[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 215: Intruder

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Chapter 215: Intruder

NOAH

The laugh didn’t start in my throat; it started somewhere deep in my gut, a bubbling, involuntary reaction to the sheer, cosmic absurdity of the moment.

Mason was still leaned in, his hand clutching mine with the kind of white-knuckled sincerity usually reserved for hospital waiting rooms.

His brown eyes were wide, brimming with a protective heat, waiting for me to confess to the "hostile work environment" he’d spent the last ten minutes constructing in his head.

Is your boss bullying you? The image of Cassian... the man who had spent the better part of Friday night with my head in his lap, his fingers tracing patterns in my hair while he whispered the most guarded parts of his soul into the dark... Being cast as a common office bully was too much.

The structural integrity of my composure simply vanished.

I tried to hold it. I squeezed my eyes shut, my shoulders shaking as I fought to keep the sound in, but it escaped anyway.

It wasn’t a loud laugh, but it was helpless. It was the laughter of someone who had been handed a gift so sweet and so ridiculous that the only response was to break.

Mason pulled back as if I’d bitten him. His face went from deep concern to wounded dignity in approximately three seconds.

"What? What’s funny? Am I funny to you right now?" He snatched his hand back, crossing his arms over his chest. "I’m being serious, Noah. I’m being your friend. I’m opening up my heart to your struggle, and you’re sitting there cackling like I’m telling a stand-up routine. Are you laughing at me?"

"No, I’m sorry—" I tried to say, but another wave hit me. I had to wipe a stray tear from the corner of my eye. "I’m sorry, Mason, I swear. It’s just—"

"I opened up to you," he muttered, looking away toward a group of hipsters at the next table. "I deployed my full emotional empathy, and I got mocked."

Finally, the tremors subsided. The smile remained, though... genuine and warmer than anything I’d felt all week. I looked at him, truly seeing the frantic, messy kindness that defined him.

"You’re so sweet," I said. It was simple, stripped of any deflection. "You are genuinely the sweetest person I know."

Mason’s posture softened, though he tried to keep the pout. "Don’t try to compliment your way out of this. You still haven’t answered the question."

I took a sip of my coffee, the warmth settling me. "A month ago maybe," I said, "you would have been right. Like, completely, 100% right. But right now... it’s really not that."

Mason gave me a long, suspicious squint. The pink flush of embarrassment was already beginning to fade from his cheeks.

"Well, how was I supposed to know? You’re always so quiet, and lately, you’ve been even more... I don’t know, distracted. I was worried, man."

"I know," I said, and I didn’t let any irony slip into my tone. "I’m sorry for worrying you. I’m really fine, Mason. Actually fine." I paused, my mind flickering back to the quiet of Cassian’s apartment. "He’s been spoiling me, honestly."

Mason’s eyes nearly bulged out of his head. "He WHAT?"

"I mean—work stuff!" I scrambled, the slip registering far too late. My face was suddenly very hot. "Like... extra breaks. And he adjusted my salary. You know. Logistics. Standard administrative appreciation."

"That man? That scary yet good-looking man?" Mason pointed a finger toward the general direction of the XUM building. "The one who looks like he invented the concept of a hostile work environment as a hobby? Spoiling you?"

"It’s very professional," I lied, looking down at my muffin.

Mason studied me for a few more seconds before letting out a long, dramatic sigh. "Hm. Fine. I didn’t think he had it in him, but good. You deserve it, Noah. Things are finally looking up for you."

"Yeah," I said, a soft, private smile tugging at my mouth. "Yeah, they are."

But even as I said it, a small voice in the back of my mind wondered if Cassian would text. I told myself not to wonder. I told myself that Saturday was a boundary. I wondered anyway.

Saturday afternoon was spent in the liminal space of my own apartment. I turned the television on, the volume loud enough to drown out the silence, but not loud enough to drown out the thoughts.

I checked my phone at 4:00 PM. Nothing.

I checked it at 7:00 PM. A text from Mason about a taco truck. Nothing from Cassian.

It was normal. This was what I told myself as I lay on my bed, staring at the ceiling.

Cassian is a CEO. He is a man with a legacy to manage and a thousand fires to put out.

He wasn’t sitting in his penthouse wondering if he should send a "How is your Saturday?" text to his assistant. That wasn’t who he was. That wasn’t what this relationship—whatever it was—was built on.

I knew what this was. I was the person who saw the cracks in the armor. I was the person he held when the world got too loud. But that didn’t mean I was a permanent fixture of his weekends.

Sunday was worse. The hollow feeling wasn’t dramatic; it was just a dull, persistent ache in the center of my chest. I put the phone face down on the kitchen counter at noon. I picked it up again at 12:04 PM.

