The Forbidden Series
Billionaires who can look, but shouldnât touch!
For Logan Black, Jaiven Rodriguez and Zair al Ruyi, New York is spread out before them like the Garden of Edenâ¦and no one knows the sweet taste of forbidden fruit better than Americaâs most ruthless billionaires!
Jaded, cynical, with a darkness that threatens to consume them whole, they think theyâve seen it all. But temptation has something new in store for each of themâ¦
When Addison Treffen finds herself working for Logan Blackâthe notorious billionaire who literally came back from the deadâshe thinks itâs a safe haven from the shocking scandal surrounding her family. Little did she know that sheâs about to get very personal with her billionaire boss!
Collect all three novels in The Forbidden Series:
THE BILLIONAIREâS INTERN by USA TODAY bestselling author Maisey Yates
THE BILLIONAIREâS FANTASY by USA TODAY bestselling author Kate Hewitt
THE BILLIONAIREâS INNOCENT by USA TODAY bestselling author Caitlin Crews
Well, really, things just couldnât get much worse. Addison sat in her older brotherâs office, numbness wrapping itself around her like a heavy blanket.
She was officially banned from her sorority, not that she cared much, since school was awful just at the moment, as was her sorority. But still, leaving of her own accord wouldâve hurt a lot less.
They hadnât exactly said the word banned, but the sororityâs president had made it abundantly clear that Addisonâs presence was a âdistraction.â And that links to âprostitutionâ and âsnipersâ were not exactly fitting with the relaxing environment of sisterhood and education they were so striving for.
Well, obviously. But nobody seemed worried about whether or not Addison felt she had sisterhood, or a relaxing environment for education.
She had nothing.
Her father had been killed in front of her only days after she discovered he was he was running a prostitution ring, behind the facade of a law office that championed for the downtrodden.
Sheâd lost not only her father, but the memory of him and any bit of safety and security sheâd ever felt in her name, or in her family home.
Her sorority might be disturbed by associations with snipersâ bullets piercing the windows of the wealthy and elite at midnight, and with associations to sex rings and scandal, but she could guarantee it was a lot worse for her.
Added to that, her boyfriend, Eddie, was suddenly and conveniently on vacation in Bermuda, and while he sent his regrets, he could not interrupt his vacation. Which she had a sinking feeling meant that her rather distant boyfriend was putting more distance between them now, thanks to the scandal.
Her schooling was on temporary hiatus, and she was finishing what she could online because campus was impossible for her to navigate. What with male students asking if she sold her favors, wink, wink, nudge, nudge, since her father had obviously dealt in sex, and with most female students now avoiding her so they didnât get her contaminants on them.
Truly, people were terrible.
Her father had been shot and killed in front of her, and sheâd had to go to his funeral. A funeral she, her brother and her mother had had to put on as though they still cared because even given what heâd done, none of them could quite bring themselves to leave Jasonâs body in an unmarked grave.
Though the marker on his grave was bland enough.
Jason Treffen, 1955â2014.
No beloved father, beloved husband, beloved boss. He wasnât beloved by a single person by the time that bullet passed through him. And it was his own fault. As more and more details emerged, it became harder to remember him as the man sheâd always believed he was. Instead her old, beautiful memories were twisting. Making it hard to see anything other than the monster.
And just as well.
Even in death, he hurt others. He was gone, and they were all left to deal with the fallout. They were all coping in the best way they could.
For her brother, Austin, it meant hoping his legacy as a true advocate for women never fell under the shadow of what their father was. It meant working harder, with even greater integrity than he had to begin with.
For her future sister-in-law, Katy, it meant living with the crushing death of her sister, trying to move on and make Sarahâs life matter, through the foundation she was establishing.
For Addisonâs mother it seemed to mean blocking out the world and shoe shopping. Addison had no idea what it meant for her.