He wanted a housekeeper not a tainted virgin.What Damien found was purity begging to be tainted. Now, he’ll ruin her, softly, cruelly, completely. Barely nineteen and untouched, Elara never thought her first job would place her inside the fortress of a man like him. Damien kael doesn’t request. He commands. And the innocent little maid is about to learn what obedience costs, one breathless gasp, one sinful punishment, one wicked whisper at a time. Dark. Seductive. Obsessive. She thought she was hired to clean his home. She didn’t realize she was stepping into his lair. Elara is broke and desperate, so when a maid position opens in a billionaire’s estate, she takes it, unaware that Damien kael is a man who doesn’t believe in boundaries. He’s older, merciless, and dangerously magnetic. She tries to leave, but he isn’t letting go. He doesn’t want love. He wants loyalty. And she’s about to learn what it means to kneel. As their twisted bond deepens, pleasure collides with punishment, fear tangles with desire, and innocence becomes his obsession. But Damien’s darkness runs deeper than she imagined and claiming his virgin maid isn’t about breaking her body… It’s about owning her soul. Mature Content Warning: This book features explicit sexual content, dark dominant/submissive dynamics, psychological tension, and a dangerously obsessive hero. For readers 18+ who crave power, seduction, and raw intensity.
View More“Deeper, Damien!” The black-haired girl screamed, her voice shattered across the room as her body arched against the edge of the billiard table. Her nails raked the green felt while her fifth climax tore through her in violent waves.
She was loud. They often were. Damien Kael didn’t care for noise, but she had been limber and eager—and tonight, he’d needed someone who wouldn’t ask questions. She would come running, like they all did. His women came when he called. They always came. Not for love. Not even lust. But for the thrill. For the power he radiated. It wasn’t connection. It was routine. He didn’t finish with her. Not yet. Sliding free, Damien gripped the carved edge of the table and stared out across the balcony. The city sprawled beyond, blinking like a restless beast beneath the ink-stained sky. Moonlight kissed the ridges of his bare chest, highlighting the angry red crescents her nails had carved into his back. The woman moaned softly behind him, crawling toward him like a stray searching for scraps. Damien didn’t turn. He didn’t need another climax. He needed silence. Control. And control had been slipping. Inch by inch. Night by night. Ever since the letter arrived from the convent. The letter offering him something new. Something pure. Something untouched. His jaw tightened like a vice. “Get dressed,” he said. A pause. Then: “What?” He turned his head, giving her a single cold look that sliced through the dim light. “Leave.” Her lips parted in disbelief, a half-laugh bubbling up. “Are you serious?” Damien said nothing. He didn’t need to. The weight of his stare was enough to crush her pride. She scrambled to gather her clothes, muttering under her breath, her perfume clinging to the air like cheap desperation. By the time she slipped out the door, Damien was already pouring two fingers of whiskey into a crystal glass. He didn’t watch her leave. She was nothing. Nothing compared to what was arriving tomorrow. She was nineteen. The letter had been neat. Official. Stamped with the seal of God and guilt. Her name: Elara Vale. The convent called it an external placement program. An act of gratitude for his generous donations. But Damien knew the truth. It was a transaction. And it intrigued him far more than he’d like to admit. A virgin. A girl who had never been touched, never spoken to a man without a prayer on her lips. A girl who would blush at bare ankles, tremble at coarse language, and bow her head when addressed. She would be his maid. Damien wasn’t a man of faith. But he had rituals of his own. And breaking this one would be deliberate. Exquisite. He glanced at the letter once more, lying like a sin on his desk: We trust Mr. Kael will find her service respectful, quiet, and obedient. His mouth curved in a slow, dangerous smile. We’ll see. The next morning, Elara Vale stood before the wrought-iron gates of Kael Manor, her breath fogging in the chill dawn air. Her hands shook as the driver swung open the rear door. The estate loomed before her like something out of a dream she wasn’t meant to have—vast, severe, silent. Its sharp peaks and shadowed windows watched her like human eyes. She stepped out, clutching her small suitcase like a shield. Her modest gray dress was pressed to perfection, her hair