The distance between his world and mine felt immense when there was no work to bridge it.

In the office, I was his shadow. In his apartment, I was his anchor. But in my own apartment, I was just Noah... the boy whose father didn’t want him and whose mother thought he was a headache. Without Cassian’s orbit to pull me along, I felt stagnant.

I went to bed early on Sunday night, the dread for Monday morning sitting in my stomach like a cold stone. It wasn’t the dread of work; it was the dread of the unknown. How would he look at me? Would the drawbridge be up? Would we go back to the professional distance, as if Friday night had been a fever dream?

The alarm went off at 6:00 AM, but I was already awake.

I got ready with a frantic sort of precision, making sure my tie was perfect and my hair was neat. I was a functional adult. I was a professional. I did not need a weekend text to validate my existence.

Mason met me in the lobby, launching into a convoluted story about this new girl he was seeing and a lost cat before the elevator doors had even closed. I nodded and made the right noises, but my mind was already on the top floor.

When the lift dinged on the executive level, I parted ways with Mason and walked down the familiar, hushed corridor. I reached my desk and my eyes immediately shot to the glass wall of the corner office. I walked slowly to the door, opening it slowly.

It was dark.

The heavy leather chair was empty. The mahogany desk was undisturbed. There was no scent of cigar smoke lingering in the air, no half-empty cup of espresso, no presence that made the very molecules of the room feel pressurized.

I went back to my desk, my hand hovering over my keyboard, looking at the empty office for much longer than I meant to.

He’s just late, I told myself. He had a busy weekend. He’s probably at a meeting. He always is.

I pulled up the schedule. There were no off-site meetings listed until 2:00 PM.

I debated texting him. My thumb hovered over his name. Good morning, Cassian. Just checking if you need anything brought in? No. Too clingy.

Is there a change to the 10:00 AM brief?

No. Too transparent.

I forced myself to focus on my inbox. I answered three emails about the upcoming London merger. I organized the digital files for the account. Every four minutes, my eyes flicked back to the glass.

Still empty.

By midday, the pretense of "business as usual" was wearing thin. My skin felt itchy with a restlessness I couldn’t name. I needed to move. I needed to breathe air that didn’t feel like it was waiting for someone else to arrive.

I headed down to Mason’s department. I found him literally buried under a mountain of spreadsheets, looking like he’d been through a physical altercation with a photocopier.

"I forgot I had work," he groaned, not looking up. "I decompressed too much, Noah. My brain is still at that taco truck. I’m a shell of a man."

"How do you forget you have work?" I asked, leaning against his cubicle wall.

"It just happens! It’s a medical condition," he snapped, finally looking up with dark circles under his eyes. "Can you get me something? A sandwich? A coffee? A new life? I’ll pay you back. I’ll pay you back emotionally."

"What does that even mean?"

"I’ll be your hype-man all week. I’ll tell everyone how great your tie looks. Just get me a panini."

"Fine," I sighed, already heading for the elevators. "Text me anything else you want." 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝙬𝙚𝓫𝒏𝓸𝓿𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝙤𝓶

The sun was far too bright for a Monday morning. It felt like an insult to the murky, unsettled state of my head. I squinted as I stepped out of the revolving doors, the heat of the city sidewalk radiating through my shoes.

I started walking toward the deli two blocks down, checking my phone one last time for a missed call. Nothing.

And then, I saw him.

A figure was walking toward the building entrance from the opposite direction.

He moved with a specific, practiced ease... the walk of a man who assumed the world would move out of his way without being asked. My eyes adjusted to the glare, and the recognition hit me like a bucket of ice water.

It was Nick.

He was here. On a Monday. At my place of work. He was wearing a suit that probably cost more than my apartment’s annual rent, looking like he owned the sidewalk.

Our eyes met, and the smile that spread across his face was immediate. It was that specific, predatory grin that meant he had found a vulnerability and was about to press his thumb into it.

"Well," Nick said, stopping a few feet from me. He looked me up and down, his eyes lingering on my ID badge. "Who would have thought? You actually work here as Cassian’s assistant and not just the guy who buffs the floors. I’m impressed, Noah. Truly."

"What do you want, Nick?" I asked. I didn’t bother with a greeting. I didn’t bother with the performance of being the "nice" brother. My voice was flat and cold.

Nick’s smile shifted, recalibrating. He didn’t like it when I didn’t play the part of the stuttering victim. A flicker of something... annoyance? Curiosity?—passed over his eyes.

"Relax," he said, smoothing the front of his jacket. "I’m not here to bully you. I have a meeting."

He paused, the grin returning with a sharpened, more pointed edge.

"With Cassian, actually."

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