
Tempted By My Father's Best Friend
Running from her father's rejection, Isabella arrives in London determined to start over, only to walk straight into temptation and danger. Her obsessive ex is waiting at the airport. And the stranger from her one reckless, unforgettable night in New York is now her new billionaire boss.
*************
"Hello, Isabella." Mateo Rossi's voice is low, smooth, and dangerously familiar, sending heat curling through her before she can stop it.
She freezes. He leans back, eyes dark and unreadable, lingering on her just a little too long.
"I never knew Nathan had a daughter like you," he says softly. "All grown up." Relief floods her.
He doesn't recognize her. Not the girl from that night. Not the one who lost control in his arms. Or he does, and he is choosing to pretend. Because Mateo watches her like she belongs to him. He tests her, corners her, pushes her past every limit she thought she had. Doors close.
Tempers snap. Boundaries blur. And Isabella realizes something far more dangerous than her past catching up to her. London was never her escape. It is his world. And this time, Mateo Rossi has no intention of letting her walk away.
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Chapter 1
**Isabella's POV**
I stepped off the plane in New York last night, jet-lagged and hollow, but I still couldn't bring myself to face my father. Not yet. Not when I had nothing to show for the last four years except a useless degree, an empty bank account, and the ghost of a boyfriend who vanished the moment I stopped being convenient.
Ethan had controlled everything...my schedule, my friends, my dreams. He made sure I never worked, never partied, never even breathed without his permission. Then one afternoon I came home from lectures to an empty apartment. His clothes, his cologne, his half-hearted promises-all gone. Just like that.
And my father? Nathan Hartley had made it crystal clear over the phone months ago:
"You're not a child anymore, Isabella. I'm done carrying you."
"Haven't you taken enough from my life already?"
Those words still burned behind my eyes every time I closed them.
I checked into a cheap midtown hotel because I had nowhere else to go. The plan was simple: hide for one night, gather whatever courage I had left, then show up at Dad's apartment tomorrow and beg for a temporary roof. One month. That's all I needed to find a job, rent something small, and start pretending I had my life together.
I wanted to be a nurse. I'd trained for it in Berlin! long hours, blood, compassion, decent pay in a country where medical bills could bankrupt you overnight. One ambulance ride here could cost a thousand dollars. I'd rather limp down the street bleeding than owe that kind of money.
I laughed bitterly at myself in the dark hotel room, then rolled out of bed. Sleep wasn't coming. I needed air. I needed something to quiet the noise in my head.
I slipped into the only dress I still liked-a deep burgundy number that clung in all the right places and flowed loose at the hem. Not expensive, not designer, but it made me feel like I still had some power over how the world saw me. I twisted my hair into a messy knot, grabbed my phone, my purse (the one I was half-tempted to pawn), and walked out.
Three blocks later I spotted the neon glow of a lounge tucked between two high-rises. The sign read "Velvet Room." Looked upscale enough to be intimidating, quiet enough to feel dangerous. I had seventy-five dollars in cash. Fifteen on a drink, save the rest for the bus to Dad's tomorrow. Sounded reasonable.
I pushed through the heavy door.
The bass hit me first, low and throbbing. Dim amber lights, leather booths, the scent of expensive whiskey and expensive cologne. Heads turned; some curious, some predatory. My stomach twisted, but I forced my chin up and walked straight to the bar.
The bartender was tall, tattooed forearms, easy smile and looked me over as I slid onto the stool.
"You look young," he said, voice warm but cautious.
I rolled my eyes, pulled out my ID, and slid it across the polished wood. "Twenty-four. Don't make me feel like a kid again."
He chuckled, checked it, then handed it back. "Seth. Nice to meet you, Isabella."
I blinked. "You read fast."
"Practice." He leaned on the bar. "What are you drinking tonight?"
I opened my mouth to ask for something cheap when a deep, accented voice cut through the music from behind me.
"Give her a Black Russian."
