[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 225: Softness
CASSIAN
The black digital file from Reid arrived with the cold, silent vibration of a death warrant against my thigh.
I sat in the back of the car, the leather smelling of charcoal and rain, and watched the grainy playback on my phone. CCTV footage is a wretched medium, it strips away the humanity of a scene, leaving only the mechanical geometry of movement and consequence.
I watched the warehouse. Not the one my men had gutted hours before, but a cleaner, more sterile facility in the industrial heart of the city.
A place that looked like it had every legal right to exist. The back doors of a nondescript van slid open, and two men hauled Vanni out. My men had tracked the lieutenant’s movement with a careful precision that would have made a predator proud.
He was broken, his limbs dangling with the uselessness of snapped rebar, his face a roadmap of the pain I had personally mapped onto him.
An underboss met them, a man named Moretti. I recognized the set of his shoulders immediately. He was mid-level, a man who possessed a terrifying amount of authority within a three-block radius and absolutely none outside of it. He was the kind of man Emilio kept around because he followed orders with the blind devotion of a dog.
Moretti leaned down, his lips moving near Vanni’s ear. The audio wasn’t clear, but I didn’t need it to decipher what he was saying. I could see the demand in the way Moretti’s hand gripped Vanni’s hair.
What did you tell them? What did you give them?
Then came the confession. I watched Vanni’s mouth move, saw the way his head lolled back as he spilled the ink of Emilio’s empire.
The shipment routes. The secondary locations. The financial pipelines through the shell companies. I watched Moretti’s face shift from irritation to a stark, pallid fear as the scope of the compromise became clear.
Moretti pulled a phone from his pocket. The call was brief. His spine straightened, his head bowing slightly, the involuntary physical response of a man speaking to the sun.
Emilio or a second in command was most likely on the other end. I watched the underboss receive his instructions, the finality of the conversation evident in the way he tucked the phone away and looked back at the man on the floor.
There was no ceremony. No final words. Moretti drew a suppressed pistol and fired once.
The lieutenant’s body jerked and then went still. Three seconds of static-filled silence followed before my own men engaged, a blur of suppressed muzzles and rapid, professional movement. Moretti and his goons were eliminated before they could even register the breach.
The footage cut to black.
The memory of Reid’s call from thirty minutes prior sat in my throat like ash.
"I sent you something," Reid had said, his voice a flat, digital drone. "Watch it before you go anywhere. The tracker held. We followed the lieutenant to the secondary site. Emilio’s men followed protocol, they brought him in, they questioned him, and they erased him. We took out the underboss and the cleanup crew. No witnesses. No evidence."
I had been standing in my office when that call came. I had been standing with Noah on my desk, his heart beating against mine, the heat of his skin a intoxicating contrast to the cold business of the morning. I had looked at the flush of his face, at the way his hands were still knotted in my shirt, and I had seen the disappointment flicker in his eyes when I stepped back.
It had cost me something to move away. A physical wrenching that I wasn’t prepared for. I had seen the way his mouth tightened, the way he tried to perform "fine" while his eyes told me he felt abandoned. I’d had to look away from that, from the soft, dangerous pull of him, to answer the ghost on the phone.
"Did they get out clean?" I’d asked Reid.
"Yes."
"Good."
I hadn’t told Reid that I was in the middle of a different kind of war. I hadn’t told him that for a split second, I had considered letting the phone ring. I had simply ended the call and walked out of the office, leaving Noah unresolved on the mahogany.
I put my phone down now and stared out at the city. The glass towers of the financial district looked like tombstones under the gray Monday sky. I picked the phone back up and redialed. Reid answered before the second ring.
"The footage is secured," I said. "The underboss is confirmed?"
"Confirmed," Reid replied. "Three additional Vincenti crew neutralized. We scrubbed the site. Emilio knows his operation is compromised. He’ll change everything now, the routes, the personnel, the locations. We’re losing the map we just took from Vanni."
There was a pause, the kind of silence that asks for a directive. "What do you want to do, Cassian?"
"Nothing," I said, leaning my head back against the headrest.
