← Back to search
Cover of Westminster Whore

Westminster Whore

Michel Russell (2010)

SubgenreErotic Romance
Age groupAdult 18+
Content ratingPG-13
Pages ()
SettingContemporary

Content levels

ViolenceNot rated
Sexual contentModerate
LanguageNot rated

Trigger warnings

Not yet tagged

Positive tags

Not yet tagged

Tropes

Not yet tagged

Themes

Not yet tagged

Synopsis

In 2009, a 24 year old blonde beauty Fernley Valentine, and his ginger-haired cute-as-button, angelic face friend Jamie Vaughan, a year younger, decide to quite the rag trade as top models from endless travelling all over the world because a rich members' only gay club - The Infinity Club - in Shepherd Market, Westminster caught their eye. When told that an initiation sex test is involved with a sinister middle-aged owner, Bobby Beaumont, which may allow them to join the other 'boys at the bar' to entertain rich clients, they decide that this was for them, and they pass with flying colours! Living almost within a stone's throw in an apartment block at Marble Arch, it seemed that Fernley had attracted a very rich banker from Hampstead whose son objected with fury, but then hesitated for a reason, while Jamie attracted more of the clientele' that liked the 'teenage type trade', and both with their strange lifestyles and invariable consequences, it was to the extent, that one of their client's, was more deadlier than the male! Was the heart of Mayfair the right move? Did Shepherd Market with all its past notoriety from the very wealthy to the underworld (nook or cranny), bring a dangerous excitement to an educated one from Hampshire and a smart Jewish one from the East End of London, or was it a mistake because destiny had already been written in the stars, for it to be changed!? Will you stroll down to Shepherd Market to its up-market shops, expensive boutiques, cosmopoltain restaurants, notoious Victorian pubs, lanes and alleyways, because its secret may tempt you to try and linger for a while? But you must be bold! So are you really ready for the dare, or perhaps, its best to leave well alone?