Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Forced by My Ex & His Best Friend - cover

Forced by My Ex & His Best Friend

Rose Rough

Publisher: Rose Rough

  • 0
  • 2
  • 0

Summary

Elena doesn't want to go to the party because her weak ex boyfriend Charlie is gonna be there. But her best friend Summer convinces her to go, and when Elena sees Charlie...he's gotten a little more -- forceful! Just the way Elena needs it. Charlie even invited his best friend to join in! These two guys know what they want, and what they want is to hear Elena scream!
 
Available since: 08/17/2022.

Other books that might interest you

  • Paying The Price 3 - Susan Benting and her Daughter are spanked by the Tutor and Philip Benting - cover

    Paying The Price 3 - Susan...

    Paul Amann

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Master Matchek is a Czechoslovakian maths teacher in his mid-fifties who has two great passions. He loves maths and he loves spanking women's bottoms, both young and old. He has a reputation for getting his girls very high marks in their final exams but his reputation for spanking girls who do not do their homework or wear the wrong clothes for his extra lessons is also well known. In this book, Susan Benting enrols her daughter Pauline on the course but omits to tell Master Matchek that she has a husband so she gets spanked twice before the course begins. Phillip Benting learns that spanking his wife and daughter can be very effective. 
    Verified Purchase: Another great story 
    Another great story well written. I really enjoyed reading this book and can not wait for the sequel. Keep up the great writing
    Show book
  • Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street An - Irish author Le Fanu brings us a timeless classic and true example of a haunted house story - cover

    Account of Some Strange...

    Sheridan Le Fanu

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Joseph Thomas Sheridan Le Fanu was born on August 28th, 1814, at 45 Lower Dominick Street, Dublin, into a literary family with Huguenot, Irish and English roots 
     
    The children were tutored but, according to his brother William, the tutor taught them little if anything. Le Fanu was eager to learn and used his father's library to educate himself about the world. He was a creative child and by fifteen had taken to writing poetry. 
     
    Accepted into Trinity College, Dublin to study law he also benefited from the system used in Ireland that he did not have to live in Dublin to attend lectures, but could study at home and take examinations at the university as and when necessary. 
     
    This enabled him to also write and by 1838 Le Fanu's first story The Ghost and the Bonesetter was published in the Dublin University Magazine. Many of the short stories he wrote at the time were to form the basis for his future novels.  Indeed, throughout his career Le Fanu would constantly revise, cannabilise, embellish and re-publish his earlier works to use in his later efforts. 
     
    Between 1838 and 1840 Le Fanu had written and published twelve stories which purported to be the literary remains of an 18th-century Catholic priest called Father Purcell. Set mostly in Ireland they include classic stories of gothic horror, with grim, shadowed castles, as well as supernatural visitations from beyond the grave, together with madness and suicide. One of the themes running through them is a sad nostalgia for the dispossessed Catholic aristocracy of Ireland, whose ruined castles stand in mute salute and testament to this history.  
     
    On 18 December 1844 Le Fanu married Susanna Bennett, the daughter of a leading Dublin barrister. The union would produce four children.  Le Fanu was now stretching his talents across the length of a novel and his first was The Cock and Anchor published in 1845. 
     
    A succession of works followed and his reputation grew as well as his income.  Unfortunately, a decade after his marriage it became an increasing source of difficultly. Susanna was prone to suffer from a range of neurotic symptoms including great anxiety after the deaths of several close relatives, including her father two years before.  
     
    In April 1858 she suffered an "hysterical attack" and died in circumstances that are still unclear. The anguish, profound guilt as well as overwhelming loss were channeled into Le Fanu’s work.  Working only by the light of two candles he would write through the night and burnish his reputation as a major figure of 19th Century supernaturalism. His work challenged the focus on the external source of horror and instead he wrote about it from the perspective of the inward psychological potential to strike fear in the hearts of men.  
     
    A series of books now came forth: Wylder's Hand (1864), Guy Deverell (1865), The Tenants of Malory (1867), The Green Tea (1869), The Haunted Baronet (1870), Mr. Justice Harbottle (1872), The Room in the Dragon Volant (1872) and In a Glass Darkly. (1872). 
     
    But his life was drawing to a close.  Joseph Thomas Sheridan Le Fanu died in Merrion Square in his native Dublin on February 7th, 1873, at the age of 58.  
     
    In this famous story two college students rent rooms in Dublin’s Aungier Street once owned by a brutal hanging judge who seems to still haunt both place and mind…..
    Show book
  • They Got Out 3 - A Sci-Fi and Horror Collection - cover

    They Got Out 3 - A Sci-Fi and...

    C.A. Gleason

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Hike: A hiking trail snakes through government secrets, passing by a classified military base where something deadly escapes. 
    The Torment: A filthy rich criminal bribes his way to freedom . . . but at greater cost than he could ever imagine. 
    Ember: The last man on Earth navigates a dangerous landscape, being hunted at every step, as he tries to find the last woman alive. 
    This collection includes five additional stories about an interview with dire consequences, a weakling who develops mysterious powers, an otherworldly animal fight, a legendary battle against giant spiders, and the return of Him.
    Show book
  • Wood’s Reward - Action and Adventure in the Florida Keys - cover

    Wood’s Reward - Action and...

