
The Billionaire Kept Me Captive
Chapter 3
Seven AM came too early, but sleep had been impossible anyway. Every creak of the building, every distant hum of the elevator, had sent my nerves into overdrive. I'd spent the night alternating between staring at the sealed windows and refreshing my phone, watching the single bar of "Bellworth Secure WiFi" mock me from the corner of the screen.
The smell of coffee drew me from my room like a lifeline. I followed it down the hallway, my bare feet silent against the marble floor, until I found an open kitchen that belonged in an architectural magazine. Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of Austin's skyline, and the morning light streamed across granite countertops that probably cost more than my car.
Caspian stood at the stove, his back to me, and for a moment I forgot how to breathe.
Gone was the immaculate suit, the corporate armor that had made him seem untouchable. Instead, he wore a soft gray sweatshirt that clung to his shoulders and black joggers that somehow made him look more dangerous, not less. His dark hair was tousled, still bearing the impression of sleep, and there was something devastatingly intimate about seeing him like this—unguarded, human.
He turned when he heard my footsteps, a plate of scrambled eggs in his hands, and the domestic normalcy of it sent a strange flutter through my chest.
"Good morning." His voice was rougher than it had been last night, touched with sleep. "I hope you're hungry."
I accepted the plate with trembling fingers, hyperaware of the way he moved around the kitchen—economical, practiced, like he actually lived here instead of just occupying space. When he handed me a mug of coffee, our fingers brushed, and I noticed how warm his hands were, how carefully he held the ceramic.
"You cook?" I managed, settling onto one of the bar stools.
"Among other things." He leaned against the counter opposite me, cradling his own mug. The casual pose should have been relaxing, but there was something predatory in the way he watched me take my first bite.
The eggs were perfect—fluffy, seasoned with herbs I couldn't identify. I was halfway through the plate when he spoke again, his tone conversational, almost friendly.
"Your 'Damage Control' group chat—'SOS this is not a drill'—very dramatic. Your friend Nola replied with a skull emoji and seventeen question marks."
The fork slipped from my fingers, clattering against the plate. Blood turned to ice in my veins as the implications crashed over me. He hadn't just monitored the WiFi traffic. He'd read my actual messages. Word for word.
I forced myself to take another bite, chewing mechanically while my mind raced. This wasn't just surveillance—it was complete digital infiltration. Every text, every search, every desperate attempt at communication had crossed his desk in real time.
"The weather's been unusually warm for October," he continued, as if he hadn't just revealed that my privacy was an illusion. "There's a new Japanese bakery downtown that's supposed to be excellent. Maybe we'll try it sometime."
The casual shift made my skin crawl, but it also clarified something important. He wanted me to know he was watching, but he also wanted to maintain the pretense of normalcy. Two could play that game.
I pulled out my phone and opened Google, typing slowly and deliberately: "Bellworth Tower security vulnerabilities." His eyes flicked to my screen for less than a second before returning to my face, but I caught it.
"This coffee is incredible," I said, scrolling through search results about corporate whistleblower protection laws. "What kind of beans do you use?"
"Ethiopian single-origin." His voice remained perfectly level, but I watched his gaze dart to my phone again as I opened a new tab. "The roaster is local."
I nodded and switched to my Notes app, typing a single line: "If I disappear, investigate 51st floor." The words appeared on screen in stark black text, and I watched Caspian's jaw tighten almost imperceptibly.
"The view from up here must be incredible at sunset," I said, setting the phone face-up on the counter between us.
"It is." His smile was perfectly pleasant, but his knuckles had gone white around his coffee mug. "The city lights are particularly beautiful from this angle."
We finished breakfast in a dance of polite conversation and digital provocation. Every few seconds, his attention would flicker to my phone as I opened new tabs, searched for building schematics, pulled up articles about corporate malfeasance. Each search was deliberate bait, and each time his mask slipped just a fraction.
When I finally set my fork down, he moved with fluid efficiency, collecting our plates and loading them into a dishwasher that probably cost more than my monthly rent.
"I have something for you," he said, reaching into a drawer and producing a sleek key card and a new phone. "Building access and a secure device. The signal is more stable than public networks."
The phone was top-of-the-line, still in its box, and when he handed me the key card, our fingers touched again. This time the contact lasted longer—his thumb brushing across my knuckles in what might have been accident or intention. Heat shot up my arm, and I had to fight not to pull away.
"Thank you," I managed, pocketing both items.
"The forty-fourth through forty-ninth floors are accessible with that card," he said. "Gym, library, conference rooms. Everything you need to be comfortable."
I nodded, clutching both phones in my hands—the old one with its secrets, the new one with its invisible chains. "I should get to work. Those Bellworth files won't audit themselves."
Something flickered in his eyes—amusement, maybe, or approval. "Of course. I'll have Marcus send you the access credentials for our financial systems."
I retreated to my room with both phones burning in my palms, my mind already calculating. The new device was beautiful, efficient, and completely compromised. But my old phone, with its offline encrypted apps and locally stored data—that was my ace in the hole.
I spent the next hour transferring every Bellworth file to an encrypted partition that didn't require internet access. Bank records, transaction logs, the intricate web of shell companies I'd been unraveling—all of it safely locked away where his digital eyes couldn't reach.
When I finally looked up from the screen, my reflection stared back from the sealed window. Somewhere in this building, Caspian Thorne was probably reading transcripts of conversations I might have, monitoring searches I hadn't made yet.
But for the first time since that bullet appeared on my pillow, I had something he didn't know about.
I smiled at my reflection, and the woman looking back seemed like someone who might actually survive this game.
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