Juliet's Game
Heat Level
Rating
4

Juliet's Game

Zoey's Bedtime Stories

Arranged Marriage / Marriage of ConvenienceEnemies to LoversBillionaire RomanceThe 'Chess' MotifPower CoupleBetrayalWho Did This To You?Power & ControlLegacyTrust vs. StrategySelf-Discovery
In the cutthroat world of corporate warfare, love is the most dangerous move of all. Juliet Reinhart was born a pawn. As the heiress to the Reinhart empire, she has spent her life being moved across the board by her father, groomed to be the perfect wife rather than a CEO. Now, with her father’s health failing and the company’s future on the line, he has made his final move: a forced merger disguised as an arranged marriage to the city's most ruthless predator. Adrian Blackwood is the King of the boardroom. He is cold, calculating, and used to crushing his enemies. He doesn't want a wife; he wants the Reinhart territory. When he catches Juliet breaking into his office to find blackmail material on him, he doesn’t call the police. He offers her a different kind of deal. Forced into a fragile alliance to destroy a common enemy—the encroaching Sterling Enterprises—Juliet and Adrian begin a dangerous game of deception. But as they dismantle their rivals, the line between business and pleasure blurs. Juliet discovers that the man she was taught to fear is the only one who sees her potential, and Adrian realizes that the woman he planned to conquer might just be the Queen he needs to win. When a betrayal from a trusted ally threatens to topple both their empires, Juliet must stop playing by the rules. To save her legacy and her heart, she has to stop being the pawn and start running the board.

Sexual Tension

The relationship is built on intellectual sparring and power plays, leading to intense physical encounters.

Explicit Scenes

Includes graphic sexual scenes that serve as a release from the high-stress corporate environment.

Is This Book For You?

Loves 'Succession' or 'Billions'
Craves a Competent Heroine
Enjoys 'Power Play' Dynamics
Likes the 'Arranged Marriage' Trope