Consequence of the Greek’s Revenge by Trish Morey

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Consequence of the Greek’s Revenge by Trish Morey
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His vengeful seduction…
…will bind them together–forever!
Athena Nikolides is wary of being exploited for her newly inherited fortune. But charismatic Alexios Kyriakos is already a billionaire, and with their overwhelmingly intense desire, Athena feels safe with him. So she’s devastated to learn Alexios only wants her to avenge himself against her father! But when the consequence of their undeniable passion is revealed, now he wants her for so much more…

  • File Name:consequence-of-the-greeks-revenge-by-trish-morey.epub
  • Original Title:Consequence of the Greek’s Revenge
  • Creator:
  • Language:en
  • Identifier:uuid:f45c2e4f-e132-4f42-8521-de76eecd01da
  • Publisher:HarperCollinsPublishers
  • Date:2018-09-01
  • File Size:546.510 KB

Table of Content

  • 1. Cover
  • 2. Back Cover Text
  • 3. About the Author
  • 4. Booklist
  • 5. Title Page
  • 6. Copyright
  • 7. Dedication
  • 8. Contents
  • 9. CHAPTER ONE
  • 10. CHAPTER TWO
  • 11. CHAPTER THREE
  • 12. CHAPTER FOUR
  • 13. CHAPTER FIVE
  • 14. CHAPTER SIX
  • 15. CHAPTER SEVEN
  • 16. CHAPTER EIGHT
  • 17. CHAPTER NINE
  • 18. CHAPTER TEN
  • 19. CHAPTER ELEVEN
  • 20. CHAPTER TWELVE
  • 21. CHAPTER THIRTEEN
  • 22. CHAPTER FOURTEEN
  • 23. EPILOGUE
  • 24. Extract
  • 25. About the Publisher

1 comments
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Kiley O
Kiley O

Consequence of the Greek’s Revenge, Book 46 of the One Night With Consequences series, was about Athena Nikolides and Alexios Kyriakos. Estranged from the father who had disinherited her when she was just a teenager, Athena was shocked to learn that, upon his death, he had left his entire fortune and everything he owned to her. Unknown to her, someone wanted to take that fortune away, as fast as he could...and with that, her world was about to change, and not always for the good. There were dark days to come. Alexios, who was thwarted from avenging his father when Athena's father died, had decided to ruin her instead...someone who was innocent of any wrongdoing. He robbed her of the fortune her father had left her, one she had not been expecting. He set her up before he even met her, made certain with their first meeting that she would feel indebted to him, bedded her, and twisted her emotions to his benefit...all to rob her blind. When he learned that Athena was pregnant, he was even more jubilant, for that was one more nail in her father's coffin...one more victory for Alexios to take his revenge against the man, a man that would never know of his downfall because...well, he was dead, right? So it made sense to take vengeance against a dead man who would never know, right? Then he forced her to move into his apartment when he knew she didn't want to, Alexios was confused as to why she wasn't happier. His thoughts on it? "What was her problem? She must see that she was better off here." Better off with the man who tricked her out of her fortune? A man who forced her to move in with him when he learned of her baby? Live with a man who had no scruples and used her for vengeance when SHE had no part in what her father had/had not done? Then he tried to force her to give up the work she loved. Then he tried to woo her back into his bed...after that betrayal? Seriously? Then he thought baring his soul would make her love him again? Really? And then he was, what, shocked that it didn't work? "He’d thought they could clear the air. Start afresh. So he’d laid his cards on the table and she’d flung every one of them back in his face." When that didn't work? "And now there was only one card left to deal. One card he’d been hoping to share in more romantic circumstances. I love you,’ he said." REALLY?! He called THAT LOVE?! I wanted to hate this book. I really did. For me, it wasn't a true love story but more along the lines of a thriller, without the gore and the death. But what Alexios did made him, not the Hero of the story, but rather the Villain. But the way the story ended touched my heart like no other. Yes, it was a hard book to read and I wanted to lash out in anger with every hateful twist and turn of the knife that Alexios wielded. No, I did not enjoy reading about how he treated Athena. But that ending...well, you'll just have to read it for yourself to see why I changed my mind about the novel. While I couldn't give it a five-star rating, neither did it merit only one star. Some will say (and have already said) that Athena forgave him too quickly, but...did she? I'll let you decide...

Reply2 years ago