Genre: Contemporary
Romance / Romantic Suspense
Release Date: February 16, 2014
Synopsis
I have lied.
I have cheated.
I have given my body and my life to the man who destroyed my
family and left me for dead.
I have killed, I have sinned, and worst of all, I have enjoyed
the misery of others.
I have licked the salty tears of a father mourning his firstborn
son, and nothing has ever tasted so sweet.
I have died, and I have been resurrected, a phoenix from the
ashes.
I know I’m going to hell. I’ll burn in the fiery pits alongside
Dornan and his sons for the things I’ve done, and for the things I’m about to
do.
But I don’t care. It will be worth every lick of the devils
flames on my guilty flesh to destroy Dornan Ross.
One down, six to go.
Prologue
Some people would call me a whore. A girl who
sold her soul to the devil. Who let him inside her, with no remorse. Who danced
with the monster who destroyed everything.
To those people, I say only this: I didn’t
have to sell Dornan Ross my soul. He already owned it. And once I’ve killed
him, maybe I can get it back.
When I think about life before Juliette
Portland supposedly died, I think of the midday sun, and the way it caught the
water, making a million tiny diamonds glisten in the Venice Beach waves. I
think of laughter and first kisses, of ice cream, stolen beer, and Ferris
wheels.
I think of how much I loved Jason Ross, and
how valiantly he fought to protect me when the rest of his family were beating
and fucking me to within an inch of my life.
I think about my father, and how whenever he
was near, I felt safe, no matter what.
I think about my mother, and how indifferent
she was to my existence, to the point where my father was going to take me away
from everything, including her, so that we could have a life free of the
constant danger that a club like the Gypsy Brothers meant.
I think of how, if he had succeeded, what a
wonderful life that would have been.
It’s true what they say—keep your friends
close and your enemies closer. Only, they forgot to add: Don’t keep your
enemies so close that they can strike without warning. That was my father’s
mistake. That was our fatal undoing.
When I was planning my revenge, I vowed not
to make the same mistakes he did. Allowing the enemy too close—Dornan was VP of
the club, my father had been the President, but he had been quickly losing
control as Dornan and his sons outnumbered him.
I vowed not to make the same mistakes my
father did. But here, now, laying pinned beneath Dornan as he fills me with his
rage and grief, his eldest son dead by my hand and the funeral in just a few
hours, I have to wonder if I’m heading down the exact path that led to our
destruction all those years ago.
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