braided neatly, her faith the only thing holding her upright. She whispered prayers the entire ride here, lips forming the familiar words even as the driver stole glances at her through the mirror. Don’t be afraid. This is your duty. You’re here to serve. To provide. But no prayer could prepare her for what waited beyond those doors. The butler, tall and austere as a marble statue, met her at the entrance. “Miss Vale. This way.” He didn’t smile. Didn’t offer warmth. The heavy doors closed behind her with a hushed finality. Her footsteps echoed softly on polished stone, her heart pounding far too loudly in her chest. The air smelled of leather and firewood—and something she couldn’t name. Something dark. Something she hadn’t imagined before. She had never smelled cologne before. She wasn’t supposed to like it. And then… he appeared. Descending the grand staircase in a charcoal shirt and black slacks, sleeves rolled to reveal forearms dusted with ink-dark hair, Damien Kael moved like gravity obeyed him. Barefoot. Controlled. Dangerous. The kind of man whispered about in sermons—the kind with teeth behind his smile. His gaze collided with hers. And the world felt like it stopped. Elara froze. Her lips parted, breath stalling in her throat. His eyes—black as a midnight sin—dragged over her like a slow blade, stripping her without a touch. “You’re early,” he said, his voice was low, smooth as whiskey. “I… the driver arrived ahead of schedule.” He tilted his head, assessing her like property. “No makeup. No polish. No perfume. Just so natural and simple”. “I wasn’t allowed,” she whispered. The corner of his mouth lifted, but it wasn’t out of kindness. “Good. That won’t be a problem.” He closed the distance between them—silent, predatory, a hunter circling his prey. “I don’t tolerate noise in this house, Elara,” he said. “You speak only when spoken to. You will follow the dress code I provide. And you will never step into the west wing. Understand?” Her throat tightened. Heat crawled up her neck. “Yes, Mr. Kael.” He stopped in front of her. Close enough for her to catch the smoky whisper of his scent. Her pulse stumbled. His shirt hung open just enough to reveal the ridge of his collarbone, the hollow of his throat. “No,” he said softly. “When you speak to me, you say Yes, Damien. You’re not in the convent anymore.” Her breath snagged. “…Yes, Damien.” He stared at her lips for a moment that lasted far too long. Then turned away without another word, leaving her trembling in the marble silence. And in that first hour of her new life, Elara Vale realized something far more dangerous than fear: She wasn’t afraid of Damien Kael. She was curious. And curiosity… was how sins began.Elara had only meant to deliver the laundry.The house was quiet at that hour. The kind of quiet that pressed into the walls and lingered in the air. It was close to midnight, and the long hallways were lit by soft golden lamps fixed high along the walls. The light was dim, leaving more shadow than glow, and her own footsteps seemed too loud as she walked barefoot across the marble floor.She carried the folded linen in her arms, the fabric smelling faintly of soap and lavender. Her nightdress hung loosely on her frame. It was simple cotton, soft from many washes, and it brushed gently against her ankles as she moved. She had not planned to be awake this late, but the task had been left unfinished, and she wanted to do it before morning came.Elara turned the corner, heading toward the guest rooms where Damien sometimes left his jackets or shirts for her to collect. Her heart always beat faster in that part of the house, though she never understood why. Perhaps it was because the air
Damien Kael walked into his bedroom, his shoulders was heavy with the weight of the day. He was ready to strip away the noise, the stress, and the endless calls from his empire. But the moment he stepped into the room, he stopped dead in the doorway.Naked.Ariana Stark lay across his bed like she had been poured there on purpose. The only thing covering her was the light blanket he had tossed there that morning, and even that had slid down low on her hips. One long leg stretched bare against his dark gray sheets, pale skin glowing under the soft light.Her red hair spilled over his pillows, bright as blood against the silver fabric.Damien’s jaw tightened.“Get off my bed,” he said in a calm voice.Ariana didn’t move. Instead, she stretched, slow and bold, the blanket falling even lower. Her chest rose as she breathed in, bare and careless, and her mouth curved in that sly smile she always used when she was daring him.“Nice welcome, Damien,” she purred.He shut the door behind him.
