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Kidnapped by the Billionaire(7)

By:Jackie Ashenden


She didn't know how long she sat there, but all of a sudden, strong  fingers wound around her arm and she was being hauled ignominiously to  her feet.

"Save your tears." Elijah's cold, rough voice in her ear. "He wasn't worth any of them."

Violet didn't say anything. She didn't want to talk to him right now.  Didn't want to hear that voice of his hurling icy truths at her. Truths  that hit her far harder than any bullet.

Really, it would have hurt less if he'd just shot her in the leg like he'd said.

"Yes," he said as he flushed the toilet and dragged her back out to the  lounge area. "That would probably have been a lot less painful for all  concerned."

Oh shit. She must have said it aloud.

He sat her once more on the couch, in among the detritus she'd pulled  out from her purse, and she didn't have any energy to fight him. "Why  didn't you then?" she only said. "I think I would have preferred it."

"The truth would have come out one way or another." He stepped back,  giving her a cold look. "Anyway, why should I spare you? You've been  successfully looking the other way for years now, just like your mother.  You deserve the truth shoved in your face."

Behind the grief, guilt waited. Because hadn't she known? Hadn't she realized deep down that things weren't quite right?         

     



 

"It's not my fault," she said tonelessly. "I didn't know what he was."

"Purposefully."

Of course it was purposefully. You didn't want to know.

She looked away. "He was my father."

"He was also a murderer."

A little flash of anger went through her at the sheer implacability in  his tone. Turning back, she looked up at him, standing there all dressed  in black, expressionless as a brick wall. "What the hell do you care?  You worked for him. Didn't you know? And come to think of it, how do I  know you're telling the truth about any of this in the first place?"

"Of course I knew." His gaze didn't waver from hers. "And you should believe me because I was his right-hand man."





CHAPTER THREE

She hadn't expected that, though why she had no idea, since if anyone  looked like a criminal it was this cold, pitiless man. Yet she couldn't  deny the shock that spread through her, already joining the acid still  sitting in the pit of her stomach.

God, if she didn't get herself together, she was going to need to throw up again.

"Okay then," she said shakily. "So you're a monster just like Dad."

His scarred, bruised mouth turned up in another of those terrifying smiles. "We're all monsters deep down, princess. Even you."

Something lurched inside her at that, but she ignored it. "I thought you were just his bodyguard."

"I was his bodyguard, but I also did other things."

"I don't want to know."

"Don't worry. I'm not going to tell you."

"And yet you had no problem telling me that Dad was a-"

"That's because it concerned you. Whatever else I did, doesn't."

Her stomach twisted. "So, why haven't you killed me? What do you want with me?"

His fathomless black gaze was utterly unreadable. "I already told you  why. Because I want to use you. And you're no good to me dead."

"But apparently incapacitated is fine."

"Yes."

Her stomach twisted in another knot. "Oh, Jesus, I'm going to be sick."

"No, you're not." He moved over to the low table beside the couch and  picked up the glass of water sitting on it. Then he handed it to her,  along with a small white pill. "Here, take this."

"What? You're going to drug me too?"

"Fine. Throw up if you want. But you'll be cleaning it up."

Bastard. Bastard. Bastard.

Violet grabbed the pill and put it in her mouth, then took the glass and  a hefty swallow of water. Maybe, if she was lucky, it would be Valium.  God knew, she could use one right about now.

"What was that?" She handed back the empty water glass to him, her mouth tasting marginally less vile.

"An antinausea pill."

"Great, so you're looking after me now?" A weird kind of euphoria had  started to move through her and since the pill clearly hadn't been  Valium, it must mean she was in shock. Or something. Whatever, the fear  and nausea had started to drop away as if knowing the worst, she had  nothing left to be afraid of. Except for a gunshot wound of course.

"You're an investment and I have to protect it." He gave her a once-over  that was the very definition of impersonal. "Are you hungry?"

"No." Not a lie. The thought of food made her feel sick again, especially if he'd made it for her.

"Fine. I have to take care of a couple of things. I've left you some  food on the counter in the kitchen. And for future reference, there's  nothing sharp in there you can use as a weapon. But good luck if you  want to use the frying pan."

He turned and started heading in the direction of the front door.

So he was leaving? Well, excellent. She wanted him to be gone. Maybe  once he was, she could start trying to figure out how to escape, or at  least how to contact someone who could help her.

"How long are you going to be?"

"I don't know. But don't worry, you'll be quite safe here."

"But not safe from you."

He stopped, as massive as a modern gladiator, the black cotton of his  hoodie stretching over his wide shoulders, and turned his head,  tar-black eyes sweeping over her. "Princess, no one is safe from me."

A shiver of fear broke through the weird euphoria.

Yeah, that she could believe.

The apartment door clicked shut five minutes later, leaving her  mercifully alone; and for a long moment she just sat there as the pill  he'd given her calmed her roiling stomach.

Then, once she was feeling a little better, she got to her feet to have a bit of a look around.         

     



 

The apartment was huge, a great echoing space that seemed to occupy the  whole top floor of the building. The kitchen was in one corner, an  industrial, bare-looking affair that had the basic amenities but not  much more, while the lounge where she'd sat occupied the whole right  side of the apartment. Because the space was so massive, with a soaring  ceiling, it made all the furniture seem far too small for the room, as  if they too were cowering.

A couch, a low coffee table, and, most weirdly of all, a lonely thick,  colorful rag-rolled rug. It looked like a setting from another room that  had been plonked into the space without regard for the surroundings. A  little island in the sea of the vast wood floor.

On the opposite side of the apartment was nothing but more bare  floorboards and open space. A punching bag hung from a beam, a treadmill  and stationary bike not far from it. Another little island of purpose.

There wasn't anything else of much interest or use, apart from a few  bookshelves filled haphazardly with a strange collection of books.  Classics and thrillers, sci-fi and romance, with a few cozy mysteries  thrown in for good measure. She could see Elijah reading the thrillers,  but he didn't strike her as an intellectual kind of guy for the  classics. And there was no way he'd be reading the romances.

It was weird.

There wasn't anything personal hanging around either, apart from the  books. No photos or pictures, no knickknacks. Not even a potted plant.

Frustrated, she wandered over to the doorway that led to the bathroom  and went down the little hall. After a quick search of the bathroom  failed to turn up anything useful, she continued on down to the end of  the hallway to where it opened up into a huge bedroom.

It was as bare as the rest of the apartment.

A massive bed was pushed into a corner up against a window, and it  clearly hadn't been slept in. There were no creases in the crisp black  sheets; they looked like they'd just been ironed.

Against the opposite wall stood a chest of drawers, but a cursory rifle  through them turned up nothing but practical, plain male clothing.

Violet cursed as she slammed the drawer back.

Why couldn't there have been a handy gun just lying around? It didn't  matter that she didn't know how to fire one, at least it would have  given her an option.

Slowly, she walked over to the windows and looked out.

The cold, steel blue of the river flowed, snow falling in fat, white  flakes. People moved on the sidewalks and traffic drove along the  streets, the world going on as if nothing had happened. As if she wasn't  the prisoner of some scary dude who'd kidnapped her at gunpoint and was  going to use her as bait.

Your father is dead. Your father was a monster.

She leaned her head against the cold glass, the handcuffs heavy around her wrists.

Her eyes prickled with tears.

She'd known there was something wrong with him. Deep down, she'd known.  But she'd ignored what her gut was trying to tell her because she hadn't  wanted to face it. Her suspicions about Theo's death already haunted  her; she didn't want to have suspicions about her father as well, not  after she'd lost her brother, the one person in her life she could count  on.