The CEO's Regret: You made me your lie, I become your Loss-Chapter 83: Predator
The metallic tang of the warehouse hung heavy in the air, the silence broken only by the rhythmic drip, drip, drip of an overhead pipe. Shane stepped closer to the table, his eyes glazed with a terrifying, singular focus. He ran his thumb over a row of blades before his hand settled.
"I like this one," he whispered, lifting a gutting knife with jagged, curved edges.
The serrations caught the dim light, looking like the teeth of a predator.
"Shane! Come at me!" Sebastian roared, his voice cracking as he strained against the ropes. "Just let Amara go! This is between us. It’s the Creed name you hate, not her!"
Shane turned slowly, every movement deliberate, the knife dangling loosely at his side like a predator sizing up its prey.
"Of course I’m coming after you, Sebastian," he said, voice low and laced with venom. "But I want to see the light go out of your eyes before I finish you. I heard Amara was your first love."
His steps were silent, measured. Then, almost casually, he slipped behind her, the curve of the blade brushing dangerously close to the soft pulse at her neck. Cold steel, warm skin.
"Tell me..." Shane whispered, voice sharp as ice, "...if I killed her... would it destroy you?"
Amara’s breath caught in her throat. Her chest rose and fell in shallow, uneven gasps. She didn’t cry out. She didn’t scream.
She only turned her wide, glimmering eyes to Seb, tears threatening but unshed, and held his gaze with a sorrow so deep, so profound, it seemed to weigh down the air around them.
No pleading. No panic. Just tragic, heart-wrenching silence, a silent question that spoke louder than any scream, Do I have to die with him?
"Look at me! Shane, look at me, please!" Seb’s voice dropped to a desperate, guttural plea. "It’s all my fault. I’m the one who brought the chaos. I’ll pay with my life. As long as you let her go, I’ll do whatever you want. Anything."
Shane froze. A slow, sickening smirk spread across his face, his eyes dancing with a new, sadistic idea. "Anything at all?"
"Anything," Seb vowed, his gaze fixed on Amara.
"Very well." Shane reached into a rusted locker and pulled out a glass bottle. It looked like clear, harmless water, but the way the liquid moved, heavy and viscous, suggested something far more lethal. He stepped toward Seb, holding the bottle out like a dark offering. "Just drink whatever is in this glass, and I’ll let her go."
Amara’s eyes went wide. "No! Seb, don’t! Shane, please!"
"I’ll do as you say," Seb’s voice cut through the chaos, eerily calm, a razor of composure against the storm of madness swirling around them.
His eyes met Amara’s, and for a brief, haunting moment, a ghost of a smile brushed his lips, the same faint, almost tragic curve from that day he had taken poison because of her before.
Fear? He had none. Death had been a familiar companion for years, a shadow he had learned to walk beside.
But a world without her breath in it? That was something he could not bear.
"But you must," he said, his voice low and unwavering, "let her go the moment I swallow it. Give me your word."
Every word dripped with steel and desperation, the kind that left no room for doubt. The knife, the threat, the madness, they were all meaningless if Amara didn’t survive.
This was not a man bargaining for himself... it was a man bargaining for her life.
"You have the word of a man who has nothing left to lose," Shane sneered, uncapping the bottle.
Outside, the roar of a high-performance engine cut through the industrial silence.
Julian shifted the car into a higher gear, his knuckles white as he tore through the gates of the old scrapyard. Beside him, Amira held a tablet, tracking the faint GPS ping from the boutique’s stolen security tag.
"We’re close, Julian! Two hundred meters!" Amira shouted over the wind. "The main warehouse, the one with the red crane!"
Julian didn’t respond. His jaw was set in a grim line, his eyes burning with a cold, lethal intent. He didn’t care about the laws or the police. He only cared about reaching the door before the silence in that warehouse became permanent. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
The warehouse smelled of rusted iron and impending doom. The single swinging bulb cast long, jerking shadows as Amara’s fingers worked frantically at the rough hemp of her restraints.
