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Wrong Room: Trapped By The Ruthless CEO

Wrong Room: Trapped By The Ruthless CEO

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10 Chapters
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Six years ago, my mother's life support was about to be cut off over a $50,000 medical bill. Desperate, I agreed to sell myself to a wealthy client in Penthouse C. But in my blind panic, I swiped my key card into Penthouse B. Before I could explain, a terrifying stranger dragged me into the pitch-black room and ruthlessly claimed me. When dawn broke, I realized my catastrophic mistake. Worse, when my mother's nurse called, the stranger mistook it for a pimp and violently smashed my only phone to pieces against the wall. I fled the hotel in tears, only to discover the real client next door had already left. Because of that one wrong door, the money never came in time, and my mother passed away two days later. I was left with a shattered life and, nine months later, a pair of fatherless twins. For six years, I struggled in the dirt to raise my children alone. I thought I had finally escaped that nightmare. "We prefer to hire employees without family baggage," the interviewer sneered, rejecting me for a junior designer role. I didn't understand. If I was humiliated and rejected so harshly, why did the corporate HR department suddenly override the decision and send me a direct offer an hour later? It wasn't until I walked into the CEO's office that my blood ran cold. The ruthless billionaire sitting behind the desk, holding my six-year-old revenge note, was the monster from that dark room.

Contents

Wrong Room: Trapped By The Ruthless CEO Chapter 1

The cheap plastic of the key card felt slick against Kailee Byers's damp palm.

Her thumb nervously traced its edges as she stared at her phone screen. A single text message glowed with brutal finality.

Mount Sinai Accounts Dept: Payment for Catherine Byers is overdue. Account balance: $50,000. Please remit immediately.

The red exclamation point next to it felt like a tiny, sharp jab directly into her chest.

Her breath hitched. The air in the plush, silent hallway of the St. Regis seemed to thin, becoming impossible to draw into her lungs.

She squeezed her eyes shut, the image of her mother's pale, sleeping face flashing behind her eyelids. The sterile scent of the hospital, the quiet beep of the machines keeping her alive...

"Okay, Kailee," she whispered, her voice a raw, trembling thread of sound. "You can do this."

It was for her. It was all for her.

Taking a shaky breath, she forced her legs to move. Each step toward the suite marked Penthouse B felt heavy, as if she were wading through thick mud. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird. This wasn't a hotel corridor; it was a walk to the gallows.

She reached the door. Her hand trembled as she raised the key card to the electronic lock. A soft green light blinked, followed by an almost silent click.

The sound was a death knell.

She pushed the heavy door open and stepped inside.

The suite was pitch black. The only light was the faint, glittering tapestry of the Manhattan skyline, cast through a massive floor-to-ceiling window.

The air was thick, almost suffocating. It smelled of expensive whiskey and a sharp, masculine cologne that clung to the back of her throat, making her feel dizzy.

She hesitated at the threshold, her fingers tight around the strap of her worn canvas bag.

"Hello?" she called out, her voice barely audible, swallowed by the oppressive silence.

A deep voice, laced with impatience and the rough edge of alcohol, answered from the direction of the bedroom.

"You're late."

Kailee's stomach clenched. The client. He was waiting.

"I'm so sorry, I..."

Before she could finish her apology, a tall, broad silhouette emerged from the shadows. He moved with a predator's speed, closing the distance between them in two long strides.

He gave her no time to explain, no time to even breathe. His hand shot out, fingers wrapping around her wrist like a steel manacle. He yanked her into the room.

The force of the pull sent her stumbling forward. She collided with a chest as hard as stone, the impact knocking the air from her lungs. She could feel the steady, powerful beat of his heart against her cheek.

A low, contemptuous chuckle rumbled in his chest. He must have mistaken her genuine shock for some kind of professional, coy performance.

Before she could protest, he shoved her back against the wall. The cool surface was a shock against her heated skin. His towering frame completely eclipsed the city lights, trapping her in his shadow. The sheer size of him, the raw power radiating from him, was overwhelming.

"I'm not... You don't understand..." she tried to stammer, her mind racing to find the words to explain the mistake.

But her words were smothered.

His mouth came down on hers, a brutal, punishing kiss that tasted of whiskey and dominance. It wasn't a kiss of passion; it was an act of ownership, a statement of control. It was invasive and absolute, leaving no room for argument or resistance.

