Alexa and her men Harley, Huxley (twins), Rogan, Quentin, Jett, Keaton, Delvin and Maverick's (adopted brothers) story was intense, a bit spicy and maybe a bit funny.
Alexa went to college her freshman year with Harley and Huxley, twins who all thought they were playboys. Alexa is a smart journalist who was working independently but was actually considering going to work at a company soon. The twins were part owners of a conglomerate company that housed different companies they and their brothers all ran. Their lead anchor just got fired so they wanted Alexa. She did not like the twins when she knew them years ago and had no intention of working for them, even if their offer exceeded her expectations. How they get her to agree to the deal took a lot of teamwork.
There is a deal their father made prior to the birth of his twins said that Harley needed to be married to pay it off in full and the wife retained half of the company. Dante inherited the debt as did Harley from their fathers. Dante and Harley's father said Malia, Dante's "like" sister, would be his bride in an arranged marriage. Harley wasn't in agreement with this and needed to find a way out of it since he did not like Malia and she had nefarious intentions towards him, his family and company. It was down to the wire and the plan was in place. This was the doing of Alexa to get them out of this. Her and Sadie (Dante's wife) worked together on this.
This read weird to me with the whole inherited debt. I didn't see how the father could have been so OK with it all and so agreeable when his 8 sons were so miserable. Malia was awful, Sadie was amazingly helpful with all of this and the dad was happy. The dynamic was not fully developed in this. With so many involved no relationships were established on page for it to really have meaning. Basically they worked together and then bam--they were doing it; even with Harley and Huxley knowing her in college and spending a tad bit more time with her. I thought it was OK but really wished for it to be longer for the development of the character dynamic which would have given the spice more meaning.