![]() ![]() She’s waded through a crap ton of pain and there’s always a line of people ready to use her for sex. She’s a mighty force of nature who makes no apologies for who she is. Elliott, meanwhile, has been struggling with less than professional thoughts about Fiona, and against better judgment he agrees to treat her again. ![]() When Fiona begins to recover memories of the night her dominant, Deacon, was stabbed, she refuses to talk to anyone but Elliott. She’s now under the care of a female psychologist and none too pleased about it. As she floats in a medicated fog, Fiona is obsessed with sexual fantasies about the good doctor. Elliott and remitted for an extended stay. Fiona is still in the posh mental institution, having essentially been abandoned by Dr. Note: It is necessary to have read Kick first, and this review contains spoilers pertaining to that book. I’m so glad I did because this time around was better than the first, and I enjoyed every moment of the fascinating, edgy journey. Use is the second book in the Songs of Perdition series and although book 1, Kick, made me quite uncomfortable, I was all too willing to hop onboard the CD Reiss train again. I mean it, again, if you're sensitive this is not the book for you. ![]() Published by Self-Published on June 23rd 2014Ī therapist whose professionalism is about to shatter. ![]()
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