Teonna Carter wasn't looking for love - especially not in Detroit, where loyalty is rare and danger is normal. She was focused on working, doing hair, staying out the way... until she met Martez Ramsey on a late summer night.
Tall, quiet, dark-skinned, tatted, and way too fine for her peace of mind - Tez walked into her life like a problem she should've avoided. A man with a past he don't talk about, enemies he don't mention, and a soft spot he swore he'd never give to nobody.
But one look at her?
That was it.
Their connection was instant, messy, and way too deep.
Arguments that could shake a room, make-ups that feel like heaven, jealousy that borders obsession, and love strong enough to ruin them both.
As Teonna gets pulled deeper into Tez's world - the streets, the secrets, the danger - she has to choose between protecting her heart... or protecting him.
And Tez?
He'll do anything to keep her close.
Even if it means burning bridges, breaking rules, and going to war for the girl who became his weakness.
This is a Detroit love story - real, raw, toxic, passionate, and unforgettable.
Because sometimes the person you should stay away from... is the only one you can't let go.
When 𝐌𝐢𝐚 𝐊𝐢𝐧𝐠𝐬𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐭𝐡 has to move back to Cedarsville, the perfect, glittering village of her childhood, she expects to pick up right where she left off: rich, admired, untouchable.
But Cedarsville remembers, and so does 𝐀𝐮𝐛𝐫𝐞𝐲 𝐖𝐞𝐬𝐭𝐛𝐫𝐨𝐨𝐤.
Once, they were inseparable: two girls building worlds in a treehouse, dreaming about forever.
Until Aubrey kissed her, and Mia called it gross, and everything broke.
Mia's family whisked her away to England. Aubrey stayed behind to become the outcast everyone whispered about.
Now, six years later, Mia's back.
Aubrey's still the same: clever, sharp, a little desperate to be seen, and Mia's still pretending she feels nothing at all.
It's not a love story.
It's obsession, humiliation, revenge, and the kind of attention that burns more than it heals.
They destroy each other slowly, intimately. Because somewhere deep down, they both think it's what they deserve.