Get the APP hot
Home / Billionaires / Dark Obsession: The Billionaire's Helpless Prey
Dark Obsession: The Billionaire's Helpless Prey

Dark Obsession: The Billionaire's Helpless Prey

5.0
10 Chapters
Read Now

I was the unwanted stepsister in the wealthy Steele family, living like a stray dog. Everything changed the night my stepbrother Kendell dragged me to a VIP club, where I caught the eye of Finnegan Emerson, the most ruthless billionaire in New York. To save his own skin, Kendell traded me to him without hesitation. "Take her. Just get her out of my hair." I tried to run, but Finnegan hunted me down and locked me in his car. Worse, our housekeeper accidentally revealed my fatal weakness to him: severe asthma triggered by dog dander. The very next day, Kendell deliberately brought a massive German Shepherd into the house, laughing as I collapsed, gasping for air. He announced that Finnegan had kindly offered his isolated, hyper-clean estate for my "safety." As I lay on the floor dying for a breath, the terrifying truth I found online echoed in my mind. Finnegan was a pathological germaphobe who destroyed people for merely brushing against his suit. Yet, he had grabbed my wrists and touched my lips without a single flinch. Why was this monstrous, cold-blooded predator so deeply obsessed with a nobody like me? As my vision blurred, my phone lit up with a message from him, bypassing every block I had set. He had cut off all my escape routes, but I swore I would find a way out of his golden cage.

Contents

Dark Obsession: The Billionaire's Helpless Prey Chapter 1

The heavy door of the Lincoln Navigator resisted, a slab of cold steel against Caprice Booth's thin frame. A gust of Manhattan winter wind shoved it back at her, the air so cold it felt like swallowing glass. Her knuckles were white where she gripped the handle.

"Get in, Caprice."

Kendell Steele's voice cut through the wind from the back seat, devoid of warmth, sharp with impatience.

She climbed in without a word, the way she had learned to do ever since her mother Eleanor married Kendell's father, Harrison Steele. Overnight, she had become a guest in their sprawling Upper East Side mansion-a charity case tolerated for the sake of family appearances. Tonight was no different: Kendell needed someone to drag along, and she was the closest available body.

She finally wrenched the door open and slid inside, the scent of expensive leather and Kendell's cologne filling her lungs. The door slammed shut, sealing her in the suffocating silence. The vehicle pulled away from the curb, gliding silently into the river of Upper East Side traffic. She smoothed down the skirt of her polyester dress, the cheap fabric a stark contrast to the plush interior. Her hands were freezing. She balled them into fists in her lap.

"Seriously?" Kendell's voice dripped with disdain. "That's what you chose to wear? It looks like something you'd find in a clearance bin in Queens."

Her stomach tightened. She didn't respond, turning her head to watch the city lights blur past the tinted window. The glittering towers were like beautiful, sharp-toothed monsters.

Her silence seemed to infuriate him more than any argument could have.

A loud smack echoed in the car as his hand hit the back of the passenger seat, inches from her head. She flinched.

"Listen to me," he hissed. "You are a guest in my father's house. Tonight, you will be quiet, you will be invisible, and you will not embarrass me. Do you understand?"

A cold wave washed over her, numbing the sting of his words. She gave a small, tight nod, her eyes still fixed on the window.

"I understand."

Her compliance was a wet blanket on his anger. He slumped back into his seat with a frustrated sigh.

The car lurched to a sudden stop in front of a nondescript black awning in SoHo. The momentum threw her forward, her shoulder knocking hard against the door. Before she could recover, a valet in a sharp red coat was pulling her door open.

A wall of sound-a deep, vibrating bass that shook the fillings in her teeth-hit her.

Kendell was already out of the car, striding toward the entrance without a backward glance. He didn't wait to see if she could manage the icy pavement in her three-inch heels. She scrambled to keep up, the wind whipping her hair across her face and stealing the breath from her lungs.

Just as she reached the velvet rope, a security guard with a neck as thick as her thigh put a hand out, stopping her. "Invitation?"

His eyes raked over her dress, his expression a mixture of boredom and contempt.

Kendell turned, his face a mask of irritation. "She's with me." The words were clipped, dismissive, as if he were claiming a piece of lost luggage.

The guard grunted and dropped the rope. His eyes, however, lingered on her for a moment longer, a silent judgment that made her skin crawl. The class difference was a physical barrier, as real as the velvet rope had been.