Her brain went white with static. All thought, all protest, dissolved into a singular, paralyzing fear.

Then, an image broke through the fog: her mother's face, fragile and wan against a stark white hospital pillow.

A single tear escaped the corner of her eye, tracing a hot path down her temple.

Despair, cold and absolute, washed over her.

She closed her eyes.

Her body, which had been tense with struggle, went limp. The fight drained out of her, replaced by a hollow, chilling resignation.

He felt the change in her, the sudden, rigid surrender. He broke the kiss, his breathing harsh in the silence. Without a word, he hooked an arm under her knees and lifted her as if she weighed nothing.

He carried her toward the bedroom.

Through it all, Kailee was a doll with its strings cut. A soulless puppet, her mind a maelstrom of shame, humiliation, and a soul-crushing guilt that ate away at her from the inside out.

Dawn was a smear of bruised purple and gray against the window when Kailee jerked awake.

Her body ached with a deep, unfamiliar soreness. The sheets were a tangled mess around her, smelling of him, of a stranger.

She turned her head slowly on the pillow.

In the faint morning light, she saw his face clearly for the first time. He was on his side, sleeping, his features relaxed. A strong jaw, a straight nose, dark hair falling across his forehead. He was handsome in a way that was almost violent, breathtakingly so.

And completely, utterly unknown.

A wave of nausea churned in her stomach, hot and acidic. She scrambled out of the bed, one hand clamped over her mouth, and stumbled into the adjoining bathroom.

She retched over the toilet, but only bile came up. Her body shook with violent, empty heaves.

When it was over, she leaned her forehead against the cool marble wall, gasping for breath. She caught her reflection in the vast, gold-trimmed mirror. A pale, haunted-looking woman stared back, her eyes wide with shock, her lips bruised.

She bit down hard on her lower lip, the sharp pain a welcome distraction. Calm down. Just get out of here.

Moving with the stealth of a cat, she crept back into the bedroom. She found her clothes discarded on a chair and dressed with frantic, silent haste. Every rustle of fabric sounded like a gunshot in the quiet room.

Her cheap canvas bag lay on the floor, its contents spilled out. Her wallet, her keys, a tube of lip balm.

And her old, cracked-screen phone.

She knelt, her fingers closing around the familiar, worn plastic. She just wanted to grab it and run. Run and never look back.

As her fingers brushed against the phone, a hand shot out from the bed and clamped down on her wrist.

She gasped, her head snapping up.

He was awake.

He had pushed himself up on one elbow, his eyes open and fixed on her. They were a cold, piercing shade of gray, sharp as a hawk's, and utterly devoid of the drunken haze from the night before.

At that exact moment, her phone vibrated in her hand. The screen lit up.

The caller ID read: Mom's Nurse.

Archer's gaze flickered from her face to the glowing screen. A look of profound disgust twisted his handsome features. He thought it was her pimp, or another client calling to line up the next job.

"My rule," he said, his voice a low, cold growl. "The transaction is over. No follow-up."

"That's my mom's nurse!" Kailee cried, desperation making her voice sharp. She tried to wrench her hand free, to answer the call.

He didn't believe her. He saw it as just another pathetic, predictable trick to get more money, to forge a connection. His fingers tightened on her wrist, a cruel, deliberate pressure.

With his other hand, he snatched the phone from her grasp.

"No!" she screamed.

He ignored her. His expression was a mask of cold fury, an anger that seemed disproportionate, almost personal. He rose from the bed, his naked body a terrifying display of power and muscle.

And with a sudden, violent motion, he hurled her phone against the far wall.

It hit the plaster with a sickening crack. The device exploded into pieces-plastic, glass, and metal scattering across the expensive carpet.

The screen went black forever.

Kailee stared at the wreckage. Her only line to the hospital. Her only way to know if her mother was...

Everything went silent. The blood in her veins turned to ice.

The terror and despair that had held her captive all night suddenly combusted, transforming into a white-hot, blinding rage.

She ripped her wrist from his grasp with a strength she didn't know she possessed.

She didn't look at him. She didn't say a word.

She just turned and ran, fleeing the room, the suite, the man who had taken everything and then smashed the last, fragile piece of her world into dust.

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