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[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 194: The Devereaux Disaster
CYAN
I started the engine. It didn’t just turn over; it roared, a deep, predatory thrum that vibrated through my spine.
For the first few minutes, I behaved. I kept the car at a respectable speed as we wound down the coastal road. I hummed a tuneless little melody, my right hand tapping a rhythm on the carbon-fiber wheel. Reggie started to relax, his shoulders dropping a fraction of an inch.
Then, I saw the straightaway.
I didn’t floor it, not immediately. I just... increased. The acceleration was a smooth, relentless pull. Then I gave it more. And more.
The world outside began to smear. The blue of the ocean became a long, horizontal streak of paint. The green of the palms became a blur.
Something changed in me. The tightness that had been coiled in my chest since I woke up simply... evaporated. The restless, annoying tapping of my fingers stopped as I settled into the wheel. The glazed, distant quality in my eyes cleared. I became present. I became real.
The road opened up, a long ribbon of gray asphalt stretching into the horizon. I took that as a personal invitation. It wasn’t, of course, but I’ve never been good at distinguishing between "forbidden" and "encouraged."
Reginald braced one hand against the door. He wasn’t white-knuckling it, and he wasn’t screaming. He was like a man with very good sea legs on a choppy boat, he respected the waves, but he’d seen them before.
We hit the city, and the speed had to die, but the restlessness didn’t return. Not yet. I had a hunger that the road couldn’t satisfy.
We stopped in the Market District first. It was a sensory explosion, the smell of grilled meat, the shouting of vendors, the dizzying array of colors and textures. I wandered through the stalls like a ghost in a jewel box.
I touched fabrics I had no intention of buying, letting the silk and wool grate against my fingertips. I asked a spice merchant a series of highly intrusive questions about his marriage until he looked like he wanted to hide under his own table.
I saw an argument brewing between two strangers over a bumped shoulder. I didn’t walk away; I moved closer. I stood right in the middle of their personal space, watching them with open, wide-eyed curiosity.
I didn’t read the "social cues" that said get out before a punch is thrown. I read the people. I saw the way the taller one’s left eye twitched. I saw the way the shorter one was sweating through his cheap shirt.
I stepped off the curb without looking. A motorbike swerved, the horn blaring a long, angry note. I watched it go, fascinated by the way the sunlight hit the chrome of the tailpipe.
Reggie caught my arm, pulling me back to the sidewalk. "Master Cyan, please."
"Did you see that, Reggie? That shade of orange on the fender? It was almost offensive," I murmured. I hadn’t noticed the danger. I’d only noticed the color.
Next, I drove us down to the waterfront. Not the tourist docks, but the industrial area, the place where men worked with heavy steel and didn’t like being stared at. I liked it there. It was gritty. It felt like it had teeth.
I spotted a group of dock workers playing cards on a wooden crate. I approached them with the breezy confidence of a king visiting his subjects. "Can I play?"
They looked at me, the silk-clad, bandaged boy, and then at the stone-faced butler standing behind me. "No," the biggest one grunted.
I sat down anyway.
The tension was immediate. A smarter person would have felt the threat of violence and fled. I just tilted my head, looking at the big man. "You have a tell," I said softly. "Every time you have a good hand, your left shoulder drops about two millimeters. It’s very distracting."
The table went silent. The man’s eyes narrowed. For a second, I thought I’d finally found someone who would hit me. But then he looked at his cards, looked back at me, and let out a gruff laugh. "Fine. Sit, kid."
I played. I won. I watched their tells and their breaths and the way they gripped their cards. Reggie stood at a polite distance, watching a potential catastrophe turn into a card game.
But as we walked back to the car, the boredom started to leak back in. The card game hadn’t been enough. The market hadn’t been enough.
"The underground spot?" I asked, looking at Reggie.
He didn’t need me to explain. He knew the warehouse in the basement of the old textile mill. We went inside, into the heat and the smell of sweat and concrete. This was an unlicensed fight club, the kind of place where people came to bleed for money.
