Plot Summary
Midnight Intruder's Shadow
Abigail's peaceful night shatters when she is assaulted in the shadows of her own apartment by a masked intruder. Paralyzed by terror, she submits to his commands and physical dominance. The chilling thrill lingers—we learn the act blurs the lines between fear and forbidden desire for Abby. This terrifying event is just the beginning, exposing a wound in Abby's psyche and becomes the flashpoint for her twisted journey ahead. It defines the complex state she's thrust into: craving control, hating her weakness, and haunted by an unspeakable violation. The prologue sears with trauma, shame, and a dangerous allure, establishing the central conflict of submission and survival that will propel Abby through love, obsession, and darkness.
Obsession Across the Street
Dane, successful but emotionally numb, confesses his obsession for Abigail, the barista he watches daily at her café—and nightly through a window across the street. He's purchased the house purely to sate his compulsion to observe her. Dane catalogues everything about Abby, from her art-stained wrists to her artistic chaos and her trinkets. Admitting his own psychopathy, Dane fixates on Abby as his "favorite malady," determined to own her flesh and soul, convinced she is "already his." His lust is not love but a dark, gripping need for control. This chilling intimacy from a predator's perspective exposes the deep roots of mutually entwined obsession and voyeurism that will suffuse the story.
Coffee, Trauma, and Temptation
In the bustling café, Abby and Dane's paths keep crossing, their chemistry palpable beneath routine greetings and cautious smiles. Dane plays the perfect gentleman, but his gaze strips Abby emotionally bare. Flashbacks from her attack haunt her—a gloved hand, a knife, a suffocating skull mask. Abby tries grounding techniques, but her body's mixed reactions betray her: heat and shame coexist with fear. Dane's touch, meant to calm her, causes Abby to spill coffee in panic, yet he steadies her, asks her out, and tries to break her shell. Yet Abby recoils, ashamed by her trauma and twisted arousal, unable to accept caring even as she yearns for it. Their dynamic is charged, hinting at deeper darkness both resist and crave.
Anonymous Fantasies Revealed
Unable to sleep, wracked by nightmares, Abby logs onto an anonymous erotica forum, where she exchanges explicit messages with "GentAnon," a kindred stranger who mirrors her darkest desires. Their dynamic—a push-pull of dominance and submission—acts as catharsis and fuel for her compulsions. Abby finds relief and connection here, more so than with real people. Yet she is repulsed by herself, certain she attracts "predatory men" and deserves what happened. This late-night dialogue oscillates between control, punishment, and longing for release, hinting both at healing and further entanglement. The secret power of anonymity and shame deepens Abby's fractured sense of self and foreshadows devastating reveals.
Dark Knight's Cold Plans
Dane plots not just to win Abby, but to orchestrate her dependence. Hiring a petty criminal, he arranges a public theft targeting Abby, intending to swoop in as her protector and foster gratitude and need. Watching Abby interact with her friend and with customers, Dane seethes with dangerous jealousy. His methods shift from observation to direct interference, believing only engineered crisis can break Abby's walls and bring her to submission. His cold calculation is chilling; even help is a means of subjugation. This chapter peels away Dane's charming mask to reveal a steely, remorseless manipulator—one who sees people as pieces in his obsessive game.
Market Theft and White Knight
During a busy day at the market where Abby sells her art, a hired thief steals her purse. Abby's reaction is fear clashing with resignation—trauma from her recent attack still fresh. Dane appears, "coincidentally," to comfort and examine her injuries, forcefully inserting himself as rescuer. Abby is grateful, but bristles at his offer to buy all her paintings, resenting the implied control and humiliation. Pride and longing war inside her. Her trauma and his possessiveness draw them together and push them apart, their boundary-testing dance intensifying through this orchestrated crisis.