"Nothing?" Reid’s voice carried a rare note of confusion. "We have the names. We have the pipelines. If we wait, they vanish."
"We let him reorganize," I said, my voice dropping into a low, predatory rumble. "We watch him do it. A man restructuring an empire in a hurry makes mistakes. Emilio is a careful man, he’s survived this long because he’s surrounded by meticulous people who will tell him what to do. But even careful men get sloppy when they’re scared. And we just made him very, very scared."
I watched a black hawk circle above the city. "People don’t rebuild from scratch, Reid. They renovate. They use the same networks, the same trusted hands, the same shady lawyers. We find the renovations. We watch where the new blood flows."
"Understood," Reid said. "And the consigliere? The name the lieutenant gave us? Rossi?"
"Not yet," I said. "He’s more useful alive and unaware. When the time comes for a direct conversation with Emilio, Rossi will be the leverage I need. For now, we practice patience."
"Patience," Reid echoed. "Yes, sir."
The call ended. I looked at the driver’s silhouette in the front seat. "Change the route," I said. "Take me to the estate."
"Yes, sir."
The car veered toward the suburbs, away from the glass towers and toward the sprawling, manicured misery of the Wolfe family grounds.
The lieutenant was gone. The underboss was gone. Emilio’s operation was a bleeding wound, and Julian was a step closer to being answered. I should have felt the cold, sharp satisfaction of a successful strike. I should have felt the predatory hum of a plan coming together.
Instead, I felt the kiss.
It stayed in me, a persistent, rhythmic thrumming in my blood. I could still feel the weight of Noah on the desk, the way his legs had wrapped around my waist with a sudden, desperate ownership. Stay. The word had been a whisper, but it had carried more force than any command my father had ever given me.
I did what I always did: I pushed it down. I filed the memory of Noah’s mouth and the scent of his skin under the category of Non-Essential. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
I had been down this road before. I knew the cost of softness. The people who had made me soft in the past were either in graves or living lives of permanent mourning.
I couldn’t afford to let Noah Bennett become a vulnerability. I had told myself this a thousand times, and the fact that I had to keep telling myself was a piece of information I refused to examine.
I couldn’t have him as a tether while I was burning down a mafia empire. I couldn’t have his safety weighing on my hand while I was pulling a trigger. And yet, as the car slowed at the massive iron gates of the Wolfe estate, I found myself checking my watch. I’d told him dinner. I’d told him I’d be back.
The gates swung open, a slow, mechanical maw that swallowed the car whole.
The Wolfe estate was a monument to the kind of money that doesn’t fix things. It was all marble, limestone, and ancient oaks, a sprawling, silent testament to my father’s reach. I stepped out of the car, the air smelling of cut grass and old power.
Inside, the house was a tomb. I walked across the polished marble floors of the foyer, my boots echoing with a sound that didn’t belong in a place this refined. I could hear Seraphina’s voice from the morning room, sharp, melodic, and entirely devoid of warmth, as she instructed a maid on the placement of lilies. I didn’t stop. I never stopped for her.
Preston was absent, which I registered as a small mercy. My brother was a vulture who preferred to circle when there was already blood on the ground; he hadn’t yet realized how much I’d bled Emilio in the last twelve hours.
I reached the double mahogany doors of my father’s study. I didn’t knock. I have never knocked on a door in this house. I simply pushed them open and stepped into the room.
Charles Wolfe was not alone. An older man sat in the leather armchair opposite the desk, a man with the silver hair and the tailored posture of a diplomat. Someone with money in his heritage and history in his hands. A meeting I was clearly interrupting.
I didn’t care.
Charles looked up from a ledger, his features tightening for a fraction of a second, a micro-expression of irritation that he smoothed over instantly. He replaced it with the mask of the patriarch, the composed, untouchable face he kept for the world.
The silver-haired man started to rise, the social reflex of a man who knew he was no longer the most important thing in the room.
"Cassian," Charles said, his voice a smooth, low baritone.
I didn’t look at the guest. I looked directly at my father. "We need to talk," I said. I turned my head slightly toward the stranger. "Give us a moment."







