“Hello,” he says, wiggling his fingers like he is trying to coax a dog out from under a bed. “Beautiful young woman wants sex. Wake up.”
I stare at him, half in horror, half ready to die of laughter.
He squints down at himself, waits a beat, then shrugs. “Nope. Didn’t work,” he says cheerfully, pulling the blanket back over his lap.
I groan, burying my face in my hands. “You’re acting like an idiot,” I mutter. “Of course talking to it won’t work.”
Zain snickers and leans closer like he is sharing a great secret. “I can take it out, play with it, and give it a little treat. Tell it ‘good boy’ if you think that would help?”
At twenty-five, Scarlet never imagined she would still be a virgin, and when she finally takes that step, she finds her boyfriend with another woman. Feeling like nothing is going to work, she turns to her gay best friend and asks him to take her virginity.
Zain's response is to laugh, say no, remind her he's gay and offer his cock a treat if it wakes up for her while laughing and looking at her like she's crazy.
Only Liam, Zain's boyfriend, comes home and tells Zain he will agree, because he knows how much Scarlet has done for Zain, and this is something Zain can give her.
Zain agrees, and is shocked when he manages to do it, raising questions about his sexuality, and someone catches feelings, and jealousy isn't a good thing for them.
Indie author of Hot Fiction. Billiejo Priestley was born in 1987 in Leeds, she currently still lives in Leeds, UK and is a mum.
She focuses primarily on writing and publishing work than other career aspects. Billiejo writes books that are often taboo, dark and forbidden romance varieties.
Subjects that many steer away from through fear of others views. Her books are not for the faint of heart. Most feature aspects of BDSM, Polyamory, and often life issues, including mental health, addiction and abuse.
She writes things that can be seen as triggers, but her books also give lessons, teach people the signs of bad relationships. Reading is something that should broaden our horizons and open our minds.
Reading was never intended to easy, straightforward and reflect our own lives. Reading was intended to teach us things. Show us an insight into others lives, even if fictional, so when the day comes, we meet someone like the characters, we can relate. This is why many of Billiejo’s book features taboo subjects.
I loved the book it was amazing plot was good the spice was a 5 but I couldn't give that last star because she never admitted to her feelings and they had made boundaries for her not to cross in the relationship....but they didn't have any even towards the end it still felt like they were in a relationship and she was the 3rd wheel