She followed Kendell through a dizzying hallway of flashing lights and into the club's chaotic heart. The air was thick with the smell of sweat, perfume, and spilled liquor. He led her up a flight of stairs, away from the writhing mass on the dance floor, to a heavy, soundproofed door at the end of a private corridor.

He pushed it open.

The immediate assault was of rich cigar smoke and expensive whiskey. The VIP room was a den of shadows and low, expensive light. The conversations stopped. Dozens of pairs of eyes, belonging to the sons and daughters of New York's elite, turned to fix on her.

A young man with slicked-back hair and a cruel smile, holding a glass of amber liquid, sauntered over. "Kendell, my man. Who's the Cinderella you brought with you?"

Kendell's jaw tightened. "Just a freeloader from home. Don't mind her."

A ripple of laughter went through the room.

Caprice's fingernails dug into her palms, the sharp, grounding pain a welcome distraction. She forced her face to remain a blank mask.

The man, Chase, reached out, his fingers aiming to tip her chin up. "Let's get a look at her."

She jerked back, a reflex as sharp and sudden as a startled animal. His hand met empty air. A flicker of annoyance crossed his face.

"Caprice," Kendell warned, his voice low and dangerous. "Don't cause trouble."

He turned his back on her then, moving to the bar to greet his friends, leaving her stranded and exposed in the middle of the room. She was a specimen under a microscope. Whispers followed her like flies.

Two girls in dresses that cost more than a year of her college tuition brushed past her, one of them deliberately ramming her shoulder. Caprice stumbled, catching her balance just before she fell. She didn't make a sound. She knew asking for help was the worst thing she could do.

She had to get out of the open. Her eyes scanned the room, desperately searching for a shadow, a corner, any place to disappear.

A waiter carrying a tray of drinks cut across her path, and she sidestepped just in time to avoid a shower of red wine.

And then she saw it. In the farthest, darkest part of the room, there was a semi-circular booth, unoccupied and shrouded in shadow.

Relief washed over her, cold and immediate. She moved quickly, keeping her head down, and slid into the plush leather seat. She sank deep into the cushions, the darkness wrapping around her like a protective cloak. For the first time all night, she took a full, deep breath.

But the quiet lasted only a heartbeat.

The heavy door to the VIP room swung open again, cutting through the thumping bass from the club below. The noise in the room didn't just quiet down-it died. Every head turned toward the entrance.

A man stood framed in the doorway, tall and dressed in a black suit so perfectly tailored it seemed molded to him. He stepped inside, and the oppressive weight of his presence seemed to suck the air out of the room.

Finnegan Emerson.

Chase, who had been holding court by the bar, immediately wiped the smirk off his face. He picked up a fresh glass and moved toward the newcomer, his posture radiating a desperate, fawning energy. "Finnegan. Good to see you, man."

Finnegan's gaze swept past him as if he were a piece of furniture. His eyes, dark and chillingly focused, scanned the room like a radar system, dismissing face after face.

In her corner, Caprice felt a sudden, inexplicable chill crawl up her spine. A primal instinct screamed at her to hide, to become smaller. She pressed herself deeper into the shadows of the booth.

It was useless.

His eyes cut through the dim light, through the clusters of people, and landed directly on her. They stopped. For a heartbeat, the entire world seemed to freeze. A flicker of something sharp and predatory lit his gaze.

Then he started walking.

The crowd parted for him like the Red Sea. People physically shuffled out of his path, their bodies tense, their eyes averted. He moved with an unhurried, lethal grace, his destination clear.

Kendell, seeing Finnegan heading for his stepsister, looked confused. He took a step forward, opening his mouth to speak. "Finnegan, what-"

Finnegan raised a single hand, a small, dismissive gesture that silenced Kendell instantly.

He stopped directly in front of her booth. His large frame blocked what little light reached her corner, plunging her into his shadow.

Caprice was forced to tilt her head up, her neck aching from the angle. Her eyes met his, and her breath caught in her throat. They weren't just eyes; they were black holes, deep and empty and filled with an unnerving, possessive intensity. Her fingers dug into the leather of the seat, her knuckles straining.

"Stand up," he commanded. The words were soft, but they were not a request.

She remained frozen, her heart slamming against her ribs.

And in that terrible, electric silence, she understood that the dark booth had never been a refuge. It had only been a trap-and he had just sprung it.

Continue Reading
img View More Comments on App
MoboReader
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY