Prolouge
Consent was her rebellion.
Iris Clarke
Twenty years old and drowning in silence. After surviving a suicide attempt triggered by a past of sexual violence and gaslighting, she returns home stitched, sedated, and emotionally hollow. Her world is grayscale, her hands trembling over a sketchbook she no longer touches. Her talent for art—once praised, now buried—is a ghost of the girl she used to be.
Enter Adrian Archer.
Tattoo artist. Ex-con. Eight years her senior. Covered in black ink and colder than steel, Adrian doesn’t believe in healing—he believes in control. When Iris is sent to him by a mentor who knows too much, she’s met with resistance. Adrian doesn’t want her in his studio. He doesn’t want her weakness. He doesn’t want her pain. But he takes one look at the sketch she drops, and suddenly, she’s in.
What begins as observation—inks, needles, outlines—twists into something else. Something feral. Watching him work is like watching power incarnate. And for the first time, Iris wants. Not to be loved. Not to be saved. To feel. To submit—on her own terms.
But submission isn’t surrender.
Through whispered commands behind thin walls, through ropes and feathers and slow-burning tension, Iris begins to unlearn what was stolen from her. Pleasure is redefined. Pain becomes structure. And consent? Consent becomes sacred.
Adrian doesn’t fix her. He doesn’t want to. But he teaches her how to draw the line—and how to cross it on her own. Their encounters are raw, intimate, threaded with dominance and discipline, with power layered under skin and ink. But the line between control and harm is razor-thin. And both of them have scars.
As her abuser circles closer—jealous, threatened, and dangerously unhinged—Iris must decide what her survival is worth. When David leaks her secrets, when her art is mocked and her name is dragged, she doesn’t fall. She paints. And in the spotlight of a gallery soaked in past trauma, she reclaims the narrative with bloody elegance.
Inked My Sins, is a dark, erotic, psychological journey into healing through power play and sensual trust. It explores the edges of pain and pleasure, the danger of projection, and the defiance of reclaiming one’s body. For fans of morally grey men who break the rules—and broken girls who rewrite them.
He gave her rules. She gave him obedience. But only one of them walked away with power.



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