He controls the rules. She was never meant to break them.
Delilah wasn’t looking to be claimed. But when she wakes in a house with no doors, no clocks, and no name for the man who watches her, the only thing more terrifying than her captivity is how quickly she begins to submit to it.
He doesn't touch her. Not at first. He studies her. Corrects her. Rewrites her in silence and sweetness.
Rhett doesn’t ask for obedience. He creates it. Through routine. Through isolation. Through rituals that make her question where fear ends and desire begins.
As the days blur into discipline, Delilah’s resistance turns to ritual, her name slips from memory, and she begins to crave the very structure meant to break her.
But obedience always has a cost.
Sugar Cage is a dark psychological romance for readers who crave slow-burn control, emotional intensity, and power dynamics that blur the line between domination and devotion.
⚠️ Contains mature themes, mind games, and consensual non-consent fantasy elements. Not intended for all readers.
What an unusual book! I’d say it’s hard to believe but this book is only for a very specific niche audience. And likely even less people want to admit they’ve read it.
First, some facts about the book: -No idea where I found this ebook -this is NOT a romance, not even a dark one. There is no romance in this book no matter how you stretch it. -For being such a kinky book, there is practically zero sex. -This book has a “split” format which some readers (myself included) do not enjoy. It changes protagonists and focus midway through the book. I wasn’t as invested in the second half and would’ve rather stayed focused on original characters.
I would not say that I enjoyed this book. It kept teasing that there was going to be some kind of reveal or something. The issue is there’s no character motivations in the book. There’s no payoff for the “system” and that’s what I kept reading to find out.
I was bewildered while reading it, turned off by the repetitious words and thoughts and lack of why for anything that happens. It had some clever philosophies hidden within and a great premise, it just didn’t work overall for me.