
One Forbidden Night: The Billionaire's Obsession
Warning: R18+
His pierced cock thrust deep, the metal barbell dragging along my G-spot with every relentless stroke, sending shockwaves that made me scream his name. I came again hard, squirting around him while he growled "mine" and filled me bare, hot pulses claiming every inch inside me.
Thirty minutes earlier I'd been drowning in heartbreak and gin at a Mayfair club.
Now I was unraveling in a billionaire's penthouse, owned by a stranger whose name I still didn't know.
One forbidden night.
No names. No promises.
Or so I thought.
One reckless night with a stranger ignites a billionaire's obsession.
Elara thought it was over at dawn.
Damian Blackwood doesn't let go.
When her world crumbles, he offers salvation-with strings: Become his contract wife.
One forbidden night becomes a lifetime of possession...
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Chapter 3
Elara
The alarm on my phone screamed at 7:15 a.m., but I was already awake-had been for hours. My body felt like it had been through a war: thighs sore, inner muscles aching in the best-worst way, faint bruises blooming on my hips where his fingers had dug in. Every time I shifted on the thin mattress of my Hackney flatshare, I felt the ghost of him-thick, pierced, relentless-stretching me open, dragging that metal barbell along places I didn't even know could feel like that.
I hadn't showered yet. Part of me wanted to keep his scent on my skin a little longer, like a secret I wasn't ready to wash away. The other part hated how much I craved it.
I rolled over, grabbed my phone from the nightstand. Three notifications.
One from my mum: Call me when you're up, love. Worried about the job thing.
One from my ex-best-friend (now ex-roommate's ally): We need to talk.
And one from Unknown Number, timestamped 3:42 a.m.
My thumb hovered. Heart already racing.
I opened it.
You forgot your earring. Or was that intentional? Either way... I'll return it. Personally.
A single photo attached.
It was my silver hoop-the one I'd worn last night, the one I'd noticed missing when I got home. The photo showed it resting on what looked like black marble, next to a tumbler of amber liquid. His hand was in the frame-large, strong, veins standing out-holding the earring between thumb and forefinger like a trophy.
My stomach flipped. Heat pooled low despite myself.
How had he gotten my number?
I sat up fast, sheets tangling around my legs. The flat was quiet-my roommate (the one who'd fucked my ex) was still asleep in the next room. I didn't want to face her yet. Didn't want to face anything.
I typed back before I could stop myself.
Keep it. I don't want it back.
Sent.
Dots appeared immediately. He was awake. Or he'd been waiting.
Too late, sweetheart. It's already on its way.
I stared at the screen. Sweetheart. The word hit the same way it had last night-low, possessive, almost tender. My thighs clenched involuntarily.
I threw the phone down like it burned me. Stood. Paced the tiny bedroom. Rain tapped against the window, grey London morning light filtering through cheap curtains. I caught my reflection in the mirror on the wardrobe door: hair wild, lips still swollen, a dark hickey blooming just below my collarbone. His mark.
Fuck.
I needed coffee. Needed to think.
I pulled on leggings and an oversized hoodie, slipped into the kitchen. The flat smelled like burnt toast and last night's regret. I flicked the kettle on, tried to breathe.
My phone buzzed again.
Doorbell in 10 minutes. Don't ignore it.
I froze.
Ten minutes.
I glanced at the clock. 7:38. My heart slammed so hard I could feel it in my throat.
I shouldn't open the door. Should pretend I wasn't home. Should block the number and delete every memory of last night.
But my feet carried me to the window overlooking the street. A sleek black car idled at the curb-nothing flashy, but expensive enough to stand out in Hackney. Tinted windows. No driver visible.
The buzzer rang at exactly 7:48.
I jumped.
Three short presses. Polite. Insistent.
I pressed the intercom. "Who is it?"
A pause. Then a voice-deep, familiar, amused. "Delivery for Elara Thompson."
My mouth went dry. It was him. Or someone he'd sent.
"I didn't order anything."
"Consider it a gift."
I should have said no. Should have told him to fuck off.
