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Now reading: Chapter 222: The Exotic Bird from [BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl, a Yaoi novel by DaoistIQ2cDu.

NICK

The car was quiet, the hum of the tires against the pavent the only soundtrack to the post-mortem currently playing in the back of my mind.

I sat in the leather embrace of the driver’s seat, my head tilted slightly, staring at the blurred gray geotry of the city.

My jaw throbbed. It wasn’t so painful, I’ve seen enough facial trauma to know the difference between a fracture and a contusion, but it was definitely there.

A dull, rhythmic announcent under the skin. I resisted the urge to touch it. To touch it was to acknowledge the impact, and I wasn’t ready to grant that satisfaction to the empty car.

I replayed the whole thing with the sa cold accuracy of a surgeon reviewing a botched bypass.

Noah had been a known variable.

Emotional, reactive, his attempts at composure as transparent as a cheap glass.

He was performing the role of a professional, but the boy who used to hide in the pantry during our father’s galas was still vibrating just beneath the surface.

I’d spent twenty years reading him; he was an open book written in a language I’d mastered before I hit puberty.

And there was Cassian Wolfe. He’d arrived at the build-up, cooling the air with that predatory stillness.

I had him figured out the mont he sat down. He didn’t just enter a room... he probed it, hunting for who ruled before he even spoke. I’d already folded that into my own little ga, and I couldn’t wait to see how ours would collide.

But the third variable. The exotic bird.

I hadn’t seen him coming. Not because he was stealthy, the man was a walking neon sign of pink hair and chartreuse silk, but because he didn’t fit the architecture of the world I lived in.

He wasn’t security. He wasn’t corporate. He wasn’t anyone who seed to understand, or care, about the concept of consequence.

And I heard Noah call him Cyan.

A ridiculous na for a ridiculous person.

He looked like an exhibition, an unusual bird with those rings and the sunglasses pushed up into hair the color of a sunset.

He’d stood next to Noah with a terrifying sense of belonging, as if he’d simply decided that space was his and the world had no choice but to agree.

And the punch.

There had been no telegraphing. No wind-up.

No beat of hesitation where the mind weighs the cost of the action against the satisfaction of the blow.

Most people, when they look at , calculate. They see the suit, the title, the family na, and they reconsider. They adjust.

The bird didn’t adjust. He decided, and then he executed.

That was the thing that bothered as the car pulled up to the hospital. Not the ground. Not the bruise. It was the absence of that hesitation.

It ant one of two things: either he was genuinely too stupid to understand who I was, or he was protected by sothing so absolute that my na didn’t register as a threat.

I tucked away the image of him stepping in front of Noah. Unbidden. Unasked.

Interesting, I thought.

The automatic doors of the hospital hissed open, and the scent of antiseptic hit , sharp, clinical, and predictable. My shoulders settled, a micro-adjustnt I only noticed because of the contrast to the last forty minutes.

This was my domain. Here, the variables were known, and the hierarchy was absolute.

The eyes found imdiately. I walked down the main corridor, the squeak of rubber soles on linoleum the only rhythm I cared about.

A nurse paused mid-sentence. A resident glanced up from a chart and did a visible double-take.

I didn’t slow down. I didn’t acknowledge the stares, and I certainly didn’t touch my jaw. Let them look. Looking cost them their focus; it cost nothing.

"Dr. Bennett—"

Sarah, a senior surgical lead, intercepted halfway to the elevators. The concern arrived on her face before she was close enough to touch , her eyes zeroing in on the darkening mark on my jawline.

"What happened? Are you alright?"

I didn’t stop. I barely even turned my head. "Disagreent," I said.

The word was flat, delivered with the sa weight I’d use to describe a minor scheduling conflict.

I moved past her before she could form a follow-up. I didn’t give her an incident to report; I gave her a gap.

And gaps in a hospital are dangerous things, they fill themselves with whatever the observer decides to pour in.

By the ti I reached my office, the rumor mill would already be churning. Sothing at XUM.

