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Hello First name / Beautiful Reader
 
There was a moment a couple of years ago when I wasn’t sure I’d write another book.
I had been stuck in a spiral of creative burnout. Every idea I started felt flat. Every page I wrote, I ended up deleting. I had stories in my head, but none of them felt right. It was the kind of writer’s block that’s hard to explain, not about discipline or deadlines, but about doubt. Nothing flowed. Nothing felt alive.
So I did what I rarely allow myself to do when I’m in a rut: I walked away. I stopped trying to push through and decided to take a real break.
 
My family and I went on vacation to the east coast of Florida, not far from Sarasota. We stayed in a beach house just a short walk from the ocean. Every morning, I’d sit on the porch with tea in hand, salty breeze in my hair, and the sound of waves in the distance. The heat was heavy in that sweet, sleepy Florida way, and the days stretched long and unhurried.
 
I read. I rested. I listened.
And then, without even trying, the idea came: 
A mysterious island.
A woman taken from her everyday life.
A twisted marriage competition.
A dangerous, broken man trying to help her escape the very world he was born into.
 
That’s how Lavish Lies was born (think Bachelor x Survivor)
 
When I meet Easton Bay, my perfectly ordinary life changes forever.
I’m kidnapped and taken to the island of York, where powerful men pull the strings of world leaders and play deadly games for entertainment. The only way out? Win a twisted contest designed to choose Easton’s bride. All but one of us will lose our lives. And the prize for survival? A forced marriage.
Easton’s father runs the island. He’s cruel and controlling. Easton is nothing like him—or at least, that’s what I want to believe. He’s dangerous in his own way, but he’s the only person who seems to want to protect me.
The catch? I have to trust him.
And I might already be falling in love with him.
 
I wrote the entire first draft of this book with sand still stuck to my ankles, waves crashing in the background, and sunscreen on my skin. Something about the ocean breeze and being away cracked me open creatively. And what came out was dark, seductive, and full of edge-of-your-seat intensity.
 
This is one of those stories that came fast once it found me, and I still think it’s one of my most intense, unputdownable reads.
1-click now:
 ebook 
 
Whether you’re heading to the beach this summer or just craving an escape that feels sun-soaked and dangerous, I hope you’ll let this story take you away for a while.
With love and heat,
Charlotte 💋
Start reading Lavish Lies Now
Prologue- Easton
They are not supposed to be here. They are innocent and polite and sweet. Some of them may even be kind.
They think that they are here of their own free will.
They think that it’s a game.
They think that everything is going to be okay.
I know the truth.
They are not here by accident. They were all carefully chosen.
Selected.
Identified.
Vetted.
Some are here because they are gorgeous, others because they will be good at bearing children. A few are lost souls who no one will ever look for.
But some, well, they are here because of their ability to fight.
Propensity to fight.
Willingness to fight.
Not everyone wants a fighter. Not everyone wants someone to resist their every move.
But some of them do. And these are the ones who will pay the most. And to find a girl who is both beautiful and a fighter? Well, that’s everything, isn’t it?
Of course, there will be the ones who fail. Most will fail at least once, but some will fail for good.
We call this game a competition to keep them pacified. Calm. Quiet.
But they had all lost their freedom a long time before they ever stepped foot on the island of York.
All but one will lose their lives.
 
Chapter 1- Everly
Freedom is difficult to describe when you have it.
You go through life bogged down by life’s little problems. You go to work at a job you don’t particularly like.
You get paid way too little.
Thirty-four thousand dollars a year.
Your rent and monthly expenses are way too high.
Fifteen-hundred in rent and another three-hundred in student loan payments plus utilities. Of course, there’s the myriad of other little but not inconsequential expenses.
The occasional lunch out.
Happy hour.
A movie once in a while.
Is this what it means to be an adult? I guess so.
After I graduated with my undergraduate degree in Psychology, I decided to work for a few years to save some money before going on to graduate school for my doctorate.
Of course, I wanted to work in the field. The only problem was that the only job I was qualified to do with just a bachelor’s degree was to answer phones at a marriage therapist’s office.
I scheduled appointments and dealt with the insurance companies. The job wasn’t anything I ever wanted to do and I hated it.
I would sit in the freezer of an office with the zipper of my dress pants digging into my stomach, and I would feel sorry for myself. College was hard, but it was nothing in comparison to the grind of everyday life. School was broken up into semesters, and semesters into weeks, and weeks into classes and assignments. Even if a class was unbearable, as some requirements were, at least I knew when it would come to an end.
I can still remember the contempt that I felt for my job and my life, in general. Days became weeks and then months and years and everything in my life stayed the same. Clients called. Appointments were scheduled. Lunch was eaten. Money was made. Bills were paid.
But looking back now, trapped in this God-forsaken place, I would give anything to be there again.
To have that kind of freedom again.
“Number 19,” a loud deep voice is piped in on the loud speaker. “It’s your turn.”
My heart sinks and I take a deep breath.
“I don’t have all day,” she says loudly.
I know what to do and I do it quickly. I pull off my tank top and take off my pajama bottoms. When the door opens, I’m completely nude. She looks me up and down.
I’m used to their glares. I don’t know her name, I know her simply as C. There are twenty-six guards here. All called by different letters of the alphabet.
“Let’s go,” she says, leading me to the end of the hallway.
The ground is cold and wet under my bare feet. I’m ushered into a large shower room. Five others are there as well. We exchange knowing glances, but none of us dare to say a word.
We have exactly two minutes to wash our hair and bodies. After that, the water turns off automatically and the guards throw us a small hand towel to dry ourselves.
It wasn’t that long ago when I worked at an office all day hating my job.
It wasn’t that long ago that I thought that I didn’t have any freedom.
Now, I know better.
Now, I know what real imprisonment is like.
Now, I know that the life that I hated so much before is one that I would do anything to get back to now.
After drying myself off, C leads me back to my cell. The walk back is even colder than before, but I appreciate being given the opportunity to clean myself.
“E will be in shortly,” C says. “It’s your turn to be shown.”
My throat clenches up in fear.
To. Be. Shown.
What does that mean?
 