"Seb, I don’t need you acting tough!" Amara’s voice rang out, sharp and trembling, echoing against the corrugated metal walls. Her heart thumped like a war drum.
She couldn’t bear the thought of another life, even his, being traded for hers.
Her gaze snapped to Shane, fierce and unflinching, edged with the raw weight of truth. "I’m sorry about Seren. She was just a child. But Elara... she did all sorts of evil. She deserved to die!"
The words hit like fire.
"Oh, really?" Shane’s voice dropped, dark and guttural, a low, demonic growl that made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end. The mere mention of the woman he loved being "evil" shattered the last fragile thread holding his mind together.
In a blur of motion, he yanked Sebastian’s hair, forcing his head back, and tilted the bottle into his mouth.
Time seemed to slow. The room smelled of metal, fear, and desperation, and in that frozen heartbeat, Amara realized just how close the edge of chaos had come and how far she might fall if she blinked.
Seb choked, the caustic liquid burning his throat as he was forced to swallow. Within seconds, he slumped forward, a violent fit of coughing racking his chest as dark, metallic-smelling blood splattered onto the concrete floor.
In that split second, Shane’s focus was all on Sebastian, his cruel grin twisted as he forced the bottle down. Amara’s chest tightened, her pulse spiking, a fierce surge of adrenaline igniting every muscle in her body.
She didn’t think she reacted.
With a sudden, explosive movement, she tore herself out of the chair. Her hands braced against his chest, and she shoved with every ounce of strength she could summon, a raw mix of fear, fury, and survival.
Shane stumbled violently, the momentum sending him crashing backward. His feet skidded over the cold, gritty floor until he collided with a stack of rusted crates. Metal groaned and splintered under the impact, and the knife slipped from his hand, clattering to the floor like a gunshot in the tense silence.
For a heartbeat, the world seemed to freeze, the clang of metal, the rapid thrum of hearts, the sharp, intoxicating scent of danger all merging into one. Amara’s chest heaved.
Amara didn’t run for the door. She dived for Seb, her fingers flying as she untied the ropes binding him. "Are you okay? Seb, look at me!"
Seb gasped, wiping blood from his lips, his face ashen. He grabbed her arm, his grip surprisingly strong despite the poison. "There are explosives here, Amara... we need to go. Now!"
"Amara, I will kill you!" Shane screamed, recovering from the floor. He lunged, the serrated blade raised high.
Amara flinched, closing her eyes, but the blow never landed. Seb had thrown his body in front of her, taking the full force of the blade into his side. He let out a choked groan, collapsing to the floor as Shane twisted the knife.
"Seb!" Amara screamed, dropping to her knees beside him, trying to stanch the flow of blood with her bare hands. She looked up at Shane, her face streaked with tears and soot. "Shane, stop! It’s not too late. Think of your mother! If you get locked up or die here, what will happen to her?"
Shane loomed over them, chest rising and falling like a wild drumbeat, the bloody knife quivering in his grasp as if it had a life of its own. His eyes were wide, unhinged, burning with a madness that made the air between them feel thick and suffocating.
"My mother will be fine," he said, voice cracking and rising at odd intervals, "my little Seren... I just got her back. She missed her mom so much that she cried and refused to go home with me. She ran off... and that truck..."
A harsh, broken laugh ripped from his throat, high-pitched and jagged, crawling under Amara’s skin. "I lost the woman I love, and my child is gone. I’ve definitely... nothing left."
Seb coughed, rasping on the floor, every breath a struggle. "Where is... your conscience, Shane?"
Shane’s head snapped toward him, spittle flying as he spat the word like venom.
"Conscience?" He stepped closer, each movement slow and deliberate, madness fully claiming him. "Everything... is your fault. All of it."
The knife glinted in the dim light, trembling with the weight of his grief and rage, and for a moment, the room felt like it had been swallowed by darkness, the line between fear and death razor-thin.







