Rating: ★★★★½

Quick Take

This one’s less about healing and more about reclaiming. Lola and the Millionaires: Part Two cranks up the heat, drops the outside world in her lap, and dares her to choose herself — over fear, over trauma, over guilt. It’s messier, spicier, and yeah, not as emotionally precise as Part One… but I still inhaled it like I had something to prove.

Power, Packmates, and Plot (Yes, in That Order)

Let’s get one thing straight: this is the sex book. Sure, there’s workplace sabotage, a stalker lurking in the background, and some attempt at external plot tension — but what we’re really here for is Lola finally getting emotionally and physically tangled up with the rest of her pack. And they absolutely deliver.

Caleb is soft and inexperienced until he’s not (hello, rut scene). Wes is the stoic bodyguard type who’s been quietly in love with Lola for ages — and when she finally sees him? Game over. Matthieu goes from emotionally unavailable silver fox to “I will burn down the world for you” in under three chapters. And don’t get me started on Cyrus, whose sunshine-dom energy is either your favorite trope or a bit of a cringe-fest (I’m still deciding).

There’s a lot of steam, a lot of emotions, and a lot of complicated feelings that don’t always get the space they deserve. But even when it’s chaotic, it’s still fun as hell.

Still a Beta, Still a Baddie

What makes this duet stand out continues here: Lola stays a Beta. No surprise heat cycle, no hidden Omega designation, no magical transformation. She’s just… herself. And it’s enough. Actually, it’s everything. She owns her boundaries, checks in with herself constantly, and doesn’t let any Alpha energy override her sense of self. That doesn’t mean she doesn’t break down — she does. But she does it on her own terms.

Her trauma is still there, and while the book doesn’t spend quite as much time unpacking it as the first did, it doesn’t forget it either. Her growth happens in small moments — her asking for what she wants, letting people love her, choosing to believe them. That, more than anything, is what made this sequel hit.

Should You Read It?

Read if you like:

  • Pack dynamics that are as spicy as they are emotional
  • Bodyguard Alphas with big marshmallow energy
  • Found family that includes four-way cuddle piles
  • Reverse harem that actually shows emotional intimacy (and hot foursomes)
  • Beta heroines who hold the reins, even in knotting scenes

Maybe skip if:

  • You’re not into A/B/O worlds at all (yes, there’s scenting, yes, there’s knotting)
  • Some of the harem dynamics feel too fast or uneven
  • You prefer slow burns that stay slow (this one accelerates)
  • Cyrus being your literal boss AND your dom weirds you out

Content Flags (non-spoilery):
Stalking, references to sexual trauma, one disturbing video scene, BDSM elements, high heat, age gap, mild power imbalance, polyamorous relationship with multiple dynamics

Final Take

This book didn’t hit quite as cleanly as Part One — some pairings felt rushed, some emotional beats missed their mark, and I wouldn’t have minded if Lola bonded with fewer men and built deeper relationships. But the emotional payoff? Still good. The spice? Better. And the ending? Wrapped it all up in the kind of cathartic, chosen-family way that made me tear up a little.

Did I want more Leo? Always. Did I cry when she finally felt the bond? You bet. Am I already re-reading the foursome scene in the theater balcony? Don’t worry about it.

This book gave me heat, healing, and all six flavors of chaos. And honestly? I’d do it again.

Find it here on Amazon or read for free here with Kindle Unlimited.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *