

Without hesitation, Cara rushes to sign them up.

Their reward? A one-way ticket into the depths of a prison ruled by gang leaders, mob bosses, and men the guards wouldn't even dare to cross...

At the centre of it all, meets Coban Santorelli - a man colder than ice, darker than midnight, and as deadly as the fire that fuels his inner rage. He knows that the project may very well be his only ticket to freedom - his only ticket to revenge on the one who managed to lock him up and so he must prove that he can learn to love…

Will Margot be the lucky one chosen to help reform him?

Will Coban be capable of bringing something to the table other than just sex?

What starts off as denial may very well grow in to obsession which could then fester in to becoming true love…

A temperamental romance novel.
The mafia princess return

The mafia princess return

632.7k Views · Completed · Tonje Unosen
Talia have been living with her mother, stepsister and Stepfather for years. One day she finally get away from them. Suddenly she learn she have more family out there and she have many people that actually love her, something she have never felt before! At least not as she can remember. She have to learn to trust others, get her new brothers to accept her for who she is!
Alpha Nicholas's Little Mate

Alpha Nicholas's Little Mate

328.7k Views · Ongoing · Becky j
"Mate is here!"
What? No—wait… oh Moon Goddess, no.
Please tell me you're joking, Lex.
But she's not. I can feel her excitement bubbling under my skin, while all I feel is dread.
We turn the corner, and the scent hits me like a punch to the chest—cinnamon and something impossibly warm. My eyes scan the room until they land on him. Tall. Commanding. Beautiful.
And then, just as quickly… he sees me.
His expression twists.
"Fuck no."
He turns—and runs.
My mate sees me and runs.
Bonnie has spent her entire life being broken down and abused by the people closest to her including her very own twin sister. Alongside her best friend Lilly who also lives a life of hell, they plan to run away while attending the biggest ball of the year while it's being hosted by another pack, only things don't quite go to plan leaving both girls feeling lost and unsure about their futures.
Alpha Nicholas is 28, mateless, and has no plans to change that. It's his turn to host the annual Blue Moon Ball this year and the last thing he expects is to find his mate. What he expects even less is for his mate to be 10 years younger than him and how his body reacts to her. While he tries to refuse to acknowledge that he has met his mate his world is turned upside down after guards catch two she-wolves running through his lands.
Once they are brought to him he finds himself once again facing his mate and discovers that she's hiding secrets that will make him want to kill more than one person.
Can he overcome his feelings towards having a mate and one that is so much younger than him? Will his mate want him after already feeling the sting of his unofficial rejection? Can they both work on letting go of the past and moving forward together or will fate have different plans and keep them apart?
Surrendering to Destiny

Surrendering to Destiny

536.4k Views · Completed · Allison Franklin
Catherine is not only a rogue half-breed, she is also the result of mate-bond infidelity, was abandoned as a baby and, to top it off, she can only shift during the full moon. When Catherine left the only pack she'd ever known in order to escape the new alpha, the last thing she expected was to find her mate... let alone for him to be the mouth-watering, heavily tattooed, lead warrior of the most feared lycan pack on the continent.

Graham MacTavish wasn't prepared to find his mate in the small town of Sterling that borders the Blackmoore Packlands. He certainly didn't expect her to be a rogue, half-breed who smelled of Alpha blood. With her multi-colored eyes, there was no stopping him from falling hard the moment their mate bond snapped into place. He would do anything to claim her, protect her and cherish her no matter the cost.

From vengeful ex-lovers, pack politics, species prejudice, hidden plots, magic, kidnapping, poisoning, rogue attacks, and a mountain of secrets including Catherine's true parentage there is no shortage of things trying to tear the two apart.

Despite the hardships, a burning desire and willingness to trust will help forge a strong bond between the two... but no bond is unbreakable. When the secrets kept close to heart are slowly revealed, will the two be able to weather the storm? Or will the gift bestowed upon Catherine by the moon goddess be too insurmountable to overcome?
The Biker's Fate

The Biker's Fate

1.2m Views · Completed · Piper Davenport
"You are absolutely my fucking woman, Dani. Got me?"
I squeezed my eyes shut.
"Dani," he pressed. "Do you get me?"
"No, Austin, I don't," I admitted as I pulled my robe closed again and sat up. "You confuse me."
He dragged his hands down his face. "Tell me what's on your mind."
I sighed. "You're everything my parents warned me against. You're secretive, but you're also honest. I feel wholly protected by you, but then you scare me more than anyone I've ever known. You're a bad boy, but when I dated a so-called good one, he turned out to be the devil, so, yeah, I don't get you because you're not what I expected. You drive me crazier than anyone I've ever met, but then you make me feel complete. I'm feeling things I don't quite know how to process and that makes me want to run. I don't want to give up something that might be really, really good, but I also don't want to be stupid and fall for a boy just because he's super pretty and makes me come."
Danielle Harris is the daughter of an overprotective police chief and has led a sheltered life. As a kindergarten teacher, she's as far removed from the world of Harleys and bikers as you could get, but when she's rescued by the sexy and dangerous Austin Carver, her life is changed forever.
Although Austin 'Booker' Carver is enamored by the innocent Dani, he tries to keep the police chief's daughter at arm's length. But when a threat is made from an unexpected source, he finds himself falling hard and fast for the only woman who can tame his wild heart.
Will Booker be able to find the source of the threat before it's too late?
Will Dani finally give her heart to a man who's everything she's been warned about?
Invisible To Her Bully