Seduction and Sabotage
Dane and Abby's first real date unfolds atop an elegant hotel rooftop. The setting is idyllic, yet tension simmers beneath: Abby, haunted by past family trauma and shame, tries to let herself be cared for, but recoils at perceived control over her through money and charm. A wrong word triggers flashbacks to her assault, turning Dane's kiss into a source of terror and twisted desire. Both long for connection, but keep slipping into roles of victim and would-be savior. Their mutual fear—of being truly seen—wounds the evening, and they once again drift apart, each feeling rejected and exposed.
Painting Pain in Shadows
Back in her apartment, Abby turns to her paints after another fraught encounter. She cannot confide in family or friends, so she channels her trauma and compulsion into hidden canvases: rope around flesh, bruised thighs, a gloved hand at a pale throat. Her secret artwork—the very essence of her disturbing fantasies—remains locked away, reflecting her deepest shame and need. Meanwhile, Dane breaks into her home to gather clues, entering Abby's intimate space under false pretenses. He discovers her stash of dark paintings and confirms what he suspected: Abby's desires and needs perfectly match his own cravings for dominance and control. Her vulnerability deepens his obsession and his resolve to claim her completely.
Boundaries Crossed and Broken
As Dane maneuvers to bind Abby tighter, their "normal" interactions become more loaded. Dane subtly asserts more authority, comes to her rescue when a new neighbor menaces her, and draws out her submission. Abby begins to surrender, both terrified and liberated by the prospect of belonging to someone powerful enough to both hurt and protect her. Meanwhile, their online sexual games reach a crescendo, culminating in Abby's emotional and physical surrender in person—she signs contracts of submission, allowing herself to be collared and dominated by Dane. Both are unmasked in their need and darkness, yet neither shares the truest, most dangerous secrets still embedded between their souls.
Dinner, Control, and Confession
Now openly together, Abby and Dane navigate the challenges of public partnership. Abby's pride and scars clash with Dane's possessiveness; debates arise over accepting gifts, money, and support. Both struggle to free themselves from old hurts—Abby's from her controlling family, Dane's from his inheritance and ruthless upbringing. Their negotiation of boundaries becomes literal, with contracts of care, rules of submission, and explicit exercises of dominance and consent. In private, their sexual connection pushes Abby to the edge—her body finally yields to pleasure and pain, her sense of security in Dane's arms igniting true intimacy. Secrets from their pasts, especially Abby's, begin to surface, drawing them closer, but setting the stage for devastation.
Sweetness, Shame, and Strain
Invited to a wedding at an old plantation, Abby is forced to confront her well-heeled, emotionally abusive family. Under the scrutiny of her mother and uncle, Abby's low self-worth and years of feeling like a disappointment boil over. Dane stands by her, fiercely rebuffing the barbs—his cold anger defending her, but also opening her old wounds. The occasion marks a turning point: Abby admits more of her trauma to Dane, sharing her history of sexual assault and guilt-ridden shame. His reaction is outrage on her behalf and reassurances of care. Their bond grows, but unspoken fears linger, and both fail to admit the entirety of their secrets.
Desire and Denial
In the aftermath, Abby clings to Dane, desperate for solace. Their sexual games escalate—gags, ropes, punishment, and forced submission dissolve her boundaries and leave her floating in a haze of compliance and pleasure. Dane finds his own catharsis and transcendence, feeling alive and in control as her absolute master. Yet, undercurrents of unease, hints of predatory stalking, and the holding back of their truest selves persist. Abby yearns to be more than the sum of her wounds, while Dane basks in ownership, convinced that only through total devotion can either of them be healed.
Contracts of Submission
Their relationship crystallizes in explicit agreement: Abby signs away her autonomy in a BDSM contract, giving Dane carte blanche to command, punish, and reward her. With collar and rope, she is transformed from fractured victim to cherished possession. Publicly, Abby learns to balance her pride with surrender, reconciling fierce independence with a craving for protection. Privately, she is tested: her body finally blooms to pleasure through pain, and she discovers peace in being fully seen, fully known, even at her most ruined. For Dane, the contract provides not just sex but the power to define both their realities—he begins to see Abby as salvation, even as darker impulses stir beneath.
