When 26-year-old card counter Riley Cooper celebrates clearing her crushing student debt at an upscale Vegas bar, she locks eyes with a stunning stranger across the room. Drawn to the woman's elegant confidence, Riley boldly approaches despite having her drink offer declined. Their charged conversation ends too soon, with neither making a move despite electric attraction crackling between them.
The next night, Riley can't resist one final game before retiring from counting cards forever. When the mysterious woman from the bar appears at her blackjack table and invites her upstairs, Riley thinks her luck is continuing.
Instead, she discovers the woman she's been fantasizing about is Victoria Sutherland, the 42-year-old owner of the very casino where Riley is counting cards.
Riley faces an face arrest or play one final game.
A private, winner-takes-all match of strip poker ensues, where the stakes aren't just her freedom... but possibly her heart.
Victoria has spent her life exceeding her family's expectations, sacrificing personal happiness to uphold the Sutherland legacy. Dating a card counter would destroy everything she's built. But as their paths continue crossing in Vegas's elite circles, both women must decide what they're willing to risk.
Victoria grapples with choosing between her family's approval and her first chance at real love, while Riley discovers that sometimes the biggest gamble is trusting someone with your heart.
In a city where the house always wins, betting on love might be their riskiest gamble yet.
A full-length steamy age-gap lesbian romance about high stakes, second chances, and playing for keeps.
4.5 stars. And now I’m back to having nothing to read by Carol Wyatt until her next release! This was really good and is also the longest book by Wyatt. I hope that this is a sign that we will be getting longer books from now own. On the flip side of that though, the only reason this didn’t get five stars is because I thought the ending section was a bit dry. I appreciate that there was no third act break up (and Wyatt is good for those) but the plot seemed to stall until the end for me.
I liked the characters a lot. Riley is a card counter to help pay off her student debts, Vanessa owns the hotel/casino that Riley visits. The spark between them was so good. The strip poker game? The way that they fought over who got to top in bed their first time? I thought I was going to combust! My goodness! I loved all of that so much and I can’t even explain why. Just know that I was swooning. The romance between them was great and I really did love them together and just how much Vanessa was willing to risk to be with Riley. The drama came from Vanessa’s mother who was so adamant about controlling her life so it was extremely satisfying watching her stand up to her.
Overall, this was great. Wyatt never disappoints me and I cannot wait for whatever she comes out with next.
From the Queen of Age gap romance comes this excellent story about societal disparity and unexpected connections. The chemistry between the characters is powerful, and they just can’t stop gravitating towards each other. Just the romantic story with enough spice to help the reader easily escape reality.
This was a quick read. Especially if you skip a lot of the sex scenes. Riley & Victoria shouldn’t have worked. Different backgrounds, Riley was a card counter Victoria owned a casino. But they worked.
Carol Wyatt really has a gift for writing wonderful stories with excellent character dialogue that generates a smooth reading flow. Recommend to those reading the reviews.
I’m a big fan of the longer reads CW, huge fan in fact. I doubt I’d have enjoyed the story if it was shorter and didn’t include the twists and turns, those things definitely made the story more interesting. Loved the characters and the journey both went on.
Had me in the first half, did not keep me in the second half. Decent writing and I felt I knew the characters but the romance just wasn't there for me. Also crazy take but way too many spicy scenes, found myself skipping many parts of the book because of this.