A corporate fallout. A high-stakes clash of wills. I let it build. I wouldn’t touch it. I’d let the fiction beco the truth, because the truth, that a man with pink hair had leveled on a sidewalk while my brother watched, was a variable I wasn’t ready to release into the wild.

I closed my office door, and the silence arrived. It was different from the corridor, this was contained, private, and entirely mine.

I went straight to the mirror above the small sink in the corner. I studied the bruise the way I studied a fresh MRI. Objectively.

I pressed the center of the impact once. The pain flared cleanly, a bright, hot needle behind my molars. I exhaled through my nose, watching my own pupils.

Sloppy.

The word wasn’t for the bird. It was for . I’d missed a variable. I’d spent so much ti dissecting Noah and Cassian that I’d left my flank exposed to a chaotic elent I hadn’t bothered to asure.

I don’t miss things.

My entire life, my career, my reputation, my survival, is built on the fact that I do not miss things.

I sat down in my chair and leaned back, the leather creaking softly. I began to put him back together in my head.

Pink hair. Purple eyes, if the light hadn’t been playing tricks. Rings. Makeup. The clothes weren’t corporate; they were inherited money worn loudly. Old money that had been bored for three generations and decided to set itself on fire.

He wasn’t just anybody. He was too familiar with Noah for that. The face-grab. The kiss.

The ease of two people who had known each other long enough to bypass all the standard social boundaries. And the way he’d said the na. Squishy. A term of affection so specific it bordered on the extre side.

What I didn’t know was the "why." Why was he there? Why did he hit ? Why did he look at like I was a minor inconvenience rather than a threat?

I searched for him.

I turned to my computer and ran a few discreet queries, skimming through social registries, high-end boutique ownerships, local donor lists.

Absolutely nothing.

The man was a ghost wrapped in a neon suit. He didn’t exist in the digital footprints of the Wolfe circle, or any circle for that matter.

The walking firework was becoming more interesting by the second.

I leaned back further, my fingers steepled under my chin. The pattern was starting to erge.

At the dinner, Cassian Wolfe had shielded Noah. He’d done it with the weight of his position, using his authority like a shield.

Today, Cyan had defended him with a fist. Two separate n. Both significant, given their resources. Both stepping in for my brother without a mont’s hesitation.

That wasn’t a coincidence. That was a shift in the ecosystem.

I thought about Noah’s face when Cassian arrived. I’d been watching. I’m always watching. In that half-second before Noah reassembled his mask, I saw the truth. It was a look of profound, aching relief, the kind of look a person gives a life raft.

The probability had shifted. It was no longer just possible that Noah was more than a secretary to Cassian Wolfe. It was likely. And likely was plenty of ground to build a case on.

I looked back at the mirror. The bruise was darker now, a deep, angry plum color against the pale line of my jaw. I pressed it a second ti, studying the impact point.

Clean. Precise. There had been no wild swinging, no wasted energy. Whoever the pink bird was, he’d hit people before.

He knew exactly where the jaw was weakest, and he knew how to translate montum into damage. The economy of it was, technically speaking, proficient.

I didn’t expect to find that interesting.

The bruise was inconvenient. The oversight was irritating. But the person who had produced them... he was an anomaly.

Most people in my life are predictable. They want money, they want status, or they want to be . They follow the rules of engagent.

Cyan hadn’t. He’d just moved. He’d seen sothing he didn’t like, and he’d eliminated the source of the irritation without a single thought for the fallout.

A small smile touched my lips, arriving without permission. It wasn’t warmth. It wasn’t admiration.

It was the pure, crystalline curiosity of a scientist who had just discovered a new species in his own backyard.

For the first ti in a long while, sothing hadn’t gone as planned. And instead of that being a problem, it was the most interesting thing that had happened all month.

I looked at the reflection of the bruise one last ti. I thought about the pink hair and the rings. I thought about the complete, utter absence of hesitation.

The smile stayed on my face much longer than I intended, there in the empty office, behind the closed door, where no one, not even Noah, could see it.

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