I felt alive here. My eyes tracked the fighters, the technique, the shifts in weight, the moments of hesitation. I’d spent years in martial arts dojos as a kid, collecting medals I eventually threw away because I found the gold plating tacky. I’d walked away because the rules were boring. I liked the movement, not the points.
A man near the ring made a comment about my bandaged hand, a sneer on his face. "Rough night, princess?"
I smiled at him. It was a sharp, jagged expression. "I can demonstrate what I can do with just the one, if you’re feeling lonely," I offered. My voice was light, but the threat was a physical thing.
The man looked at me, then at the stillness in my eyes, and he backed down. I felt a pang of disappointment. I’d wanted him to say yes.
Reginald watched it all. He saw the hunger in the way I moved. He saw that the speed helped for a minute, the cards for another, the fights for a third. But nothing was filling the void. I was chasing a dragon that didn’t exist.
I noticed the shade of blue on a tarp. I noticed the tell in a fighter’s knee. I noticed Reggie’s breathing change. But I didn’t notice that I was running in circles.
We were back in the car, the engine idling, when Reggie’s phone rang.
I didn’t look at him, but my body went still. My shoulders dropped. The restless scanning of the street stopped. I already knew.
Reggie answered. "Yes, sir. I understand. Of course."
He hung up and turned to me. "Your father is at the villa, sir. He’s been waiting."
Waiting. Not a call. Not a text. An in-person appearance.
The world seemed to sharpen. I didn’t make a joke. I didn’t suggest we go to a club or buy a boat. I just looked at my bandaged hand, then out at the road ahead. Something settled in me. It wasn’t peace, it was a grim resolution.
"How long has he been there?" I asked quietly. No performance. No sing-song.
Reggie told me.
I nodded once. I started the car and pulled away from the curb. I didn’t speed this time. I drove at the exact limit, my eyes fixed on the road.
The ocean was visible on my left, the sun beginning to dip toward the horizon, turning the water into a sheet of hammered gold.
It was a beautiful view. I didn’t care. The running was over for today. The monster in the villa was waiting, and it was time to go home and play the part of the son.
"Reggie," I said as the villa came into view. "I think the wind just changed."
"Indeed, sir," he replied.
....
The black cars were the first sign that the air in my life was about to get very, very thin.
They were parked in the driveway like a row of obsidian coffins, sleek, armored, and wearing government plates that screamed for attention while pretending to be discreet.
Security detail stood at intervals along the stone path, men in charcoal suits who stood like expensive furniture designed specifically to break your arm if you touched it.
I clocked them all through the windshield. I didn’t slow down. I didn’t speed up. I just pulled the supercar into its usual spot, the engine’s roar sounding like a tantrum compared to the muffled, terrifying silence of the Prime Minister’s entourage.
Reginald moved to open my door, but I was already out. I stood in the driveway for a beat, adjusting my hat and looking at the fleet of vehicles with the kind of mild interest one might show a neighbor’s new, slightly garish lawn ornament.
"He really does travel light, doesn’t he, Reggie?" I said. My voice was airy, the sing-song quality returning as I smoothed the silk of my emerald robe.
"He is a man of significant responsibilities, Master Cyan," Reginald replied, his voice a low warning.
"He’s a man who likes a parade," I corrected. I didn’t wait. I started walking toward the door, my smile already deployed. It was a practiced, high-gloss finish, the kind of performance I could reassemble in seconds.
I was the erratic son, the colorful stain, the Devereaux disaster. I knew my lines.
The interior of the villa had been colonized. Security stood in the foyer, eyes tracking my movement with professional indifference.
The household staff moved like ghosts, their usual chatter replaced by a stiff, terrified competence. The house itself seemed to be behaving, trying its best to look like a place where a statesman might live rather than a playground for a lunatic.
I found him in the living room. He was standing by the floor-to-ceiling window, looking out at the ocean I had spent the morning hating.







