[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 206: A small Wish

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Chapter 206: A small Wish

CASSIAN

The first thing I felt was the heat of his palm.

It was specific... a localized, radiating warmth that anchored me to the present moment.

Noah’s grip was slightly tighter than necessary, the telltale overcorrection of a man trying to convince the world he wasn’t affected by the very thing he was doing. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂

He was leading me through the carnival crowd with a desperate sort of focus, as if navigating the sea of neon lights and cheap polyester was a mission of survival.

I could feel the stares beginning. I felt them without needing to look; I had been feeling my entire life. Whispers had followed me through rooms since I was little, a constant white noise of judgment and curiosity. I’d stopped caring about them somewhere around my teenage years.

What I was aware of instead was the flush on the back of Noah’s neck.

It was a deep, frantic crimson, climbing from his collar upward. He was failing spectacularly at pretending it wasn’t there. I found the sight... I didn’t finish the thought. I simply tightened my hold on his fingers and followed.

Without meaning to, I had begun collecting details.

Under the erratic park lights, the color of Noah’s hair caught the warmth and went slightly gold at the edges.

It was too similar to Nick’s—the same genetic raw material—but it was arranged differently, used for a different purpose entirely.

On paper, they were twins; in practice, they were opposites. Nick was a mirror, designed to reflect what people wanted to see. Noah was a lens, focusing everything inward.

I looked at his eyes, that specific, vibrant green. I had looked at them more times than I had officially catalogued, and I was looking again now, taking advantage of the fact that he didn’t know he was being watched. The evening air was cold, but it was doing him a service, bringing a sharp color to his skin that the dinner had systematically drained out.

Before the park, I had stood in the shadow of that stone column and watched him. I’d found him tucked into the corner of the building, knees to his chest, face hidden. It was a specific kind of smallness—a man trying to reduce his physical presence until he became a non-entity. He had been trying to shrink the weight of the evening.

I had stood there for a long moment before touching him, just looking. I saw the red around his eyes that he’d been managing with agonizing effort all night.

Something had moved through my chest then... a sensation I hadn’t named at the time and named even less now. It was a desperation of my own. I felt a sudden, sharp need to put something back into him that had been taken out.

I’d sent him into that dinner unprepared. I had walked him toward that family without knowing the depth of the rot. The guilt of that sat somewhere inside me where guilt didn’t usually live. I had met guilt rarely in my life; this version was specific. It had Noah’s shape.

Nick’s eyes flashed in my memory.

I could still see them across the table, unblinking and intelligent. It was the look of a man who had filed a piece of data and was already planning how to use it. I knew that look. I had worn it myself. It meant: I don’t have the whole picture yet, but I have enough to start the fire.

Nick Bennett was not a problem yet, but the trajectory was clear. He was becoming one.

This evening hadn’t been an ending; it was the beginning of several things. Preston’s move, Charles’s orchestration, George’s practiced erasure of his own blood... it was all still in motion. It all required my attention.

But not tonight. Julian had taught me that escape isn’t avoidance, it’s maintenance.

You cannot run a war on an empty tank. You stop. You breathe. You find a park, apparently, and you let someone lead you through the dark by the hand.

Julian would have found this hilarious. The thought arrived without warning, a ghost of a laugh I hadn’t heard in years. I let it pass.

Noah stopped at a new stall. We had moved past the ring toss—mercifully—and were now standing in front of a board of balloons.

He began explaining the rules of the dart game with the utter seriousness of someone briefing a surgical team.

He pointed out which balloons were worth more, the strategy of the throw, the angles required to compensate for the wind. I listened.

Fully. I gave him the same undivided attention I gave boardroom presentations that decided the fate of thousands.

He clearly found this both flattering and slightly absurd. I could see the sparkle returning to his eyes as he spoke, an animation that brought his whole face to life. His hands moved as he talked, cutting through the air to illustrate a point.

Watching him, I felt a quiet, internal relief. The right choice had been made. I knew it with a cold, analytical certainty.

The longer I looked, the more I felt that familiar thing spreading through my chest. It was familiar because I had felt it once, a long time ago. It was foreign because I had decided I wouldn’t feel it again. I had been fairly certain that decision was permanent.

Noah laughed at something... probably the intensity of my expression. The sound was unguarded. Completely, dangerously unguarded.

Noah didn’t know how to be protective of himself when he was happy. That transparency should have been a weakness, but I found it... again, I didn’t finish the thought.

I found myself wishing for something small. I wished for time to slow, just enough for Noah to have more of this. More of the sparkle. More of the color.

And underneath that, a quieter wish for myself... for more time to look at him. At the particular handsomeness of him when he wasn’t trying, when he was just a man under string lights explaining dart angles with complete sincerity.

I didn’t say any of this. I kept it somewhere I didn’t usually visit and kept looking.

"Are you bored?"