Chapter 2- Everly 
Being shown.
I’ve heard whispers about this, but none of the prisoners really know what’s going to happen. The guards? They know. Of course, they know, but they aren’t talking.
When C leaves, I put my pajamas back on and sit down on the bed. I wrap my hands around my knees, resting my head on top.
I wait.
A few minutes later, E comes in. Her hair is cut short, blunt at the edges, right by her chin. Her eyes are severe, without an inkling of compassion. Her skin is pale. Her bright red lips stand in stark contrast to the gray monotone uniform that all the guards down here wear.
Besides the bright red lips, she is not wearing a smudge of any other makeup.
She lays a garment bag and a big black box on my bed.
After washing and drying her hands, she opens her makeup box. It’s so large that it has wheels like a suitcase. She gets out a big spotlight and shines it in my face. There is no mirror here, so I cannot see what she is doing as she starts to apply foundation to my face. All I see are the tools. Foundation brush. Concealer brush. Eyeshadow primer. Eyeshadow brush. Highlighter. After a few minutes, I lose track of everything that she’s doing.
“So…how did you get this job?” I ask. Partly out of curiosity and partly out of boredom.
I haven’t talked to anyone in days and life gets tedious that way.
But E ignores me.
“You’re just not going to answer me?” I ask. She gives me a little shrug. Progress.
“Are you not allowed to talk?” I ask.
“Of course, I am,” she says. Apparently, I have insulted her.
“So, why don’t you answer me?”
She shrugs again.
“I applied for it.”
“You applied for it?”
“Did I stutter?” she asks.
Now, it’s my turn to shrug.
“So…you don’t live here?” I ask.
I don’t really know where here is, but I hope that she can help me figure it out.
“I just work here. I live on the mainland.”
Wow. There’s that word.
Mainland.
How long have I been here? I’m not sure exactly. But in all that time, I didn’t realize that we were on an island.
Do you know what happens here? I want to ask. Do you know that we are all prisoners? You must. Of course, you do.
I want to ask, but I don’t know who I’m talking to. She’s a stranger. And just because she’s a woman, doesn’t mean that she is necessarily on my side. She is an employee, after all.
So, I decide to ask something else instead.
“So, what does E stand for?”
“It’s just a letter.”
“You don’t have a regular name?”
“Not here.”
“Why?”
“No one here has names. Privacy reasons.”
I look straight into her eyes. Is she trying to tell me something? Reach out? Or is she just stating the facts?
“My name is Everly,” I say. I need to make a connection, any way I can.
“No.” E shakes her head. “Your name is Number 19. And you will never mention Everly again, if you know what’s good for you.”
It sounds like a threat, but it’s not. More like sound advice from someone who has a little sympathy for me. At least, I hope so.
If she won’t tell me anything about herself or this place, then maybe she will tell me something about what is about to happen.
“Why are you here?” I ask. “Why are you doing my makeup? Dressing me up?”
“Because that’s my job.”
“But what’s it for?”
“You are going to be shown.”
“What does that mean?”
“There will be a competition. A contest with judges. Only, it won’t look like a contest. Everyone will want to be there. It’s a privilege just to be chosen. You will all live in a big house together. Play. Have fun. But every few days, someone will leave.”
The way she says the word ‘leave’ sends shivers through my body.
“What do you mean by leave?”
“There will only be one winner. And the winner will get to leave with her life.”
“And…go home?”
“No.” E shakes her head. “You will never go home. You will be his.”
“Whose?”
“I’ve already said too much.”
“That doesn’t exactly sound like a contest you’d want to win,” I say after a moment.
“It’s not. But it’s better than the alternative.”
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