Taken by the Dom
~A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance~
© 2017
By Cassandra Dee and Katie Ford
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© 2017 Cassandra Dee and Katie Ford
All Rights Reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locations is purely coincidental. The characters are all productions of the author’s imagination.
Please note that this work is intended only for adults over the age of 18 and all characters are represented as 18 or over.
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ALSO BY CASSANDRA DEE
Standalones
His Captive
Buck Me Cowboy
Beg Me: Sold To My Dad’s Boss
Daddy’s Pretty Baby
Loving the Babysitter
Reverse Harem
Seven Brothers of Sin
Six Ways to Sin
The Billionaires Club
Sold at the Auction
Virgin for Sale
Serving Him
Buy Me
Anonymous Encounters
MFMM Ménage Romance
All the Best Men
MMF Bisexual Romance
Double Dare
Double Exposure
The Falling Series
Falling for My Dad’s Best Friend
Falling for My Boyfriend’s Dad
Falling for My Son’s Best Friend
The Virgin Series
The Naughty Virgin
The Wicked Virgin
The Dirty Virgin
The Trashy Virgin
Delivering the Virgin
The Princes Series
Double Princes
Triple Princes
DEDICATION
To all the dirty girls who love power exchange.
This one’s for you!
NOTE FROM CASSIE AND KATIE
Hi! Thanks so much for reading Taken by the Dom: A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance. I hope you enjoy the steam between Minnie and her Master!
Love,
Cassie and Katie
ABOUT THIS BOOK
TAKEN BY THE DOM: A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance
Get down on your knees, he said. And I obeyed.
It started when I had trouble in class.
My dad put me into reform school.
Forest Hills is a place for bad girls, and it was supposed to make me into a model citizen.
But things didn’t turn out well.
Because my new teacher doesn’t just teach.
He commands.
Grayson Thorn doesn’t use a pen or pencil.
He uses a whip.
He doesn’t have a ruler.
He has a paddle.
But the problem is that I’m still a bad student.
And Master Thorn is going to teach me a lesson.
Every night.
Gasping.
Screaming.
Bent over.
Calling his name.
Because I’ve met my match …
Or has the Dom met his?
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Taken by the Dom
ABOUT THIS BOOK
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
EPILOGUE
Making Up
The Proposal
Six Ways to Sin
ABOUT THIS BOOK
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
EPILOGUE
Serving Nuts
Serving Champagne
Twin Fun
Seven Brothers of Sin
ABOUT THIS BOOK
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
EPILOGUE
All the Best Men
ABOUT THIS BOOK
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
EPILOGUE
DELETED SCENE
A SNEAK PEEK
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
MORE BY CASSANDRA DEE
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
CHAPTER ONE
Minnie
“Minnie?”
Dad’s voice got louder and harder to ignore. The hoarse tone that had trailed me since childhood started to go up in volume, and now it was accompanied with muffled banging on my bedroom door.
Sighing, I yanked out the earbuds and set my iPad aside to face the nagging of my only parent. Sure enough, the door opened to reveal Patrick’s face, puffy and red.
But Dad is always mad at me for some reason or other. This wasn’t anything new. My eyebrows rose in response.
“What’s wrong?” came my patient tone. “What’s going on Dad? Is everything okay?”
But I already knew what was up. Dina had texted me that our grades were out, mailed home in specially sealed envelopes. And sure enough, the portly man shoved a white paper into my face.
“Explain this to me, Minnie Evans,” he rasped, face almost purple with rage. “Explain to me why you’ve been getting C’s and D’s and not straight A’s. I put you in a good school with the best teachers and this is what you do?” he roared, eyes bulging.
I closed my eyes for the briefest of moments. I hated how he always brought up my grades. Pat made it seem like I’d committed some kind of heinous crime, like murder or arson. In fact, I suffer from dyslexia, p’s turning themselves into q’s, letters literally swimming before my eyes sometimes.
So I took a deep breath.
“I’m sorry Pat. I did my best, but you know that reading can be hard for me. Even numbers are difficult, they seem to dissolve and then re-form as squiggly lines.”
The man
snorted in disbelief.
“That dyslexia shit again?” he scoffed. “Please that crap is made up. Don’t tell me you have ADHD too. Just. Pay. Attention,” he barked, waving the paper around wildly again.
