
My Groom Kept Me Blind to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 4
The war room's obsidian table reflected Darius's face like a dark mirror as he leaned forward, his knuckles pressed white against the polished surface. The holographic displays still flickered with evidence of Bentley's theft, each transaction a fresh wound reopened.
"Russell," Darius said, his voice carrying the lethal calm of a blade being drawn. "Give me twelve hours. Bentley King will disappear so cleanly, not even his mother will find bones to bury."
My grandfather's weathered hand moved toward the approval gesture I'd seen him use in recovered security footage—the silent command that had ended dynasties. But my palm slammed down on the table first, the sharp crack echoing through the room.
"No."
Every head turned toward me. Darius's dark eyes widened fractionally—the only crack in his stoic mask.
I rose slowly, my legs steadier than they'd been in the cathedral, in the alley, in every helpless moment of the past decade. "Bentley King doesn't get the mercy of a quick death," I said, my voice crystallizing into something I barely recognized. "He kept me blind and dependent for ten years so he could drain me slowly. I'm going to return the favor."
Russell's lips curved into something between pride and sorrow. "What are you proposing, little bird?"
"I want to watch his empire collapse brick by brick," I continued, circling the table toward where Darius stood rigid. "I want him to feel every supply chain severed, every investor fleeing, every door that once opened for the King name slamming shut. I want him to know exactly who's destroying him. And I want him alive to suffer through every second of it."
The silence stretched taut as a wire. Then Darius's jaw unclenched, and he turned that platinum ring once on his finger—the gesture I was learning meant deep, satisfied approval.
"Understood," he murmured, pulling out his phone with movements that were almost reverent. His fingers moved across the screen with lethal precision. "Consider it done."
I didn't ask what he was doing. I could see it in the cold efficiency of his posture—the first domino was already falling.
---
Two days later, I stood in the estate's massive library, surrounded by floor-to-ceiling mahogany shelves that smelled of leather and old power. Abner had compiled twenty years of King family business records, and I was systematically identifying every vulnerable pressure point when the heavy door suddenly slammed shut behind me.
I spun around. "What—"
Darius appeared from behind a shelf, his expression thunderous. He strode to the door and yanked the handle. It didn't budge. A small electronic keypad blinked red.
"Miller," Darius growled, his voice carrying through the wood. "Open this door. Now."
From the hallway came Miller's entirely too cheerful response: "Sorry, big brother! The lock's on a timer. You two have all night to... strategize. I left snacks!"
Footsteps retreated down the corridor. Darius's shoulders went rigid, his hand still gripping the useless door handle. The tendons in his neck stood out like carved marble.
I should have been furious. Instead, an inappropriate laugh bubbled up my throat. "Your brother just locked us in."
"My brother," Darius said slowly, turning to face me, "is a dead man."
But his eyes betrayed him. That fierce, protective intensity I'd felt in the SUV, in every room we'd shared since—it blazed brighter now, unguarded in the amber library light. He looked at me like I was something precious and dangerous all at once, like a man staring at salvation he didn't deserve to touch.
I set down the file I'd been holding, my pulse suddenly loud in my ears. "We should work, then. Since we're trapped."
"Yes," Darius agreed, but he didn't move. "Work."
The air between us felt charged, electric. I forced myself to return to the desk, spreading out corporate acquisition records. Darius settled into the chair across from me, close enough that I could smell cedar and rain again, close enough that when he leaned forward to point at a document, his shoulder brushed mine.
The contact sent heat racing down my spine. I kept my eyes locked on the pages, but every cell in my body was hyperaware of him—the controlled power in his movements, the way his jaw tightened when our hands accidentally touched reaching for the same file.
"Here," I managed, my voice steadier than I felt. "King Industries relies on three primary international shipping contracts. If those disappeared—"
"They'd hemorrhage cash within weeks," Darius finished, his gaze dropping to my lips before snapping back to the document. "I'll make the calls."
Hours blurred together. The library grew warmer. At some point, Darius shrugged off his suit jacket, revealing the tailored lines of his shirt, the platinum cufflinks catching light. I found myself stealing glances—the concentrated furrow of his brow, the rare ghost of a smile when we identified a particularly devastating vulnerability in Bentley's armor.
"Kendra," he said quietly, near midnight. His hand covered mine on the desk, deliberate this time. "You're remarkable. You know that?"
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't look away from the intensity burning in his dark eyes.
"I'm just angry," I whispered.
"No," Darius corrected, his thumb tracing a slow circle on my wrist. "You're powerful. There's a difference."
The timer on the door beeped. The lock disengaged with a soft click. Neither of us moved.
---
Across Manhattan, in a glass-walled boardroom that suddenly felt like a cage, Bentley King stared at his longtime business partner with uncomprehending rage.
"What do you mean, the credit lines are frozen?" Bentley demanded, his perfectly styled hair finally showing signs of disarray.
Marcus Sterling's face had gone gray. Financial reports covered the table like casualty lists. "Every major bank, Bentley. Simultaneously. And the Shanghai deal—our biggest investors pulled out an hour ago. No explanation. They won't even return calls."
Bentley's hand moved to his expensive watch, twisting it compulsively. "That's impossible. We're the King family. We—"
"Are bleeding eight million dollars a day," Marcus interrupted, his voice hollow. "And I have no idea why."
Bentley's phone buzzed. A single text from an unknown number: *The storm is coming. —K.P.*
His blood turned to ice.
You may also like





