
The Billionaire Kept Me Captive
The Billionaire Kept Me Captive Chapter 1
The bullet was a .45 caliber, still warm, centered perfectly on my pillowcase like a chocolate at a hotel.
I stood frozen in my bedroom doorway, my keys still dangling from my fingers. The metallic scent hung in the air—copper and gunpowder, sharp against the familiar lavender of my fabric softener. My training kicked in before my panic could. Phone first. Photos. Evidence.
The camera flash illuminated the brass casing, its surface reflecting the overhead light like a malevolent eye. My hands shook as I documented the scene, but my mind catalogued details with mechanical precision. No signs of forced entry. The front door lock was intact, the chain still hanging loose where I'd left it this morning. Whoever did this had walked in like they owned the place.
I moved through each room systematically, my bare feet silent against the hardwood. Living room—untouched. Kitchen—the coffee mug I'd left in the sink still sat exactly where I'd abandoned it. But in my closet, something was wrong. The navy blazer hung backwards on its hanger, the label facing out. I never hung clothes that way. Never.
My stomach dropped. They'd been through everything, then put it all back. Professional. Thorough. The kind of people who left calling cards instead of stealing jewelry.
I dialed the emergency hotline with trembling fingers.
"Wren? Thank God." My supervisor's voice crackled through the speaker. "Are you safe?"
"Define safe." I sank onto my couch, the bullet's weight somehow pressing against my consciousness even from the other room. "Someone left me a present."
"The office was hit two hours ago. Your entire Bellworth file—gone. Paper copies shredded, digital files corrupted beyond recovery. We're dealing with a complete data breach."
The words hit like ice water. "What about the backup drives?"
"Everything. They knew exactly where to look." His pause stretched too long. "Wren, don't call the police yet. We need to assess our legal exposure before—"
"Legal exposure?" The phrase tasted bitter. "Someone threatened my life and you're worried about liability?"
"Just... give us twenty-four hours. Stay somewhere safe tonight."
The line went dead. I stared at my phone, understanding crystallizing like frost on glass. The company wasn't protecting me. They were protecting themselves.
I opened my laptop with shaking hands, navigating to my private Notion workspace. The Bellworth files were still there—every transaction, every discrepancy, every thread I'd pulled that had unraveled their carefully constructed lies. The only surviving copy of evidence that could destroy a multi-billion-dollar corporation.
Or get me killed.
The apartment felt different now, shadows deeper, silence more oppressive. I made coffee I couldn't drink and paced circuits around my living room until the walls felt like they were closing in. At 2 AM, exhaustion finally began to blur the edges of my fear.
Then the doorbell rang.
Two sharp chimes that cut through the silence like a blade. I froze, coffee mug halfway to my lips. Nobody visited at 2 AM unless they were delivering bad news or worse intentions.
I crept to the peephole, my heart hammering against my ribs. A man stood in the hallway—tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a dark suit without a tie. His jaw looked like it had been carved from granite, and his eyes... even through the distorted fish-eye lens, they seemed to look straight through me.
"Wren Garcia." His voice carried through the door, low and controlled. "Open up."
I kept the chain latched. "Who are you?"
"Caspian Thorne." He stepped closer, and I could see the precise way he held himself—balanced, ready. "Someone wants you dead. I'm the only reason you're still breathing. You need to come with me. Now."
Every instinct screamed danger, but when I glanced toward the stairwell, I saw them—two figures in the shadows by the emergency exit, their attention fixed on my door. They weren't trying to hide. They wanted me to see them.
"The men in the stairwell aren't mine," Caspian said, as if reading my thoughts. "You have about thirty seconds before they decide to stop being subtle."
My laptop sat open on the coffee table, the Bellworth files glowing on the screen. Everything I'd worked for, everything that could bring justice or get me killed, condensed into ones and zeros. I grabbed it along with my passport from the kitchen drawer.
"Back door," he said when I cracked the chain. "Move."
His hand pressed against my lower back, guiding me through the hallway toward the rear exit. The contact sent heat through my thin cotton shirt, and my body reacted in a way that had nothing to do with fear. His touch was firm, protective, possessive—and completely inappropriate given that I was fleeing for my life.
I risked one look back as we reached the stairwell. The bullet on my pillow caught the hallway light, winking like a malevolent star.
"Don't look back," Caspian murmured, his breath warm against my ear. "Only forward now."
A black sedan waited in the alley, engine running. The driver didn't turn around when we got in, but I caught his eyes in the rearview mirror—cold, professional. The same look I'd seen in corporate boardrooms when million-dollar deals went south.
Caspian slid in beside me, his presence filling the confined space. He smelled like expensive cologne and something darker—leather, maybe, or steel. When he shifted, his thigh brushed mine, and I had to force myself not to lean into the contact.
"Where are we going?" I managed.
"Somewhere safe." His voice was matter-of-fact, but his eyes never stopped scanning the mirrors. "44th floor. Marcus, call ahead—have the NDA ready for signature."
The car pulled into traffic, and I watched my building disappear behind us. Somewhere in that maze of windows, two men were probably discovering my empty apartment, my abandoned life. The bullet would still be there, warm metal against cold cotton, a promise that had already been kept.
I clutched my laptop tighter, feeling the weight of secrets that could topple empires or bury me six feet under. Beside me, Caspian Thorne sat like a statue, beautiful and dangerous and completely unreadable.
And I was about to sign my life over to him.
The Billionaire Kept Me Captive of Contents
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