[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 203: Subjects

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Chapter 203: Subjects

NICK

I must be seeing things, that was the first thought that came to mind.

The moment was infinitesimal.

To the Governor, it was likely just a pause between courses.

To my father, it was probably invisible, buried under the weight of his own self-importance.

But I have spent my entire career reading the topography of the human face. I read micro-expressions the way a navigator reads a star chart, not as single points, but as a map of intent.

I saw it. A glance across the linen and silver. My brother and Cassian Wolfe.

It lasted perhaps half a second. It wasn’t a professional check-in. It wasn’t the CEO ensuring his assistant hadn’t spilled the wine.

It was something wordless and devastatingly specific. It was the kind of look that only exists between two people who have already said things to each other that don’t belong at a dinner table.

Oh.

It wasn’t love. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖

I didn’t believe in the romanticized rot most people use to describe attraction.

I thought in terms of biological imperatives and psychological triggers.

What I saw wasn’t restraint. Noah has spent this entire evening draped in restraint, badly stitched, fraying at the edges, but present. He used it with our father; he used it with the security guards. But that look? That was recognition.

And recognition is far more dangerous than desire.

I returned to my wine, the vintage cooling on my tongue as I filed the observation away. My mind was already moving, deconstructing the architecture of that half-second.

I have been watching Noah since we were in the lobby. It is an involuntary habit, a relic of a childhood where his reactions were the only metric I had for my own standing.

I told myself I didn’t care, but you don’t watch something you don’t care about with this much clinical intensity.

He arrived before Wolfe.

Alone. In a building that usually requires a pedigree to enter. That meant he was sent. Which meant his claim in the lobby, the one I had dismissed with practiced ease, was true.

I had known it was true approximately four minutes after I’d called him a liar. I’d just kept calling him one because it was easier than acknowledging he might have actually found a way to survive without us.

He sat now with a careful, brittle stillness. I know that stillness. I’ve watched him assemble it since we were twelve years old. It’s the camouflage of the weak, the attempt to become so small, so colorless, that the room stops targeting you. It worked on the Governor. It worked on my father, who was currently pretending Noah is a ghost.

But it doesn’t work on me.

I could see the near-tears quality behind his composure. It was invisible to the rest of the table, but to me, it was a siren.

I could see the frantic pep talk he was giving himself after Preston’s barbed question. His answer had been solid, though, constructed fast, better than it had any right to be.

I guess I don’t know him as well as I thought, I realized.

The thought sat strangely in my chest. It wasn’t comfortable, but I wasn’t ready to examine it yet.

I looked at Cassian Wolfe. He was already looking at me.

He seemed to arrange his world so that he was always already looking at whatever became relevant. His gaze wasn’t a performed threat; it was a statement of fact. Most men in this room perform their power, Preston with his polish, my father with his "hero" narrative. Cassian didn’t bother.

The look he gave me was simple: I know you saw. And I don’t care that you saw.

It wasn’t defiance. Defiance requires an acknowledgment of the other person’s authority.

This was indifference. He wasn’t hiding Noah. He didn’t intend to hide whatever was happening from me or anyone else at this table. The confidence of that was either extraordinary or insane. I was beginning to suspect it was both.

Wolfe possessed a predatory calm. Most men with his level of dominance inherited it, they were told from birth that the world was their playground. But Wolfe didn’t feel like that. He felt like someone who had learned his power in rooms that didn’t want him, staying until the room changed its mind.

He was the most dangerous person at the table because he never looked uncertain.

And uncertainty is the thing I use. I find the crack in a person’s confidence and I press until it shatters. But there were no cracks here. No tells. No gap between his composed state and his threatened state.

I filed that under: Requires a different approach.

Same family, different product.

Preston on the other hand was polished in the way of men who have never had to be anything else. His smile arrived before the thought that produced it, decorative armor.

But what sat underneath wasn’t decorative. He was surgical. He didn’t use force; he used precision. I’d watched him drop that question about Noah’s "impression" and recognized the method immediately.

Because I use it.