My spine stiffened. I didn't turn right away. I felt him before I saw him-the shift in the air, the way Seth's easy smile tightened into something guarded.
Then he was there.
Tall. Broad shoulders filling out a charcoal Armani blazer like it had been tailored directly onto his body. Dark hair slightly tousled, silver threading at the temples. A jaw carved from stone. Tattoos peeking from the open collar of his black shirt-intricate lines curling around his neck like secrets. A Blancpain watch on his wrist that probably cost more than my entire existence.
He caught me staring at it.
"Blancpain," he said simply, voice low and rough with a rich, rolling accent-Mexican edged with something darker, something Italian. "You like it?"
I swallowed. "It's... nice."
He smirked. The kind of smirk that said he knew exactly what effect he was having.
"I'm Mateo," he said, sliding onto the stool beside me without asking. "And you're not the usual crowd here, Amore."
The endearment hit like a spark. I should've told him to back off. I should've walked out. Instead I met his eyes-dark brown, almost black, intense enough to make my thighs clench.
"Isabella," I answered, voice steadier than I felt. "And I'm just passing through."
Seth placed the Black Russian in front of me. I stared at the dark liquid like it might bite. Mateo lifted his own glass-whiskey, neat-and clinked it lightly against mine.
"To passing through," he murmured.
I took a sip. Coffee, vodka, rich and smooth. Heat bloomed in my chest. I liked it more than I should.
We talked. Or rather-he talked and I answered in short, breathless sentences. He asked why I was in New York. I told him the truth, stripped bare: fresh out of university, ex disappeared, father probably wished I'd stayed gone. He listened without pity, without judgment. Just watched me with those predator eyes.
The second drink came. Then the third.
His hand brushed mine, deliberate. Electricity shot up my arm. I didn't pull away.
"You don't seem scared of me," he said quietly, leaning closer. His cologne wrapped around me...dark musk, leather, sin. Sweet sin.
"Should I be?" I whispered back.
His thumb grazed my lower lip. Slow. Possessive. "Maybe." he replied.
My breath caught. My body answered before my brain could catch up. I leaned in. He smelled like danger and expensive decisions.
"You're shaking," he noted, voice velvet.
"I'm not scared," I lied.
He smiled-slow, filthy. "Good."
The fourth drink blurred the edges. His hand slid to the small of my back, guiding me off the stool like I weighed nothing. I followed him through the crowd, pulse hammering in my throat.
Outside, a black SUV waited. Tinted windows. Driver didn't even glance back.
He took me to a penthouse. Floor-to-ceiling glass. City lights glittering like fallen stars. I barely registered the view before his mouth was on mine-hard, claiming, tasting of whiskey and control.
Clothes disappeared in a frantic rush. My dress pooled at my feet. His shirt followed. Tattoos everywhere-beautiful, violent art across his chest, arms, ribs. I traced them with trembling fingers.
He lifted me like I was weightless, carried me to a bedroom that smelled like him. Laid me on silk sheets. Looked down at me with something feral and reverent at the same time.
"Look at me, Isabella," he ordered, voice gravel.
I obeyed.
He stripped the last of his clothes. Thick, hard, intimidating. My mouth went dry.
He settled between my thighs, notched himself at my entrance, and pushed in-slow at first, letting me feel every inch. I gasped, nails digging into his shoulders.
"Eyes on me," he growled when my lids fluttered.
I locked gazes with him. Held it. Watched the way his jaw clenched, the way his pupils blew wide as he sank deeper.
"Fuck, you feel perfect," he rasped, starting to move.
I moaned-loud, shameless. He thrust harder, deeper, setting a rhythm that made my back arch off the bed. Pain and pleasure twisted together until I couldn't tell them apart.
"Tell me what you want," he demanded, hips snapping.
"You," I gasped. "Harder. Please."
He gave it to me. Relentless. Possessive. One hand pinned my wrists above my head; the other gripped my hip, angling me exactly how he wanted.