Sins Shared in Storm
A beach trip turns transcendent when a summer storm inspires vulnerability. Abby and Dane bare long-held secrets: her trauma and inability to leave "home," his aristocratic lineage and family disdain. The cleansing rain washes away shame, and their bodies and souls unite in the shower—the most passionate, loving, and equal connection either has known. Abby is at last able to say "I love you," and though Dane cannot return the words, he commits his care. For the first time, their union feels almost redemptive—a hard-won moment of peace before the encroaching darkness returns.
Collared in the Dark
Now living together, Abby fully submits to Dane as her master. She is collared, marked, played with, and punished. Public defiance is turned to private surrender; arguments about money and control are resolved through trust and negotiated boundaries. Abby's pride shifts from resistance to strength, the act of giving herself up becoming a new form of agency. For Dane, each act of dominance, each word of praise or punishment, forges a deeper bond. Yet, the thrill of possession is shadowed by unresolved secrets and a seed of violence that has yet to be truly uprooted.
Public Masks, Private Scars
The dreamy stability of Abby and Dane's dynamic is threatened when Abby is confronted by her manipulative mother at the wedding. Public slights reveal private scars. Dane's fury rises, and Abby's old fears of worthlessness flare. Their confrontation becomes a catalyst, pushing Abby to admit the depths of her family's emotional neglect, the true source of her difficulty accepting care—and the challenge of learning to receive love as well as pain. Dane's angry protection offers comfort, but both sense that the surface peace they've created cannot last without confronting what still haunts—and defines—them.
Family Ghosts and Confrontations
In the aftershock of the familial encounter, Abby finally opens up to Dane about the root cause of her trauma: being raped at a young age, the subsequent guilt over her involuntary pleasure, the emotional abandonment of her family, and the shame that led her into isolation. Dane's reaction is a mix of vengeful outrage and unconditional support. Abby learns that true healing can only come through confession and honest connection—and through the strength to stand up for herself, even in the face of fresh danger and old ghosts.
Trauma's Root Unearthed
Abby is stalked and cornered again by her predatory neighbor, Ron. But this time, empowered by Dane's support and her own resolve, she fights back and escapes. The aftermath is harrowing but redemptive: she unburdens herself to Dane, who swears to protect her. Their sexual encounter is stripped of games and roles—just raw, fierce passion, two broken but willing souls clinging to each other for love and comfort. Yet, in the background, Dane's capacity for violence surges, and lines between hero and antihero begin to blur.
Claws, Gags, and Surrender
Dane tracks down Ron and exacts brutal, lethal retribution for his assault on Abby, ensuring her safety through blood and force. The narrative shifts: vigilante justice, once a fantasy, becomes reality. Consumed by self-justifying love and obsession, Dane can no longer distinguish between protector and predator. Meanwhile, Abby's faith in Dane deepens, even as Franklin's suspicions about Dane's past arise. The seeds of doubt, obsession, and complicity are sown in these final acts of submission and violence.
Predators and Prey Reversed
Franklin's revelation that Dane may have been living across from Abby all along—watching, waiting—prompts Abby to investigate. She breaks into the powder blue house, uncovering a shrine of her own art, personal effects she thought lost, and the mask used by her attacker. The walls close in as clues she's overlooked become damning. Shock, betrayal, and horror crystallize as the narrative's darkest revelations come to light.
Stalker's Shrines Exposed
Abby is forced to confront Dane's absolute duplicity—her lover, master, anonymous pen pal, and masked violator are all the same man. The violence, obsession, and games have all been orchestrated by him. Her world is shattered—every moment of trust, submission, and so-called healing now feels like a deeper wound. Dane's attempts to justify himself, to claim their love through force, become a nightmarish echo of the trauma she sought to escape. The boundaries between love and compulsion, submission and predation, are irrevocably destroyed.