I hated the recognition. I hated seeing the way Preston’s attention moved to Cassian, half a beat too quickly, recalibrating after every response.

It was the subtle competition of a man who had always been the most capable person in the room and had recently been forced to revise that assessment.

Preston and I, we were both instigators. We both operated with the same basic architecture: find the weakness, use it surgically, maintain plausible deniability. It sat in my chest like something swallowed wrong.

Everything Preston and Cassian were, Charles was the template for.

He spoke softly. Men who are loud are men who aren’t sure they’ll be listened to. Charles has never had that doubt. He didn’t use volume; he used tempo. He controlled when the conversation moved and who got space in it without appearing to move a muscle.

He weaponized politeness. The way he’d shaken my father’s hand earlier, You must be very proud, sounded like warmth, but it was a positioning. He was making a public statement about the Bennett family’s relationship to the Wolfes in front of the Governor. It was impossible to object to, which was precisely why he did it.

Charles was the kingmaker. There are men who have power, and then there are men who decide who else gets it. Charles was the second kind. That made him more dangerous than anyone else at the table, except his son.

My mind circled back to Noah and Cassian. It always returns to unsolved things.

I had a CEO and an assistant who looked at each other like they shared a secret written in blood. I had a brother who was barely holding his composure and a family dinner he had no business attending, except that he was sent here by the man who looked at him like that.

The shape of it was there. I didn’t have the full picture, but I had an edge. And in my world, an edge is enough to start a fire.

I decided not to act. Not tonight. There were too many variables in motion. But I filed it away at the back of my mind. Available. Ready.

Do I use it against him? Or for him? I pushed the question away before I had to answer it.

As the dinner began to wind down, the mood settled into that comfortable, post-meal self-congratulation. The Governor looked satisfied; my father was practically glowing.

Charles turned to me.

"Tell me, Nicholas," he said, his voice unhurried. "What does it mean, in your profession, to truly earn a position versus simply occupying one? Between the man who is celebrated and the man who is trusted?"

It was a test. The kind Charles likely gave to anyone he found interesting. Most people fail by being too humble or too proud. I didn’t even have to think about the answer. I’ve been performing for audiences like him since I could talk.

"Merit requires proof that survives the removal of the circumstances that produced it," I said calmly. "Celebration is external, it’s about the room’s reaction. Trust is structural. The difference only becomes visible under pressure."

Charles paused. He gave a single, precise nod. It wasn’t warmth; it was the acknowledgment of a man who had been given the exact answer he was looking for. I felt the recognition settle. I’d passed.

"A productive evening," Charles declared, signaling the formal close.

The room shifted. Chairs scraped against the marble; glasses were emptied. The staff appeared to begin the quiet ritual of removal.

I moved through the handshakes. Charles was firm and brief. Preston gave me a smile and a grip that lasted a second too long, a look that said, I noticed you noticing things. Then, I watched Noah.

He moved through the ritual with less certainty. He shook Charles’s hand and received something that looked almost like protection in the way Charles extended it. He shook Preston’s hand and pulled away first, his face tight.

And then there was Cassian.

He was the last to stand. He didn’t adjust to the room’s pace; the room adjusted to his. Noah moved toward the exit, deliberately not looking at Cassian. The avoidance was so loud it was practically a shout.

Cassian watched him go. He didn’t say anything, but he didn’t stop watching until Noah was out of the immediate circle.

I turned to follow, but I found Cassian already looking at me.

We didn’t shake hands. There was no gesture of feigned friendship. It was just the look. Quiet. Steady. Complete.

Try it, his eyes said.

I held the gaze. One beat. Two. I didn’t look away. I allowed the faintest almost-smile to touch my lips. This was the most interesting thing that had happened to me in months. A man who looked back without moving.

Beneath the strategy, beneath the interest, there was something else. The faintest, unwanted recognition. I didn’t have the full picture of what was happening between my brother and this man, but I knew one thing for certain.

The full picture was going to be beautiful when it finally shattered.

I turned away first. Not because I had to, but because I chose to. I made sure he knew the difference.