Nothing to Say
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4.4 • 57 Ratings
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Secret Baby Billionaire Romance
Pregnant?
Did I hear that right?
Complicated doesn't begin to cover it.
Three's a crowd? Tell me about it.
Guess who showed up in my office in the middle of the night? Billionaire CEO Zachary Kintyre. No big deal. It's his building, the guy can go wherever he wants. Not newsworthy? Maybe not. Except he's naked. Stark naked. And he needs me to save his ass.
That should've been it. The beginning and end of our association. Why didn't I leave it there? I swore I wouldn't succumb to his charms, but before I know it, we're spending the weekend in bed.
It has to be private. Secret. No one can know.
Why not?
The contract between him and his ex-wife says as much. Her hooks are in deep. So is it him and me or him and her? Which is real? What's declared in public or what happens behind the scenes?
Seems hopeless until I learn Ms. Julietta Ines-Kintyre has a secret of her own. To expose it, I need help, partners-in-crime… potential co-defendants. Roxie and Jane are ready to ride or die.
If the truth comes out, everything will change. Will we ride the rapids to still waters, or are we rushing toward disaster?
Warning: Contains explicit language and imagery. Suitable only for ages 18 and over.
**HEA STANDALONE**
Customer Reviews
To be continued
This is the fifth book I’ve read in this series and they all end with to be continued. This series should be the Roxie capers because that’s what these stories are. She’s the true star of these books. It’s about reintroducing her as soon as possible and the shenanigans begin.
Lilya is supposed to be the star of this book. She meets Zach and they’re in lust by the end of Chapter 2. Enter Roxie. Why does a successful VP level auditor make a statement like “what would Roxie do?”
Why can’t these characters really have their own romance, built through reasonable dating processes? You can be really attracted and intrigued at first sight, but in love? I really wanted to like this series but I’ve read enough. I know what will happen next.
Hard to follow…
It’s a good read, but it gets a bit confusing because the author uses pronouns so much; without identifying who’s talking, a lot of the conversations are hard to follow. Especially when there’s more than two people conversing… I had to go back several times to figure out who the ‘she’ or ‘he’ was. It just interrupts the ‘reading flow’ when you have to stop to figure out who’s saying what.