Instead, I buzzed him up.
The lift was slow. My pulse thundered louder with every floor. When the door opened, he filled the hallway-tall, broad, charcoal coat over a dark shirt, hair still perfectly tousled like last night hadn't touched him.
But his eyes... they were different. Hungrier. Darker.
He held out a small black velvet box. "Your earring."
I didn't take it. "How did you find me?"
A slow smile curved his lips. "I have ways."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only one you're getting right now."
He stepped closer. The hallway smelled of rain and him-sandalwood, smoke, sex. My body reacted before my brain could catch up: nipples tightening, core clenching around nothing.
He noticed. Of course he did.
His gaze dropped to my neck-to the hickey he'd left. "Looks good on you."
Heat flooded my face. "You can't just show up here."
"I can. And I did." He lifted the box again. "Take it."
I snatched it, fingers brushing his. Electric.
Inside: my earring, nestled on black satin. And beneath it, a small folded card.
I unfolded it.
Tonight. 8 p.m. Blackwood Tower. Penthouse. Wear the dress.
No signature. Just those words.
I looked up. "I'm not coming."
His smile turned wicked. "You will."
"Why would I?"
"Because your body already knows the answer." He leaned in, voice dropping to a whisper that brushed my ear. "You're still wet thinking about it. I can smell it."
I stepped back, slamming into the doorframe. "Get out."
He didn't move. Just watched me with that predatory patience. "I own the agency you worked for, Elara. The one that let you go last week. Budget cuts? My call."
My blood ran cold. "You're lying."
"I don't lie." He straightened. "I also own three others in Shoreditch. I can have you rehired by Monday. Better salary. Better projects. Or I can make sure no one in this city touches your CV for a year."
My hands shook. "That's blackmail."
"Call it incentive."
He turned to leave. Paused at the lift. Looked back.
"Eight o'clock. Don't be late."
The doors closed.
I slid down the wall, knees weak.
The velvet box burned in my hand.
I opened it again. Tucked inside the card was a second item: a thin black silk blindfold, embroidered with silver thread.
My breath hitched.
I should throw it away. Should block him. Should run.
But my fingers traced the silk. Soft. Sinful.
And deep inside, the ache between my legs pulsed in time with my heartbeat.
I closed the box.
Looked at the clock.
Seven hours until eight.
I had no idea what I was going to do.
But I knew one thing.
This wasn't over.The velvet box sat on my kitchen counter like a live grenade.
I hadn't opened it again since he left. Hadn't touched it. But I couldn't stop staring.
The flat felt smaller now-walls pressing in, air thick with the scent of rain and leftover takeaway. My roommate's door was still closed; she hadn't stirred. Good. I didn't have the energy for confrontation. Not when my body was still screaming reminders of last night: the deep ache between my legs, the faint throb where his piercing had dragged inside me, the bruises on my hips shaped like his fingerprints.
I poured coffee with shaking hands. Black. No sugar. The bitterness matched the knot in my stomach.
My phone buzzed again.
Unknown Number.
I almost didn't look.
But I did.
Change of plans, sweetheart. 7 p.m. instead of 8. Car will be outside in 45 minutes. Don't make me come up again.
Attached: a photo.
Not my earring this time.
A candid shot of me-taken last night, in his penthouse. I was asleep, face turned toward the camera, lips parted, hair spilling across the pillow. One breast was half-exposed where the sheet had slipped, nipple still reddened from his mouth. His arm was visible in the frame-possessively draped over my waist, hand splayed across my stomach like he was claiming territory even in sleep.
My coffee mug slipped. Shattered on the tile.
How long had he watched me? How many photos did he take?
My breath came in short, panicked bursts.
I typed back, fingers flying.
Delete that. Now.
His reply was instant.
Too late. It's my favorite one.
Then another message.
The car is black Mercedes. License plate ends in 777. Driver won't speak. Just get in. Or I start sending these to people who know you. Starting with your ex.
My vision tunneled.
He had my ex's contact? How?