    Steven Becker

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Mac and Wood find themselves confronted with the troublesome job of repairing a bridge piling supporting one of the iconic bridges spanning the Florida Keys. In the process they discover something unexpected—a cache of silver coins and bars embedded in coral. The pair, along with their archeologist friend Ned, soon realizes the immense historical significance of their discovery—the coins date back to the Civil War. 
    But their joy quickly turns to apprehension as they realize they are not the only ones interested in the treasure. The project engineer, a fellow treasure hunter with questionable motives, becomes a formidable obstacle in their path. And if that wasn't enough, they find themselves at odds with the sheriff, who appears to be running a protection scam, further complicating their pursuit of the truth. 
    Just when Mac and Wood think they have reached an impasse, fate intervenes in the most unexpected way. A chance discovery of an old chest resting on the seafloor leads them to a remarkable journal written by the renowned Key West wrecker, John Geiger. Within its pages lies the captivating history of the silver, tracing it back to a legendary pirate chase and another shipwreck resting on the treacherous reef. 
    Becker's expert storytelling will transport you to the sun-soaked shores of Florida Keys, immersing you in a world teeming with adventure, mystery, and the allure of buried treasure. "Wood's Reward" is a gripping maritime thriller that will leave you breathless, yearning for more, and eagerly awaiting the next exhilarating chapter in Mac and Wood's extraordinary journey. 
    Prepare to dive into a sea of suspense, as Steven Becker sweeps you away on a captivating tide of discovery, danger, and destiny.
    Show book
  • The Short Stories of Arthur Conan Doyle - Creator of Sherlock Holmes who wrote many other equally impressive stories - cover

    The Short Stories of Arthur...

    Arthur Conan Doyle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Arthur Conan Doyle was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 22nd May 1859.  His childhood was blighted by his father’s heavy drinking which for some years broke up the family. Fortunately, wealthy uncles were willing to support them by paying for education and clothing.  
     
    He was accepted at the University of Edinburgh to study medicine and also began to write short stories the first, ‘The Haunted Grange of Goresthorpe’, was published in Blackwood’s Magazine.  Despite several other stories and some articles in the British Medical Journal his medical studies took priority. 
     
    When these finished he was appointed as Doctor on the Greenland whaler ‘Hope of Peterhead’ in 1880 and then, after graduation, as ship’s surgeon on the SS Mayumba on its voyage to West Africa. 
     
    1882 saw a move to Plymouth and his own independent practice. With few patients he resumed writing and completed his first novel, ‘The Mystery of Cloomber’, although most of his output was short stories based on his experiences at sea.  
     
    He married Louisa Hawkins in 1885. However, two years later he met and fell in love with Jean Elizabeth Leckie, though they remained platonic out of respect for, and loyalty to, his wife. 
     
    His literary career suddenly burst into life in November 1886 with ‘A Study In Scarlet’, the first of the fabulously successful Sherlock Holmes stories.  
     
    With two children to support he now revisited his haphazard commercial arrangements and curtailed everything save for commissions from the Strand Magazine.  
     
    As a sportsman he was remarkably proficient. He was goalkeeper for Portsmouth Association Football Club and played ten first-class cricket matches for the Marylebone Cricket Club as well as captain of the Crowborough Beacon Golf Club in East Sussex.  
     
    In 1891 tired of writing Holmes stories, he began a series of historical novels and even went so far as to apparently kill off Holmes in a lethal brawl with his arch-nemesis Moriarty. 
     
    Despite heavy and sustained criticism he continued to write in support of the Boer War, a fact he thought contributed to his knighthood in 1902.  The following year to great relief and acclaim he brought Sherlock Holmes back from the dead in his first outing for a decade. 
     
    Sadly, his wife Louisa died from TB in 1906 and, a year later, he at last married Jean.  
     
    During the War and for several years after family deaths had left him depressed. In a search for solace and answers he alighted upon spiritualism and, such was his interest, that he wrote several books on the subject. 
     
    On 7th July 1930 Conan Doyle was discovered in the hall of Windlesham Manor, his house in East Sussex, clutching his chest dying of a heart attack.  He was 71. 
    01 - Arthur Conan Doyle - A Short Story Collection - An Introduction 
    02 - The Striped Chest by Arthur Conan Doyle 
    03 - How It Happened by Arthur Conan Doyle 
    04 - B24 by Arthur Conan Doyle 
    05 - The Cabman's Story. The Mystery of a London Growler by Arthur Conan Doyle 
    06 - The Final Problem by Arthur Conan Doyle
    Show book
  • Grownup Matters - cover

    Grownup Matters

    Vsevolod Garshin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Much like his stories for children, Vsevolod Garshin's grownup prose may not always be easy to read due to difficult subject matter he tends to pick for his narratives. It is, however, always beautifully written and fascinating.
    Show book