[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 53: Negotiable
Alex stood there like this was a difficult conversation, not a hostage crisis. Hands visible. Voice steady. Expression soft in a way that felt practiced... but sincere enough to work.
Relief hit me so hard I almost sobbed.
Oh thank God.
Oh thank everything. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
Alex looked at me... not long, not obviously... but enough.
He didn’t rush.
That was the first thing I noticed... not consciously at first, more like my body noticed before my brain caught up. No sharp movements. No sudden authority-laced commands. No verbal chest-thumping disguised as confidence.
He didn’t contradict the man.
Didn’t challenge him.
Didn’t say that’s not how it works or you’re mistaken or any of the phrases that usually set men like this on fire.
He let him talk.
My brain, despite the fact that I was one wrong breath away from passing out, started narrating in real time:
Oh. That was smart.
Wait—did he just validate the emotion without validating the threat?
That’s hot.
No. Noah. Focus.
But still.
Is this what competence looks like up close?
The man’s agitation spiked the longer he talked. His voice grew louder, words tumbling over each other now, anger feeding on itself. His hands moved more. The weapon shifted, pressing harder, closer... my body flinching every time my ribs registered it.
Alex didn’t mirror the escalation.
Didn’t raise his voice to compete.
Didn’t shrink either.
He stayed exactly the same.
Infuriatingly calm.
He offered time. He offered space. He offered understanding.
And... this part I clocked with a strange, delayed awe... he offered nothing concrete.
No promises or deals.
No "if you let him go, then—"
Nothing.
On purpose.
The realization hit me like a small electric shock, sharp and clarifying:
Alex was stretching this out.
Buying time.
Outside, the noise continued... voices, movement, urgency but in the room, Alex kept the air steady. Grounded.
The man shouted again. Something about promises. About lies. About being erased, wiped clean by people who would never know his name.
Alex didn’t flinch.
Didn’t interrupt.
Didn’t deny the pain.
He acknowledged it. Named it. Let it exist without letting it rule.
I had the sudden, wildly inappropriate thought: If we survive this, I’m baking him something.
Cookies.
Brownies.
A three-tier cake with emotional-support frosting.
The weapon pressed closer.
I inhaled, shallow and careful, like my lungs were afraid of drawing attention to themselves.
Okay.
Okay.
Stay conscious.
Stay breathing.
Don’t do anything stupid like fainting or sobbing or attempting heroics you are profoundly unqualified for.
Alex continued to negotiate.
Which was insane, because the man holding me hostage was very clearly vibrating at a frequency reserved for about to ruin everyone’s day.
His voice was calm. Warm. Almost gentle. The kind of voice that sounded like it belonged in a documentary about people who save puppies during hurricanes.
"I hear you," Alex said. "And I believe you were wronged."
I thought:
Ah. He’s doing the voice. The I-see-you voice. That voice works on customer service reps and sad billionaires, not men with guns.
The man’s grip tightened. My spine stiffened so hard I was fairly certain I’d achieved temporary petrification.
"I’m not stupid," the man snapped. "You think I don’t know what you’re doing?"
Alex nodded, slow and respectful, like this was a normal conversation happening in a normal room and I was not currently starring in How I Accidentally Became a Statistic.
"You’re right," Alex said. "You’re not stupid. And that’s exactly why I don’t want this to end badly... for you, or for him."
Alex glanced at me.
Just for a second.
And it shouldn’t have meant anything. It really shouldn’t. But his eyes softened... just a fraction... and it hit me straight in the chest.
Oh.
Oh no.
Why is he looking at me like that.
Why does that make my heart feel like it just missed a step.
Alex continued, "He’s not the one you’re angry at."
I would have liked to scream THANK YOU but settled for not peeing myself.
The man scoffed. "He works for you."
I thought:
I KNEW I SHOULD’VE SAID I WAS AN INTERN. Interns are barely people.
Alex tilted his head. "Then take me instead."
My brain blue-screened.
I’m sorry. WHAT.
The room froze.
Even the gun paused, like it, too, needed a moment to process that sentence.
Alex stepped forward... slow, deliberate, hands visible.
"I’m the one you want to speak to. I’m the one who can make things right. He’s just collateral."
Collateral.
NOAH IS NOT A COUCH.
But still...
Something tightened in my chest. Something warm and stupid and traitorous.
Because no one had ever said that for me.
Not my parents.
Not my ex.
Not my brother.
No one had ever stepped forward and said, Take me. He matters.
The man laughed, sharp and humorless. "You think I’m letting him go?"
The gun pressed closer. My breath stuttered.
Alex didn’t flinch.
"That tells me you’re scared," Alex said gently. "And scared people deserve to be heard."
I thought:
He’s doing therapy. He’s doing hostage therapy. This man is about to speedrun a psychology degree.
The man’s breathing grew ragged. His eyes flicked... just once... to the side.
And I didn’t know why, but something in that flick made my stomach drop.
I realized it slowly, distantly, like a thought drifting up through panic fog.
Oh.
This is on purpose.
The man raised his voice. "You people ruin lives and then you pretend you care!"
"I do care," Alex said. "And that’s why I don’t want you to make a mistake you can’t undo."
I felt it then.
A vibration through the floor.
A muffled thud somewhere behind the walls.
The man didn’t notice.
He was too locked onto Alex.
Alex’s eyes flicked... not to me this time... but past me.
Just a fraction.
I swallowed.
Something is happening.
The man’s grip shifted. His attention wavered for half a second...
And everything exploded into motion.
A deafening crash from the side entrance.
Shouts.
Boots pounding.
The man jerked, startled...
And Alex MOVED.
Fast.
Too fast for someone who looked that calm.
He lunged, grabbing me by the arm and yanking me backward just as the man stumbled, weapon swinging wide.
I tripped. Alex went down with me.
We hit the floor hard.
My back slammed into the tiles, breath knocked clean out of me.
Alex landed half over me, bracing on one arm.
For one surreal second...
That was all there was.
Alex’s face inches from mine.
Breathing fast.
Eyes sharp and alive.
My brain offered, unhelpfully:
Wow. He smells nice.
Like expensive soap and competence.
Then hands were pulling us apart.
Shouting filled the room.
The man was tackled, disarmed, gone.
I was sitting up, shaking, alive.
Alex gripped my shoulders, firm, grounding.
"You’re safe," he said quietly. "It’s over."
I nodded, because if I opened my mouth I might cry, laugh, or confess something deeply inconvenient like thank you for existing or please hold me for three to five business days.