"You're mine tonight," he said against my throat, teeth grazing skin. "Say it."
"I'm yours," I breathed, lost in him.
He fucked me like he wanted to ruin me for anyone else. I came apart screaming his name, clenching around him so hard he groaned like it hurt. He followed seconds later, burying himself deep, pulsing inside me with a guttural curse in Spanish.
We stayed like that-sweaty, tangled, breathing hard.
He kissed my temple, soft now. Almost tender.
"Sleep, Amore," he murmured.
I did. For the first time in months, I slept without nightmares.
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9.8
Aurora Vale was trained to be a weapon beautiful, precise, and disposable. Recruited as a teenager into a covert intelligence division that officially doesn't exist, Aurora has spent her life seducing secrets out of powerful men and destroying targets without ever pulling a trigger. Cold. Calculated. Untouchable. Inside the agency, she is known as The Steel Heart an operative who never fails and never feels.
Until her latest mission. Her target is Valerio Blackthorn, an untouchable crime lord feared even by governments brilliant, disciplined, and impossible to trap. Assigned as his personal bodyguard, Aurora is meant to get close, extract information, and deliver him to a massive takedown operation.
What she doesn't know is that Valerio has already seen the trap. Instead of exposing her, he lets her stay watching, testing, dismantling her carefully crafted tactics with unsettling calm. As the line between hunter and prey blurs, Aurora begins to realize the truth: Valerio is not the monster she was sent to destroy. And the government she serves is far more corrupt than the criminal world she was trained to infiltrate.
When Aurora discovers that the mission is not about justice but about silencing a former ally who refused to be controlled she makes an impossible choice. She betrays the agency. She saves the man she was meant to destroy.
Now branded a rogue agent with a kill on sight order, Aurora is forced into the shadows alongside Valerio. Hunted by her own government and by a ruthless international syndicate seeking revenge, the two must survive a war where trust is dangerous, love is lethal, and freedom comes at a devastating price.
As bullets fly and secrets explode onto the global stage, Aurora must decide who she truly is a weapon, a traitor, or a woman reclaiming her soul. In a world ruled by lies and power, love may be the most dangerous rebellion of all.

9.6
A billionaire art collector purchases a mysterious 19th-century portrait and begins having vivid dreams about the woman in it. After a near-fatal accident, he realizes the portrait is connected to a tragic past that mirrors his present life. As he grows close to a woman who looks exactly like the one in the painting, he must uncover the truth behind the portrait before history repeats itself.
Can love survive centuries of secrets and mistakes? And will he finally find the courage to fight for the woman in front of him, or will the past destroy them both?
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7.5
I didn't fall for him.
I crashed.
Liam Cage wasn't supposed to matter. He was just the arrogant stranger with a dangerous smile and eyes that undressed me in a single glance. Just a man passing through my life.
Until our parents got married.
Now he's everywhere, in the kitchen at midnight, leaning against doorframes like he owns the air I breathe. In the hallway, too close. Always too close. Every look between us feels like a secret. Every argument feels like foreplay. Every silence feels loaded.
We don't talk about it.
We don't have to.
Because the truth is there in the way my pulse stutters when he says my name. In the way he watches me like he's trying to decide whether to ruin me - or save me.
He's wrong.
For me.
For my family.
For my sanity.
But when he touches me, the world narrows down to skin and heat and the terrifying realization that some mistakes don't feel like mistakes at all.
They feel inevitable.
This story is about craving what you shouldn't, crossing lines you swore you wouldn't, and discovering that sometimes the most dangerous love is the one that feels the most real.

8.8
My little boy died on the operating table during a minor, routine surgery.
That exact same night, my billionaire husband bought out the Hudson River for a massive, million-dollar fireworks show.
It wasn't to mourn our child. It was to celebrate his first love's son being discharged from the hospital.
When I confronted him with our son's death certificate, he sneered and accused me of hiding the boy to get his attention.
