Haley can have any guy on campus, but all her dates seek only to get inside her pants. She wants more. She wants a man who is her friend, who she can respect, who she has passion for, who she can trust. She wants love.
Quinn has been her friend since forever, always there for her, but he doesn't believe he can be anything else for her, not her boyfriend and certainly not the love of her life.
When Haley takes Quinn for granted one time too many, it sets their relationship on an entirely new course. In exchange for his help, he demands a weekend with her serving as his naked slave girl. Turns out that they are each exactly what the other needs. The only question is whether each of them can overcome their own hangups in time to see it.
Such a lovely gem this is. Anybody interested in CMNF in a relation, who loves the psychology and not the whip / SM type humiliation. Fact is that some young women simply love to be told to be naked , within a safe setting. Some men are learning to make the commands. The characters explore pretty much all boundaries and trust remains the main word. Starting with strict CMNF, some built up drama and suspence, and then even more steamy CMNF. A good 260 pages, much longer than most kindle books in this genre, and an author who enjoys setting up a story. "Meet me out front in an hour." "Uh ... undressed?" "No, silly. Wear a coat, a short one that shows off your legs. And those boots."
This steamy, erotic romance is the story of Haley, a cheerleader, and Quinn, a football player. It’s been going on for years, Haley taking advantage of Quinn’s intense crush on her while she feels only friendship, not a mutual attraction. That changes over an erotic weekend they spent together, her completely naked due to a spur-of-the-moment bargain to retain his help with a physics assignment. One thing leads to another with Haley getting totally aroused. A plot shift then has Haley trying to get Quinn hooked up with someone who would love him as he deserves. Fortunately for both of them, the plan backfires, and they finally get together in the end.
I liked this a little less than “The Shame Gambit,” mainly because the main character here is such a terrible person. But I do loved the two alternative first-person narratives, that’s a format I’d like to read more often.