The Unmasking
Dane presses his advantage, refusing to let Abby go—even as she tries to flee him, even as her horror overwhelms her old longing. He drugs and subdues her, determined to possess her completely, body and soul. The narrative closes on a note of devastating ambiguity: is this the ruination of Abby, or the consummation of Dane's unrepentant compulsion? Every boundary has been crossed; every secret is out. Trust and love have become indistinguishable from betrayal and violation.
Analysis
Julia Sykes' Compulsion is a deeply unsettling exploration of obsession, trauma, and the search for healing within darkness. Rather than offering a simple "dark romance," the novel walks a razor's edge, scrutinizing the interplay between victimhood and agency, consent and violation, love and compulsion. Through meticulous use of dual perspectives, Sykes denies readers the comfort of clear morality—forcing us to question not only Dane's actions but also Abby's complicity in her own subjugation. The use of anonymous online confessions and physical contracts literalizes the ambiguities of consent and desire, problematizing the fantasy of safe surrender. At its core, the novel interrogates whether true intimacy can exist when built on secrets, power imbalances, and deep psychological wounds. The final unmasking devastates any hope of redemptive love untainted by compulsion, leaving readers grappling with the uneasy reality that sometimes healing and destruction emerge from the same act. Compulsion neither pathologizes nor glamorizes the dark spaces it explores; instead, it invites reflection on catharsis, survivorhood, and the ethics of desire in a dangerously broken world.
Review Summary
Most readers found Compulsion to be an addictive, darkly thrilling stalker romance featuring a psychopathic MMC (Dane) and a shy barista/artist FMC (Abigail). Reviewers frequently praised the intense chemistry, BDSM elements, and shocking cliffhanger ending. Common criticisms included pacing issues in the middle, underdeveloped plot versus romance focus, and some readers objecting to non-consensual elements. The audiobook narration received particular praise. The book averaged 3.63 stars, with most engaged readers eager to continue the trilogy.
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Characters
Abigail Foster
Abby is a sensitive, gifted painter estranged from a wealthy but emotionally abusive family. Her crisp manners and sunny disposition mask deep wounds: she survived a traumatic sexual assault in her youth and internalized the guilt and shame of her body's unwanted arousal. Abby's life, driven by daily routines and art, is shattered when an intruder assaults her—plunging her into a cycle of fear, compulsion, erotic longing, and self-reproach. Vulnerable but also courageous, Abby seeks catharsis through anonymous sexual conversation online and in her secret paintings. Her capacity for trust is fragile; she struggles to balance her yearning to surrender with a desperate clinging to independence. Throughout the story, Abby's development is marked by moments of agency—fighting off predators, confessing traumas, demanding honesty—and by her dangerous willingness to forgive and submit. Ultimately, she is both victim and survivor, forever navigating the line between pleasure and pain, autonomy and surrender.
Dane Graham
Dane is an English ex-aristocrat and surgeon, self-declared psychopath, whose affect is outwardly polished and charming. Internally, he is ruled by compulsion and a need for power—most viscerally fixated on Abigail. He orchestrates her life from the shadows: stalking, engineering crises, and finally, violating her while masked. As her online confidante and real-life lover, Dane is at once her sanctuary and her greatest peril, a master manipulator whose longing for connection is filtered through violence and erotic domination. His desire for Abby is a mix of genuine care, deep-seated need for control, and a black hole of possessiveness. Dane's psychology is complex: he is capable of tenderness and devastation, love and objectification, empathy and monstrous acts. His growth is marked by an increasing inability to separate love from compulsion, culminating in the shattering revelation of his crimes.
Franklin
Franklin, Abby's neighbor, is the platonic ally who grounds her socially and witnesses (unbeknownst to himself, often) the manipulations and dangers that surround her. Encouraging and authentic, Franklin is one of Abby's only sources of genuine, judgment-free support. His suspicions about Dane bring the unraveling truth to light, and his gentle concern highlights what a relationship based on mutual respect and care might look like, in stark contrast with Dane's consuming darkness.