Invisible To Her Bully

250.8k Views · Ongoing · sunsationaldee
Unlike her twin brother, Jackson, Jessa struggled with her weight and very few friends. Jackson was an athlete and the epitome of popularity, while Jessa felt invisible. Noah was the quintessential “It” guy at school—charismatic, well-liked, and undeniably handsome. To make matters worse, he was Jackson’s best friend and Jessa’s biggest bully. During their senior year, Jessa decides it was time for her to gain some self-confidence, find her true beauty and not be the invisible twin. As Jessa transformed, she begins to catch the eye of everyone around her, especially Noah. Noah, initially blinded by his perception of Jessa as merely Jackson’s sister, started to see her in a new light. How did she become the captivating woman invading his thoughts? When did she become the object of his fantasies? Join Jessa on her journey from being the class joke to a confident, desirable young woman, surprising even Noah as she reveals the incredible person she has always been inside.
The War God Alpha's Arranged Bride

The War God Alpha's Arranged Bride

483.4k Views · Ongoing · Riley Above Story
On the day Evelyn thought Liam would propose, he shocked her by getting down on one knee—for her stepsister, Samantha. As if that betrayal wasn’t enough, Evelyn learned the cruel truth: her parents had already decided to sell one daughter’s future to a dangerous man: the infamous War God Alpha Alexander, who was rumored to be scarred and crippled after a recent accident. And the bride could’t be their precious daughter Samantha. However, when the "ugly and crippled" Alpha revealed his true self—an impossibly handsome billionaire with no trace of injury—Samantha had a change of heart. She was ready to dump Liam and take Evelyn's place as the family daughter who should marry Alexander.
Yet Alexander made his decision clear to the world: “Evelyn is the only woman I will ever marry.”
The Pack: Rule Number 1 - No Mates

The Pack: Rule Number 1 - No Mates

1.8m Views · Ongoing · Jaylee
Soft hot lips find the shell of my ear and he whispers, "You think I don't want you?" He pushes his hips forward, grinding into the back of my ass and I groan. "Really?" He chuckles.

"Let me go," I whimper, my body trembling with need. "I don't want you touching me."

I fall forward onto the bed then turn around to stare at him. The dark tattoos of Domonic's chiseled shoulders, quiver and and expand with the heave of his chest. His deep dimpled smile is full of arrogance as he reaches behind himself to lock the door.

Biting his lip, he stalks toward me, his hand going to the seam of his pants and the thickening bulge there.

"Are you sure you don't want me to touch you?" He whispers, untying the knot and slipping a hand inside. "Because I swear to God, that is all I have been wanting to do. Every single day from the moment you stepped in our bar and I smelled your perfect flavor from across the room."


New to the world of shifters, Draven is human on the run. A beautiful girl who no one could protect. Domonic is the cold Alpha of the Red Wolf Pack. A brotherhood of twelve wolves that live by twelve rules. Rules which they vowed could NEVER be broken.

Especially - Rule Number One - No Mates

When Draven meets Domonic, he knows that she is his mate, but Draven has no idea what a mate is, only that she has fallen in love with a shifter. An Alpha that will break her heart to make her leave. Promising herself, she will never forgive him, she disappears.

But she doesn’t know about the child she’s carrying or that the moment she left, Domonic decided rules were made to be broken - and now will he ever find her again? Will she forgive him?
I Slapped My Fiancé—Then Married His Billionaire Nemesis

I Slapped My Fiancé—Then Married His Billionaire Nemesis

387.4k Views · Completed · Jessica C. Dolan
Being second best is practically in my DNA. My sister got the love, the attention, the spotlight. And now, even her damn fiancé.
Technically, Rhys Granger was my fiancé now—billionaire, devastatingly hot, and a walking Wall Street wet dream. My parents shoved me into the engagement after Catherine disappeared, and honestly? I didn’t mind. I’d crushed on Rhys for years. This was my chance, right? My turn to be the chosen one?
Wrong.
One night, he slapped me. Over a mug. A stupid, chipped, ugly mug my sister gave him years ago. That’s when it hit me—he didn’t love me. He didn’t even see me. I was just a warm-bodied placeholder for the woman he actually wanted. And apparently, I wasn’t even worth as much as a glorified coffee cup.
So I slapped him right back, dumped his ass, and prepared for disaster—my parents losing their minds, Rhys throwing a billionaire tantrum, his terrifying family plotting my untimely demise.
Obviously, I needed alcohol. A lot of alcohol.
Enter him.
Tall, dangerous, unfairly hot. The kind of man who makes you want to sin just by existing. I’d met him only once before, and that night, he just happened to be at the same bar as my drunk, self-pitying self. So I did the only logical thing: I dragged him into a hotel room and ripped off his clothes.
It was reckless. It was stupid. It was completely ill-advised.
But it was also: Best. Sex. Of. My. Life.
And, as it turned out, the best decision I’d ever made.
Because my one-night stand isn’t just some random guy. He’s richer than Rhys, more powerful than my entire family, and definitely more dangerous than I should be playing with.
And now, he’s not letting me go.