

Vice and Victor
Vice and Victor was inspired by Kesha. When I started writing this series, her legal battle in 2022/2023 was all over the media, and hearing her story—of betrayal, of surviving abuse, of fighting an industry that failed her—cut deep.
I wanted to write something that honored that pain… and the power that grows from it. Mirage, the heroine of Vice and Victor, is a pop star on the brink. To the world, she’s a reckless party girl. In reality, she’s a woman rebuilding herself after being drugged, assaulted, and blacklisted by the man who was meant to protect her.
This book is loud. It's messy. It's raw. It’s about reclaiming your voice when the world calls you crazy. It’s about finding love in the unlikeliest of places—between two men who have also burned and rebuilt. Mirage, Vice, and Victor aren’t here to be pretty. They’re here to rage. To heal. To sing. And to remind us that we get to write our own endings.
I hope this story speaks to you—whether you’ve been silenced, sidelined, or underestimated. This one’s for the girls who scream.

Raven's Luck
Where pain wears leather, and love comes with bruises.
When I started writing Raven’s Luck, I knew I wanted to create a character who was the embodiment of contradictions—tough, sharp, and emotionally untouchable… but aching to be unraveled.
Raven is the classic PI—smart-mouthed, emotionally unavailable, and sexier than sin in a trench coat. But behind that swagger? He's a walking wound. Failed relationships, a suffocating past, a desperate need for control. He’s spent years running from the pieces of himself that don’t fit the mold of masculinity he's been taught to worship. Especially the part of him that’s always looked at his best friends—Vice and Victor—with just a little too much longing.
Then Mirage comes along. Not for him, but she sets things in motion when Vice and Victor ask Raven to look into her grandfather: Gregory Holmsworth, a dying crime boss clinging to his last shreds of power. But Raven’s investigation doesn’t just pull skeletons from Gregory’s closet—it leads him straight to Vixen, a woman who doesn’t just break his rules… she rewrites them.
Vixen isn’t your typical love interest. She’s a Domme with a whip-sharp mind, a brutal sense of justice, and a heart hidden beneath layers of leather and fire. Her boyfriend Gabe (aka Shadow) is a submissive punk rock dream with a soul full of softness and secrets. Together, they see Raven—not just the PI, but the man underneath. And they offer him something he's never had before: a place to belong, where being broken isn’t a flaw—it’s an edge.
Through them, Raven confronts his bisexuality, his trauma, and his own capacity for love and vulnerability. But nothing about Raven’s Luck is simple. Gregory’s criminal empire is falling apart, and the man rising to power will do anything to stay on top—including silencing Vixen forever.
What follows is a high-stakes climax of vengeance, violence, and reclaiming power. When Vixen is assaulted by the man she helped rise, she refuses to be broken. Instead, she burns the whole empire down—with Gabe and Raven by her side.
Raven’s Luck is about more than just crime and kink. It’s about what happens when we let ourselves be seen—really seen—for everything we are. It’s about love that doesn’t play by the rules. And it’s about finally realizing that sometimes the luck we’ve been chasing… has been waiting for us to surrender all along.

Two Way Street
Childhood sweethearts. Wedding plans. Two houses. One heartbreak.
Two Way Street is the emotional, musical chaos of what happens when love hits a red light—and decides to do a burnout instead.
Originally inspired by a Katy Perry song (yes, that one about hot and cold), Two Way Street was the first book written in the Don’t Mess With The Rock Chicks series, but the last to be released in its final form. Why? Because this one had to be perfect. It’s the cracked-open chest, tear-streaked eyeliner, gut-punch of a romance that set the emotional tone for the series.