He held his mistress in our home, watched her fake a panic attack, and threatened to bankrupt my family if I didn't get on my knees and apologize to her.
But the most horrifying truth came from a terrified hospital nurse.
My son's anesthesia was deliberately kept low during the procedure to keep his tissue viable to save the mistress's child.
He was awake and in agonizing pain while his own father planned a grand celebration for another man's son.
I couldn't understand how a father could be so completely heartless.
How could he sacrifice his own flesh and blood just to please a woman who constantly manipulated him?
Looking at the ashes on my son's favorite toy, my paralyzing grief evaporated, replaced by a cold, unyielding rage.
I arranged my little boy's funeral alone in the freezing rain, left my wedding ring on the counter, and walked straight into the private hotel suite of my husband's most ruthless business rival.
"Let's take him down," I said.

8.7
I finally stepped onto American soil after four years of exile, clutching my suitcase with white-knuckled desperation. My plan was simple: get to Manhattan, start my job, and stay as far away from the Newton family as possible.
But the moment I turned on my phone, Sterling Newton’s voice cut through the air like a blade. He had already sent a car; he didn't care about my plans, my apartment, or my freedom. He wanted me back in that suffocating mansion, and he expected me to obey.
When I arrived, the house felt like a mausoleum. My adoptive mother smothered me in a desperate, suffocating embrace, while my father and sister acted as if my departure had never happened. Then, the heavy front door thudded shut. Barron Newton had arrived.
He didn't greet me with warmth; he looked at me like a piece of furniture that had been moved out of place. He spent the entire dinner dismantling my resolve, using my deepest guilt as a weapon to force me to stay, making it clear that I was merely a prisoner in his gilded cage.
I felt like I was suffocating. How could he have so much power over my life? Why was he so determined to keep me trapped in this house, and what was he truly waiting for in the shadows of the night?
I retreated to my room, feeling the invisible chains tightening around my throat. Just as I thought I had found a way to fight back, a message from Fernando flashed on my screen, warning me that our original plan was in ruins. I realized then that I wasn't just fighting the Newtons—I was fighting a war on two fronts, and the countdown to my destruction had already begun.

7.7
I spent two years trying to please Xander Yates, thinking he was the man who would help me save my family’s struggling manufacturing business. As a former senior legal counsel, I thought I knew how to handle sharks, but I never expected the man I loved to be the one who would try to skin me alive.
Everything shattered at a high-end gala when I felt a chemical fire start in my marrow. Xander had spiked my drink, chasing me through the hotel corridors with a predatory smile, ready to take by force what I wouldn't give him willingly.
I barely escaped into an elevator, stealing a key card from a man in a sharp grey suit and collapsing in room 8086. That stranger turned out to be Crockett Blackburn, the "Ice King of Wall Street" and a man my family had spent years avoiding. He didn't save me out of the goodness of his heart; he saved me because he saw a "messy variable" he could turn into a weapon. By morning, Xander was blackmailing me with a video of me drugged, and Crockett was offering me a deal that felt like a deal with the devil. He would save my factory, but only if I gave him 51% controlling interest and became his personal legal counsel.
The humiliation was total. Xander called me a junkie and a slut, while Crockett looked at the bruises on my neck with the cold, clinical assessment of a man checking a damaged piece of equipment. When a secret bid was leaked, Crockett didn't hesitate to pin the blame on me, accusing me of working with my ex to drive up the price.
I was a pawn in a game between two monsters, one who wanted to destroy my body and another who wanted to own my soul and my family’s legacy. I had lost my apartment, my reputation, and my safety in less than twenty-four hours.
"I don't like it when people break my things," Crockett told me as he applied ointment to the marks Xander left on my throat.
I realized then that if I wanted to survive, I had to stop being the victim and start being the predator. I signed the contract, moved into Blackburn’s penthouse, and prepared for a scorched-earth war against the Yates family. I don't care if Crockett Blackburn is using me as a leash—as long as he lets me be the one to bite.