Stacy
Stacy manages the café where Abby works and acts as a subtle maternal figure—perceptive, gently insistent, and determined to safeguard Abby's well-being. She is a stabilizing presence, offering empathy and support as Abby's trauma threatens to upend her life. Stacy's interventions—suggesting Abby take time off, offering a listening ear—provide Abby with crucial moments of reflection and clarity.
Ron
Ron is the archetypal threat—a real-world predator whose intrusion into Abby's space reignites her traumas. He serves as both a "test" for Abby's development (her ability to fight back) and as a lens through which Dane's violent capacity for vengeance is fully revealed. Ron's menacing presence distills the ever-present dangers Abby faces, and his eventual demise at Dane's hands marks a turn from fantasy to deadly reality.
Dane's Family (Earl, Mother, Brother)
Offstage, Dane's English aristocratic family shape his psychology: an abusive, cowardly father; a calculating, status-conscious mother; and a brother who replaces Dane as heir after Dane's self-imposed exile. Their coldness, expectations, and neglect foster Dane's view of others as objects to be controlled, and his belief that true connection is impossible without domination.
Abigail's Family (Mother, Father, Uncle Jeffrey)
Abigail's family, old-money Southerners, have always measured love in terms of performance and public image. They use finances—and emotional withholding—as tools to control and belittle Abby. Their inability to nurture her, their insistence on superficial perfection ("get the freckle removed"), and their disregard for her trauma not only drive Abby's isolation, but also her desperate longing for acceptance and care.
GentAnon
GentAnon, Dane's anonymous persona on the erotic forum, establishes the hidden connection between them. He encourages, manipulates, and mirrors Abby's darkest fantasies, drawing her out and binding her emotionally even before their physical relationship begins. This identity acts as both dark confidant and grooming tool, blurring identity and intent—until their realities inevitably merge.
Tom
Tom, Abby's debutante ball escort, initiates the cycle of assault, guilt, and compulsion that haunts Abby. His repeated assaults, and Abby's coerced pleasure, become the blueprint for her later sexual psychology and the patterns that trap her with dangerous men. Tom's death, and Abby's subsequent feelings of culpability, cement her belief in her own unworthiness.
Plot Devices
Dual Point of View
By switching between Abby and Dane's voices, the narrative grants insight into both victim and perpetrator, revealing their motivations, doubts, and desires. This structure both humanizes and demonizes Dane, complicates our judgments of Abby's complicity in her own subjugation, and maximizes suspense—readers know more than characters do, often bracing for inevitable collisions.
Anonymity, Masks, and Secret Selves
Dane's use of multiple identities—neighbor, stranger, online pen pal, lover, and attacker—creates layers of deception that heighten psychological suspense. The motif of masks (skull, GentAnon screenname, "perfect" exteriors) externalizes internal duplicities, turning trust into landmines and masking intention with performance. Abby's use of online erotic forums mirrors Dane's own duplicity, blurring the moral lines and implicating both in the unmasking.
Contracts and Symbolic Agreements
Explicit contracts—NDAs about pasts, and BDSM agreements—serve as both legal and psychological constructions, formalizing power dynamics and providing perceived safety in dangerous exchanges. They literalize the emotional stakes: can boundaries be trusted, and what does consent mean when the very rules are written by the one in power?
Art and Physical Evidence
Abby's paintings and trinkets, stored and cherished, act as windows into her unconscious, coded cries for help and understanding. Dane's collection of her art, the theft of her clothing, and the recreation of her life in his hidden house conjure chilling shrines to obsession and raise questions about ownership, memory, and use of physical reminders in compulsion.
Foreshadowing and Revealed Clues
Early details—Dane's house purchase, the thefts, his "gentleman" mask, the way GentAnon knows too much—build a narrative of slow exposure. These breadcrumbs accrue until the devastating denouement, making the final revelations at once inevitable and shocking, the logic of compulsion perfectly, terribly complete.