No. He was bluffing. He had to be.
But the photo... that wasn't a bluff. That was real. Intimate. Invasive.
I paced the tiny kitchen, bare feet sticking to spilled coffee. The clock on the microwave read 6:12 p.m. Forty-eight minutes.
I could run. Pack a bag. Crash at my mum's in the suburbs. Block him. Change my number. Disappear.
But my laptop sat open on the table-LinkedIn still showing my profile, the one he'd clearly seen. My CV. My references. My entire fragile career hanging by a thread he could snap with one call.
And deeper, buried under the fear, something darker stirred.
The memory of his voice: "Don't worry, sweetheart. It will fit."
The way he'd stretched me, filled me, made me come so hard I saw stars.
The blindfold in the box-silk, soft, promising things I shouldn't want.
I opened the velvet box again.
The blindfold lay there, folded neatly. Underneath it, a small key fob-black, sleek, engraved with a single initial: D.
And a note, handwritten in sharp, slanted script:
Wear nothing under the dress. Nothing at all.
If you're not in the car by 7 sharp, the next photo goes to your mother.
My knees buckled. I gripped the counter.
He knew my mother's number? Or was he guessing? Bluffing again?
Did it matter?
I looked at the clock: 6:18.
Forty-two minutes.
My hands moved before my mind caught up. I went to my wardrobe. Pulled out the black dress-the same one from last night. Slipped it on. No bra. No panties. Just the thin fabric against my skin, nipples hardening instantly at the friction.
I stared at my reflection.
Marked. Claimed. Terrified.
And wet.
God help me, I was wet.
I slipped the blindfold into my clutch. Grabbed my keys. My phone.
The buzzer rang at 6:58.
I pressed the intercom with numb fingers.
"Miss Thompson?" The driver's voice-neutral, professional. "The car is waiting."
I didn't answer.
I just walked out the door.
Down the stairs. Through the lobby. Into the rain.
The black Mercedes idled at the curb, rear door already open.
I slid inside.
The leather was warm. The partition was up. No driver visible-just the faint scent of sandalwood and smoke.
The door closed with a soft, final click.
The car pulled away smoothly.
I stared at my reflection in the tinted window-rain-streaked, distorted, unrecognizable.
My phone buzzed one last time.
Good girl.
Attached: another photo.
This one live-taken seconds ago, from inside the car.
Me, sitting in the back seat, dress riding up my thighs, eyes wide, lips parted.
He was watching.
Right now.
Wherever he was.
My breath fogged the glass.
The car accelerated toward central London.
Toward Blackwood Tower.
Toward him.
And I knew-deep in my bones, in the traitorous pulse between my legs-that whatever happened tonight, there would be no walking away this time.
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7.7
In their first year of marriage, Melinda's husband never shared her bed, and the loneliness became a craving.
She understood why after catching him kissing her sister-she was just a stand-in.
When that restless craving finally sharpened into an ailment, she went to the hospital and met a doctor whose steady hands almost unraveled her.
The next day, he showed up as the company's new CEO and made her his assistant.
"Sir, I have a husband. Stop hitting on me." She had tried to resist, but eventually, she still became his girlfriend.
Her ex begged tearfully, "Melinda, let's start over. Don't leave me."
Melinda huffed, "Sorry. I'm not interested in a man who couldn't perform in bed."

7.4
Two days before her wedding, Serena Vale thinks she has everything. Love. Stability. A new job. A perfect future. That is until she finds out her fiancé has been cheating on her and is unapologetic about it.
Broken-hearted, she leaves alone for what was supposed to be their honeymoon where she runs into two powerful billionaires.
Rafael and Nikolai are supposed to be rivals, but little does the world know that they share a lot of interests, including the same woman.
They both want her. They both claim her. And neither of them wants to let her go.

7.8
Amara Daniels doesn't believe in destiny or happy endings; having survived from the dark shadows of her past, her life no longer has room for mistakes or attractive billionaires like Ethan Cole.
Ethan enters her life with his charming persistence, and she becomes worried after he meets her four-year-old son, her past that she has carefully buried.
