
Room Service, Extra Dirty
Sapphic Contemporary Romance
by Aurora North
Free with Kindle Unlimited
Pairing: FF (Sapphic)
Heat: 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ Inferno
Tropes: Caretaking, Class Gap, Forced Proximity, Only Person Who Sees Me, Woman in Hiding, Blue-Collar Heroine, Hotel Romance, Slow Burn
She came to make up the room. The guest in it came to ruin her good habits.
Iris Moreno is the housekeeper who notices everything and says nothing. She reads guests from the wreckage they leave behind—the wine glass with one lip print, the suitcase that hasn’t been unpacked, the woman in 412 who hasn’t slept in three days.
Sloane Mercer checked into The Alcott to disappear. After her wife dismantled their marriage, their firm, and Sloane’s entire sense of self, a boutique hotel room is the only place where nobody expects her to perform.
What begins as professional courtesy and stolen glances becomes the most intimate relationship either woman has ever had—because Iris sees Sloane at her worst every single day, and still comes back. In service corridors and linen closets, over chamomile tea and two-dollar tacos, they build something real inside a room with a nightly rate.
When Sloane’s past breaks through the hotel walls, they’ll have to decide: is what they’ve built only beautiful because it’s contained? Or can love survive checkout?
You’ll love this book if you enjoy:
✅ Sapphic romance with inferno-level heat (9 explicit scenes)
✅ Caretaking as foreplay — every blanket and tea is a love letter
✅ Blue-collar heroine x woman in hiding
✅ Hotel setting with service corridors, linen closets, and locked doors
✅ Class-gap tension that’s named, not ignored
✅ Emotional slow burn that DETONATES
✅ HEA guaranteed
⚠️ Content Warning: This novel contains explicit sexual content (graphic FF scenes), strong language, depictions of divorce aftermath, and anxiety. Intended for readers 18+.
📖 Read Chapter One Free
Not sure yet? Read the full first chapter right here.
Chapter One: The Woman in 412
The trick to a good room was making it look like no one had ever touched it.
Not clean—anyone could do clean. Clean was spray and wipe and move on. What Iris did was erase. She eliminated evidence. Every wrinkle, every stray hair, every smudge on a faucet handle that proved a living, sweating, shedding human being had spent the night doing living, sweating, shedding human things. By the time she was done, the room looked like a photograph. Like a promise.
Most people didn’t notice. That was the point.
She stripped the bed in 408 with the efficiency of someone who’d done it four thousand times—because she had, give or take. Sheets first, then the duvet cover, then the pillowcases, each one inverted and shaken out in a single snap of her wrists.
She pushed her cart to 412 and knocked. Three sharp raps, spaced evenly, followed by a pause exactly long enough for someone to reach the door from the bathroom.
“Housekeeping.”
The door opened.
The woman standing in it looked like she’d gotten dressed for something important and then decided, mid-process, that nothing was important anymore. She wore a silk blouse the color of fog, tucked into tailored trousers that probably cost more than Iris’s rent.
She looked, Iris thought, like a woman who’d been beautiful on purpose for a very long time and had recently stopped trying. The result was something more interesting than beauty. It was honesty.
The room was wrong. Not dirty—wrong. And the suitcase. Dark green leather, still on the luggage rack. Zipped. Three days in, and this woman hadn’t unpacked.
Iris worked quietly. She left an extra set of the good bath towels on the shelf, the thick ones that weren’t standard but that she kept for guests she liked. The woman looked like someone who needed a good towel.
When she came back into the main room, the woman was watching her. Not with the usual glazed non-attention guests gave housekeeping. This was direct. Focused.
“What’s your name?”
“Iris.”
“Iris.” The woman said it carefully, like she was tasting it. “I’m Sloane.”
At the door, Iris paused. “You’re using the firm pillow against your stomach, not under your head. I can bring a body pillow from storage. Might help you sleep.”
The look on Sloane’s face was the expression of someone who had been performing competence for so long that being seen through a single detail felt like being caught naked.
“That would be nice. Thank you.”
“You done with the fourth floor?”
Drea appeared at the end of the corridor, pushing her own cart with the aggressive efficiency of a woman who wanted to be on break ten minutes ago.
“What’s the deal with 412? Long-stay?”
“Divorce?”
“That’s usually why the nice ones stay forever. They camp out in a suite and order room service soup until their lawyer calls.”
“She hasn’t even unpacked.”
“The pretty ones are always the saddest. Don’t get invested. She’ll be gone by Friday.”
Iris pulled a body pillow from the linen closet. She tucked it under her arm and headed back to the service elevator.
“You’re bringing a woman you met ten minutes ago a special pillow because—why?”
“Because she’s not sleeping.” Iris hit the elevator button. “It’s a pillow, Drea. Relax.”
“Uh-huh. A pillow. Sure.”
Sloane took the pillow. Held it against her chest with both arms. For a moment, she looked like someone who had been handed the first kind thing in a long time and didn’t know how to hold it without breaking.
“Thank you,” she said. Her voice was very quiet. “Iris.”
“Same time tomorrow, Sloane.”
She could feel Sloane watching her all the way down the hall, the way you feel sunlight on the back of your neck—warm, focused, impossible to ignore.
She pressed her back against the elevator wall and closed her eyes.
Same time tomorrow.
She was already looking forward to it.
Want to keep reading? The full novel is available now.
🔥 Want an EXCLUSIVE Bonus Chapter?
Counter Service — A scene TOO HOT for Amazon
Iris and Sloane have been in the Mariposa Street apartment for two weeks. The kitchen has seven knives and a rice cooker. What it doesn’t have yet is a proper christening. When Iris comes home to find Sloane cooking in nothing but an apron and a dare, the counter gets put to its intended use—and several unintended ones.
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