
[MATURE CONTENT WARNING!!! 18+ READERS ONLY!!!]
{Explicit s*x scenes, Abduction, Murder, Stalking, Assault, Physical violence, Torture or extreme brutality, s****l assault/r**e, Miscarriage, Alcoholism, l***q}
{This story explores themes that are intense and unsettling. If you're easily affected by heavy content, this book may not be for you.}
~
“Daddy—” I gasped as my ex-fiancé’s hot daddy slammed into me again, the heavy oak desk creaking beneath my back. “f**k…!”
His hand locked around my waist, holding me still while every deep thrust dragged another broken sound from my throat.
“Mhhpp…”
“You have any idea,” Horace growled against my ear, squeezing hard on my n*****s, “how hard it’s been pretending I don’t want you like this?”
I could barely think. His expensive watch dug against my skin. My dress was shoved up around my hips. And somewhere downstairs, his son was still calling me his fiancée.
Horace thrust deeper, making me feel every inch of him.
“Say my name,” he ordered, trailing kissed down my neck as his hot lips caught my n****e and sucked hard on it. “While I’m buried inside you.”
“Daddy…” I whimpered, arching my waist. “Yes. Daddy…mmmhhhp…”
~
I woke up with no memories… and my ex-fiance screaming at me from beside my hospital bed.
Apparently, I spent seven years chasing hockey superstar Zayden Wallace while he loved my sister the entire time.
Everyone says I’m manipulative. Crazy. Obsessed.
But when I’m kidnapped and left begging for help, my fiancé ignores me. My family abandons me.
Only one man come to my rescue.
Horace Wallace. Zayden’s father.
Cold billionaire.
The man I’m apparently supposed to hate.
But the way Horace Wallace looks at me doesn’t feel like hate.
It feels like he remembers nights my missing memory erased.
And maybe that’s why my thighs clench every time he gets too close. Why my body burns with filthy thoughts of his rough hands pinning me down, his deep voice in my ear, his expensive rings dragging across my skin while he tells me exactly who I belong to.
And the more my memories return, the more I realize something terrifying:
I may never have wanted the son at all.