I’ve been through this a thousand times now. ADHD and dyslexia are real, they’re not made-up ailments pulled from thin air. Besides, how would I fake it? And why would someone do this to themselves? It’s no fun to struggle every day, looking like an idiot again and again. It’s pure torture in fact, enough to make tears spring to my eyes.
But there’s no way to get this across to my father. I’ve tried to explain again and again, only to come up against hard, unyielding concrete. So hanging my head, I went another route.
“Sorry,” was my low mumble. “Next time.”
Unfortunately, my dad continued to rage.
“These grades aren’t going to get you into any college, Minnie,” he thundered. “What then? You think I’m going to support you? You’re going to end up in the gutter!” he spat.
I sighed. We’ve been over this before. College isn’t my thing, and I’d explained it over and over again. But as always, my voice fell on deaf ears.
“Dad, please calm down okay? I tried as hard as I could. I did all my homework and turned in all my projects. I studied, but my brain can’t pull off straight A’s. This is as good as it gets, I’m sorry.”
His face pulled into a disbelieving grimace.
“Well then try harder, Minnie,” came that hoarse rasp, shaking his head. “It’s because you’re not using your potential. It’s because you’re so focused on those stupid makeovers.”
Pain lanced through my heart, swift and hot.
“It’s not stupid, Dad,” I managed in a calm voice, despite the fact that my stomach writhed with snakes inside. “It’s something I love to do.”
“Your mother loved it too, and look where that left us,” the man spat. The comment stung because my mother abandoned us long ago, running off with our next-door neighbor. The memory was painful even now, years later.
But life is life, and shit happens sometimes. After all, Dad loved Elaine, I could testify to that. And he didn’t ask for this either. I remembered how he used to randomly bring her flowers or sweets when she was working late at the beauty salon.
But I also remembered the night I found out Elaine had left us. The memory was crystal clear in my mind, filled with sharp edges and jagged shards. I’d come home from a football game, the house quiet and still.
“Mom?” I asked, peering into the dark. “Elaine?”
Maybe she’d fallen asleep early, although it was only just past nine. But as I inched closer to our living room, my foot bumped into something. An object rolled and there was a light thud. Suddenly the lights flew on overhead, blinding and harsh.
Because Pat was sitting on the couch. Bottles of beer surrounded him as he gazed my way, eyes bloodshot. He was still in his work clothes, tie hanging askew over a rumpled work shirt.
“Hey,” I began cautiously. “Where’s Mom?”
The question set off a trigger, and suddenly Pat hurled a bottle against the wall, glass shattering with green shards flying everywhere.
“Elaine? That bitch? Your fucking mom left. Ran off with that asshole next door, Thomas Markle. What the fuck does she see in a sixty-five year old troll is her goddamn business. But that good for nothing wench took half the money in our savings account.” He hurled another bottle, making me duck and wince, heart pounding. “Fucking cow!”
I was shaking and didn’t completely understand.
“She’s gone? Elaine’s gone? Just like that?”
Pat slammed another beer bottle on the coffee table. “What the hell did I do wrong? I gave her everything. Everything she wanted. That shop. Tuition money for you. Every goddamn wish was granted by me. Me! And there she was all along, sleeping with that prick of a neighbor behind my back.”
My heart clenched and I could barely breathe. “I can’t believe this.”
My father glared at the ceiling. “It’s just us now, Minnie. Just the two of us.”
I nodded slowly, a lump in my throat. Because Elaine Evans wasn’t exactly the epitome of a perfect mother. She was almost always too busy with her salon to attend to Dad or me. As much as Mom acted like she was the nurturing and caring mother figure, it wasn’t her forte. But I loved the woman just the same. I loved her for the fact that she introduced me to the world of eyeshadows and lipsticks, that she nurtured my creative soul. It was the only thing we had in common.
Because when I was young Elaine had let me play with cheap makeup from the drugstore, and I’d relished it. When most kids my age begged for dollhouses and Barbies, I asked my mother to buy me a makeup kit. And as the years rolled by, I mastered the art of transforming people through the power of cosmetics.
But what my mother had done to my father was a thing I paid for all the time. And I was paying for it the day that Pat got my report card.
“What the fuck is up with these grades?” he shouted, face purple and bloated. “You dumb shit!”