He is her dangerous distraction.
But their chemistry conceals shocking secrets and connecting fates - that might either bring them together or set them apart forever. In a game where hearts and careers collide, can she have it all or will passion cost her everything?

7.0
I was the Stanton family heiress, engaged to the President's son to secure a vital military alliance.
But he cornered me in the White House sitting room, slamming a thick manila folder onto the marble table.
"I said, sign the annulment agreement, Hester."
He looked at me like I was dirt, demanding I step aside so he could be with a manipulative intern named Tricia.
In my past life, I was a naive lamb. I cried and begged him not to end it. My devotion was rewarded with absolute cruelty. He ordered my bones broken and my reputation completely shredded. My trusted assistant forced poison down my throat, and I was left to die with a rope burning my neck.
Until my last breath, I didn't understand. I had done everything perfectly for the family. Why did my unwavering loyalty only bring me a gruesome death? Why did the monsters who tortured me get to live happily in the highest seats of power?
Opening my eyes again, the suffocating terror of the noose suddenly washed away. I was sixteen again, staring at the exact same annulment papers.
"Hester, please. Just let us be happy," Tricia whimpered, reaching out her trembling hand.
This time, I didn't cry. I picked up the solid gold fountain pen, stabbed it violently through the center of the contract, and prepared to drag the entire First Family straight to hell.

8.1
My billionaire husband, Cooper, was thirty minutes late to my father's funeral.
When the heavy cathedral doors finally opened, he wasn't there to comfort me. He was tightly shielding his mistress, Celeste, under his umbrella, treating her like a fragile lily while I stood alone in my black mourning dress.
The whispers in the pews were deafening, but they were nothing compared to the truth I soon uncovered.
Cooper hadn't just humiliated me—he had secretly taken my father's life-saving spot in a medical clinical trial and given it to Celeste's family. My father died gasping for air because of him.
Days later, while I was shivering in the ER with a 103-degree fever, I saw Cooper sneaking into the VIP maternity ward. He was holding Celeste, his face glowing with the ecstatic joy of a man about to become a father.
For three years, I swallowed my pride to be his perfect, obedient wife, only to let his elite friends openly mock me to my face.
"You were just keeping the seat warm until the real queen came back."
He let my father die, hid all our marital assets in offshore trusts, and made me take birth control every single morning, claiming he wasn't ready for kids.
I didn't scream, and I didn't let him see me break.
Instead, I hired Manhattan's most ruthless divorce lawyer, smiled sweetly as I handed Cooper his coat at home, and began secretly gathering the evidence to burn his entire empire to the ground.

9.1
Jessie Compton harbored a lethal, burning secret in her veins, forcing her to live as a ghost on the fringes of society.
When her volatile blood spiked to a boiling point, she fled into the woods and stumbled upon a dying billionaire, his veins turned to ice by a synthetic toxin.
To stop herself from literally combusting, she made a desperate gamble: she cut their wrists and mixed her fire-blood with his poisoned ice.
The insane transaction saved them both, but it unleashed an absolute nightmare.
Bryce Hogan woke up completely cured, but violently obsessed with the anomaly that had invaded his system.
He deployed a private army, thermal drones, and limitless wealth to hunt her down.
He tracked her across state lines, shattered her carefully built new identity, and cornered her in an underground Las Vegas black market.
"Find her! I want her found!"
His men ruthlessly closed in, leaving her battered, bleeding, and with a cracked rib as she barely escaped his terrifying pursuit.
With only three vials of inhibitor left to keep her body from catching fire, Jessie was exhausted and desperate.
She couldn't understand why the man she had saved was hunting her with such a predatory, suffocating intensity.
What exactly had her blood awakened in him, and why did he look at her with a chilling mix of absolute terror and dark obsession?
Sitting on a midnight bus heading into the desert, Jessie tightened her grip on her tactical knife.
She was finally out of places to hide, which meant the billionaire was about to find out exactly how dangerous a cornered ghost could be.