Brenda McDonald joined the News Daily after a badly researched exposé at the Sun nearly ended her career, and has been writing about dog shows ever since. Her editor throws her a paragraph about a mistaken identity case involving one Chris Petersen of MPEC, the company whose father’s factory she has always believed killed her dad. She goes to the Flask on a Friday evening to find out what she can and instead finds Allan Montgomery buying her a drink and promising an introduction.
The Journalist and the CEO is the second book in the Hampstead Court series, a love story set in 1995 Hampstead between two people who arrive at each other carrying the specific weight of unresolved histories, and who find, over the course of a relationship that begins with a misunderstanding and a very firm hand, that they are considerably better together than they have been apart.
Chris Petersen spent his twenties travelling to places his father’s money made accessible and his father’s expectations made necessary to escape. He is thirty-five, back in London, managing a company he never wanted and a scandal he did not create, and possessed of the specific quality of someone who has been looking at the world from a distance for long enough to know exactly what he wants when he sees it. He sees Brenda across the table at the Flask and knows immediately. The investigation she is running into his company is, from his perspective, a secondary consideration.
Paula Mann writes both of them from the inside, with the warmth the series is built on. The spanking is explicit and fully described, every implement named and felt, the arousal tracked throughout. The love story is written with the same completeness, because in this series the two have never been separate.
This book contains explicit M/F erotic spanking, bare bottom correction, hand spanking, strap use, domestic discipline within a developing romantic relationship, full nudity, and graphic sexual content between consenting adults.






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