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Believe in Love Again

The peaceful life of David, a gardener entering adulthood, comes to an end when a young, handsome but somewhat strange millionaire is brought into his neighborhood. Gustav is a loner with an ice-cold gaze and a hostile attitude, but for some reason he accepts the presence of his employee, David. He even cross some boundaries of decency with him. Everything for David gets even more complicated when it turns out that Gustav is not the only man who is interested in the black-haired 20-year-old and yet David is already in love with a certain girl. On top of that, all the guys who are interested in David have something of the bad boy in them. Will David be seduced by the aura of unavailability spread by the millionaire Gustav and help him believe in love again? Maybe he will be seduced by the equally unpredictable Greg? Or will it be a third party who will win his heart? In front of you a somewhat disturbing but warm story about the struggle against adversity to win and keep true love. All characters, organizations and events described in the book are fictional. The resemblance to the real ones is purely coincidental. The cover illustration is generated by AI

AmberFullMoon · LGBT+
Not enough ratings
320 Chs

A Man With a Name With a Letter D

Gustav remembered Julius Linden more for his name and history than for his face. As the son of an energy empire, Gustav must have attended official parties even as a teenager, but he never had any interest in the company or in making contacts in this economic world. A few young people were, like him, forced into such parties, but he didn't bother with them. He figured they too would be as boring as their parents.

Julius was then an undersized boy with glasses. He had dark eyes and brown hair. He was serious and quiet. That's how much Gustav remembered about him. Later, he heard this and that about him, but paid no attention to him. He only remembered that his parents had an accident and Julius had to take over the company while still in college. He didn't drop out of college and put the management in the hands of capable directors. He only oversaw the whole thing.

That much Gustav learned from the media, because nothing else interested him.