Kennedy Neil is a cop who hates rules. A detective with the N.Y.P.D, she has few inhibitions, and flaunts her beauty and sexuality, using it to distract and befuddle suspects and police alike. She’s a wild child who can’t be tamed - but who wants to be. And that is her ultimate secret. For as tough and independent minded as she is in life she’s a sexual submissive whose passion is being utterly dominated, bound, brought to heel and used as thoroughly as possible. Kennedy’s adventurous lifestyle takes a turn for the darker side when she meets a handsome and wealthy man in a club who knows just how rough she likes it. But then the roof falls in on them, literally, as they make love in the back room of the club, and Kennedy is drafted into the anti-terrorism squad to find the men responsible. She needs to use her skills to find the terrorists before they strike again, and to keep the identity of her mysterious new beau a secret. To make matters even more complex the FBI agent assigned is an old lover who wants to put a leash on her, perhaps quite Graphic sex and sexuality
JJ Argus started writing erotica in the 1980s working for Star Distributing, a New York publisher. He wrote 3 books a month until Star went under with the advent of the internet. He has also been published by Beeline and Beaver books, and sold short stories to Penthouse, Oui, Nugget, and numerous others. In the 1990s he began writing for British publishing houses, which required a decidedly higher level of quality and a lower level of obscenities. He has been published repeatedly by Olympia, Silver Moon, Chimera, and Virgin - Nexus. He has written and sold over 250 novels, most of which are now available in electronic format.
Thematically this could be the continuation of Dark Obsession, a book I loved and have read a number of times. In this book Argus is his normal nasty self, with crude rough and hot sex, but there also a good story developing. Unfortunately the story and sex doesn't blend that well as well as in Dark Obsession, which creates a disconnect in the flow of the book that keeps this from being a truly great book.