I kept my cool.
“I’m not Elaine, Dad,” were my words, voice quiet but loud enough to cut through the tension that hung in the air. “I’m not her.”
The sharp look from Dad said otherwise. My mother was a voluptuous woman. She had curves in all the right places, and the generous size of her breasts and ass always made men look twice. The fiery red hair and the seductive hazel eyes were straight out of the book of seduction. Fortunately or unfortunately, I inherited all those assets as well. Down to the Double Ds that made every shirt and blouse strain tight.
But Pat didn’t say a word. Instead, he jerked a pamphlet out from his coat jacket and threw it on the floor before leaving me alone with my thoughts.
Staring down, my eyes tried to focus on the paper. Luscious green hills and a glistening lake winked at me from the stiff paper brochure. Admittedly, it was enticing. It had its allure, that much I could say, but the content of its words told me that it was meant for students who needed discipline. Forest Hills, a reform school for troubled teens.
Except I wasn’t a troubled teen.
I just wasn’t great at school because of my learning disabilities.
That’s not a crime, is it?
But Dad hated me. He hated my love of make-up, hated how I learned how to use a brush on my face but never knew how to hit the books.
So I sat stiffly in my room, head held high, as dignified as possible. Picking up my phone, I dialed Dina’s number. Thankfully, she answered immediately.
“Hey, how’s it going?” came that chirpy voice.
I took a deep, shaky breath. Dina was my oldest friend, and she’s always been my number one fan when it comes to make-up, letting me use her as a guinea pig countless times.
I dropped the bomb on her.
“Dad wants to put me into a reform school.”
Dina’s gasp was swift and loud.
“He’s making you leave me? What about our children?”
I laughed at my bud’s corny joke.
“No, I’m serious Deen. He wants to lock me up in a reform school for troubled teens. I didn’t know that being passionate about something made you into some kind of criminal,” was my bitter reply. “It’s make-up for crying out loud. I’m not selling drugs or stealing from people.”
Dina let out a short chuckle. “Pat just wants you to get into a good college. You know, like he went to.”
I sighed.
“I don’t think any of the fancy colleges offer degrees for cosmetics,” I replied, shaking my head. “Plus, it’s surprising that Pat cares that much about my future.”
She laughed.
“Well, duh, he is your Dad.”
I scoffed. Pat has never acted like my Dad. Well, he did, earlier in life, before Elaine left. But in the last few years, there’s been crazy tension. He could barely look at me most days, like I was a leper. I couldn’t understand what I had done wrong, or why he suddenl
y hated me. And it’s only been getting worse. Why though? What’s changed?
Because now, the only time Pat actually acknowledges me is when something goes awry. Go figure. I was an easy target, a sitting duck in his house, waiting to be cut down.
So I took a deep breath.
“Yeah, Pat’s my dad. I get it. He wants what’s best for me,” I said through clenched teeth, not believing the line. “But why does he care? The man barely pays attention to my life. So why does it matter what grades I get or what I want to do with my future?” I asked, playing with a strand of my hair.
Dina was silent for a moment, thinking. But evidently there were no answers because my buddy merely responded with a question.
“What’s this reform school he’s sending you too?” she asked carefully.
My heart sank. Reality was here. If Pat wanted me to go somewhere, they there was no choice. I was only eighteen, and he paid the bills around the house. So my fingers flipped quickly through the pamphlet.
“It’s called Forest Hills in upstate New York,” I answered. “The brochure makes it look amazing, but I think it’s a prison. It must be a false advertising, no reform school is this beautiful. I bet they photoshopped stuff to look less jail-like.”
I could hear faint typing from Dina’s side of the line as she surfed online.
“Wow. This place does look amazing. Maybe you’re right. Maybe it’s just a facade, but damn do they know how to market.”
I sighed.
“I don’t want to go there, Deen,” were my sad words.
“Then tell your Dad that, silly,” came her quick reply.
“Don’t you think I did that?” I closed my eyes, hopelessness washing over my frame.
“I’m sure you didn’t say it straight up,” Dina says stoutly. “Show him the pictures of the girls you did for homecoming. Margaret went from clownish to stunning! Even Renee looked good, and she never even wears make up. Tell Pat how everyone in school gushes about your talent. Hell, even the teachers do,” she reminded me.
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