Page 248 of Heartless Legacy

He slips his hands between mine and Holden’s bodies and slaps my clit, at the same time Pax pulls my nipples. “Arrrgggh.” I groan as I detonate.

“Oh, shit.” Holden groans. “I have never. Is this is what it feels like?”

“There it is.” Wolfe coos. “I love it when you squirt like that. I’m a little jealous that Holden’s the one feeling it.”

Holden’s hips stutter and he presses deep as he climaxes. Our chests press together, or hearts thumping in synch. He eases out of me and helps Wolfe flip me over. Wolfe wraps my dishelved ponytail around his fist, and pulls, forcing my neck up and my back to arch.

“You did so good tonight. Making us feel so damn good. Letting us worship your body. So proud of you.” He says as he pistons in and out of my ass. “Such a. Good. Fucking. Girl.”

He cums deep in my ass, groaning against my ear, ringing a mini-orgasm out of me. When he pulls out, I collapse onto my stomach, sucking in air.

My eyes droop. I’m half asleep by the time someone comes back with a warm washcloth to clean me up.

Finn asks, “You still with us, Pet?”

“Mmm.”

“Did you have fun?”

“Mm-hmm.”

“We’re gonna add mandatory fivesomes to our marriage contract. Agreed?”

“Nice try Finn.” Is my sleepy reply. “How about we revisit this conversation if you’re still around after I get my Phd?”

Sleep claims me, drowning out whatever counter argument he offers.

Epilogue

Pax

“You can’t just stop in the middle of the sidewalk, Big Guy.” Thea says, playfully nudging me in the back. She steps around me and sees what’s caused me to halt in my tracks.

My parents are here.Together. I haven’t been keeping up with what’s been happening with them, but the last thing I expected to see was them hanging out in the annex.

“Ah.” She chuckles. “Mr. and Mrs. Federal charges. You wanna go say hi?”

“What are they even doing here?Together?” Finn asks.

Thea laughs even louder, unbothered by the looks she’s getting. “Oh, didn’t you hear? Mr. Sexy Sullivan says they’re stuck together. If they divorce, they lose the spousal immunity in their individual criminal cases.”

I look down at where Thea’s slipped her hand into mine and give hers a gentle squeeze. All those jobs I did, thinking they were for The League, and they weren’t. I’m still having a hard time coming to terms with knowing my mother was pimping me out for her lover, and that my father was a part of locking people away in Rockridge, and ordered Felix Lazarro to torture them until they agreed to his demands. They almost ruined my life.

Thea pushes onto her toes and kisses my cheek. “They don’t matter, Big Guy. They can’t hurt us anymore.”

The investigation is ongoing. I’ve been interviewed by the FBI and local law enforcement, who are all fighting over who has jurisdiction over the case. Parker warned me it could be years before this goes to trial. In the meantime, my parents can’t leave the state, which means there’s always the risk of seeing them around town.

I exhale, pushing thoughts of my parents to the back of my mind. Thea doesn’t judge me for what I’ve done. She doesn’t think less of me because of it, or turn her nose up at me for the number of women I’ve been with. She loves me.Acceptsme, and she’s right, they don’t matter. Theycan’thurt us. We’ve already exposed what they were up to, and The League isn’t protecting them.

Even if the high council wanted to get involved, they wouldn’t. They’ve got their own problems to deal with, with Thea establishing herself as the head of the Adrianakis bloodline. There are a lot of assets in league and historian vaults and in possession of certain legacy families that belong to Thea and Scott Hughes. Not to mention, she’s supposed to be the head of the guardian program.

My official placing is fifth, and rightfully so. My grandfather graciously volunteered to give up his spot on the council, even though he insists he didn’t know what my father was doing. Of the two bloodlines that merged, none of the descendants are willing to uproot their lives and join The League, which means a challenge is still in play for the fourth bloodline.

Thea sent out a petition to have the Cox family name formerly recognized in that spot. When I asked her why she would do that, she said no matter how much of Coxsucker I am; she believes my grandfather is a straight up kind of guy, becausehe never tried to bullshit her, and we shouldn’t be demoted for something we had no control over.

Holden pulled me to the side and expressed a different theory. He thinks our grandfathers knew the truth and were waiting for Scott to have a son that they could bring into The League, so they left the fourth spot empty.

That never happened, and then Thea showed up in town. My dad thinks he was the catalyst for letting women pledge, as part of his plan to overthrow my grandfather, but Holden thinks it was our grandfathers, or someone in their circle, who planted the idea first. That made total sense to me, seeing how a lot of accommodations were made to keep Thea around.