Damien had not planned to come home early. The day had been heavy with long meetings and short tempers, and the voices of men in suits still rang in his head. He wanted silence, and more than that, he wanted a meal that didn’t come out of a carton. He hated the dull taste of food that carried no warmth, no effort, no heart.As he came close to the door, he heard two voices and paused to listen.“Pass me the vegetables,” Ella said, pointing to the end of the table.Elara stirred a pot of hot gravy and steam warmed her face. A strand of hair touched her cheek. She brushed it back with her wrist and fetched the chopped vegetables.“Here,” she said, placing them beside Ella.They stood side by side in the bright kitchen. Pots bubbled. Metal touched wood. The room smelled of herbs and roast chicken.“You’re good with spices,” Ella said as she stirred.“I learned at the convent,” Elara said.“At the convent?” Ella asked.“Yes. Every Saturday after mass. The sisters taught cooking. They said
The security gate slid open with a low hum as Elara stepped through, holding her small handbag close. It was only her second day in Damien Kael’s estate, and she had been trusted to run to town for errands. Trust. Or maybe a test. Either way, she wanted to do it well.On her way back, the guards at the booth turned to look at her. Both wore black uniforms, their badges glinting in the late sun. One was older, tall, with dark hair and sharp eyes that lingered too long. The other was younger, broad in the shoulders, and his stare never left her legs.“Miss Elara,” the older one said smoothly. “Back already?”Elara gave a polite smile. “Mr. Kael asked me to collect the dry cleaning before seven.”The younger man said nothing, but his gaze was heavy. The maid dress she wore felt too fitted now, the heat of the sun making her skin prickle.“You’re very beautiful,” the older guard added, his tone was too casual.Elara blinked. Her smile stayed, but her chest tightened. No one had ever calle
“I thought you said the replacement for Clara is already on the way?”Damien Kael’s voice cut through the silence of his room like a thunderstorm. Cold, sharp and Unforgiving.On the other end of the call, the woman flinched so hard he could hear it through the line. “M-Mr. Kael, I was told she left the convent last night. They said she was the perfect choice. Quiet, obedient, untouched.”“I don’t care what they said.” Damien’s voice dropped lower, darker. “You should have waited for my final decision. I did not ask for a child in a dress who can barely look me in the eye.”“Mr. Clifford, she’s nineteen—”“I said wait.”With a hard swipe of his finger, the call ended. The screen went black. His room fell into silence, broken only by the faint crackle of the fireplace.Or so he thought.But just beyond the the half-open door, hidden behind the in the shadow of an ornate column, stood Elara Vale.~~~She hadn’t meant to eavesdrop. She had been wandering back from the kitchen, tray in he
“Deeper, Damien!” The black-haired girl screamed, her voice shattered across the room as her body arched against the edge of the billiard table. Her nails raked the green felt while her fifth climax tore through her in violent waves.She was loud. They often were. Damien Kael didn’t care for noise, but she had been limber and eager—and tonight, he’d needed someone who wouldn’t ask questions.She would come running, like they all did.His women came when he called. They always came. Not for love. Not even lust. But for the thrill. For the power he radiated. It wasn’t connection. It was routine.He didn’t finish with her. Not yet.Sliding free, Damien gripped the carved edge of the table and stared out across the balcony. The city sprawled beyond, blinking like a restless beast beneath the ink-stained sky. Moonlight kissed the ridges of his bare chest, highlighting the angry red crescents her nails had carved into his back.The woman moaned softly behind him, crawling toward him like a
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