The Silent Bride's Dangerous Billionaire Escape

The Silent Bride's Dangerous Billionaire Escape

Rafaela Kokkotou

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I sat at a luxury restaurant, forced to listen to a man named Preston brag about his cars while my stepmother's heel dug into my leg under the table. To the Montgomery family, I wasn't a daughter; I was just a mute doll being sold to a predator to settle their debts. When Preston's damp hand landed on mine, I felt a surge of pure revulsion. I tried to bolt for the exit, but my father's security team was already there, blocking the doors and sealing the perimeter to make sure I couldn't run. In a moment of total desperation, I saw Constantine Durham-the most dangerous man in Manhattan-walking toward the private rooms. I launched myself into his path, crashing into his chest and grabbing his lapels. "Help me." I mouthed the words, my voice locked by years of trauma. Constantine didn't push me away. Instead, he pulled me closer with a possessive grip and leaned into my ear. "Using me is expensive, Miss Montgomery." Within the hour, we were in a private hangar, signing a marriage certificate that turned me into a Durham. I thought the paper would be my shield, but when I got home, my father only laughed. He told me that if I didn't force my new husband to sign a massive funding deal, he would dig up my mother's remains and toss them into a pauper's grave. I stared at the man who shared my DNA, feeling the last of my restraint snap. They thought my silence meant I was a victim, but they forgot I was the one who knew every dark secret hidden in their encrypted files. I opened my laptop to dismantle my father's life, realizing as Constantine's men stormed the estate that I hadn't just found a protector. I had jumped from a cage into a tiger's den, and the tiger was finally coming to collect his debt.

Chapter 1 1

The serrated edge of the steak knife scraped against the porcelain plate, a screeching sound that vibrated right up Gracelyn's arm and settled in her teeth. It was the only thing loud enough to compete with Preston Hayes's voice.

He was talking about horsepower. Again.

"It does zero to sixty in two point eight seconds," Preston said, sawing at his filet mignon like he was killing it for the second time. "I told the dealer, if it's not German engineering, I don't want it in my garage."

Gracelyn kept her head down. She focused on the pink center of her meat, trying to ignore the way the air in Le Coucou felt too thick, too hot. Her stepmother, Elena, was sitting to her right. Gracelyn didn't have to look at Elena to know she was watching her. She could feel Elena's gaze like a physical weight on her shoulder, a silent command to smile, to nod, to be the perfect, mute doll the Montgomery family was trying to sell.

Preston reached across the table. His hand, damp and heavy, landed on top of hers.

Gracelyn's stomach lurched. It was a violent, physical rejection. Bile rose in her throat.

She jerked her hand back. The movement was too sharp, too desperate. Her elbow knocked into her water goblet. The crystal tipped. Ice water flooded the tablecloth, soaking the expensive linen in a dark, spreading stain.

The chatter at the nearby tables died down. Heads turned.

Under the table, a sharp pain exploded in Gracelyn's shin. Elena's heel dug into her flesh, twisting.

"Oh, how clumsy," Elena said, her voice a high, sugary trill that didn't match the violence happening under the table. She dabbed at the spill with her napkin, smiling apologetically at Preston. "Gracelyn is just so overwhelmed by your company, Preston. She's a bit jittery."

Preston looked annoyed. He flicked a droplet of water off his cufflink. "Right."

Gracelyn stood up. Her legs felt shaky. She raised her hands, signing the word for restroom.

Preston rolled his eyes. "Make it quick. I ordered the soufflé."

Gracelyn turned and walked away. She kept her steps measured, her spine straight, the picture of obedience. But the moment she rounded the corner into the long, dimly lit corridor leading to the restrooms, her posture collapsed. She leaned against the wall, gasping for air. Her heart was hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird.

She couldn't go back there. She couldn't let that man touch her again.

Gracelyn looked toward the rear exit at the end of the hall. The red EXIT sign hummed, a beacon. She pushed off the wall and started toward it, her pace quickening.

Then she stopped.

Two men in dark suits were standing in front of the door. They weren't restaurant staff. They were Montgomery security. Gracelyn's father, Richard, had anticipated this. He knew she would try to run. He had sealed the perimeter.

Panic, cold and sharp, flooded her veins. Gracelyn's breath hitched. She spun around, looking back toward the dining room. She was trapped. Boxed in between a predator at the table and guards at the door.

A commotion at the front of the corridor drew her attention. The restaurant manager was bowing low, practically scraping the floor, as he led a group of men toward the VIP private rooms.

The man in the center of the group walked with a stride that consumed the space around him. He was tall, wearing a black coat that looked like it cost more than Gracelyn's life. His face was hard angles and shadows, his expression one of utter boredom.

Constantine Durham.

Gracelyn recognized him instantly. Not just from the business magazines her father left on the coffee table, but from a memory that flashed hot and sharp in her mind-of encrypted files and a single, desperate act of sabotage two years ago. She didn't know the man, but she knew his empire. She knew the crisis she had anonymously averted for him. He was dangerous, powerful, and utterly unpredictable. He was her only variable.

Her mind raced, calculating the trajectory. The guards at the back door were watching her. Elena would be coming any second. Gracelyn had maybe ten seconds before the trap snapped shut. It was a terrible idea, a leap from a cage into a tiger's enclosure. But a tiger, at least, might be distracted. A predator like Preston only had eyes for his prey.

Gracelyn looked down at her heels. She reached down and unbuckled the strap of her right shoe, loosening it just enough.

Constantine was five feet away. Three.

She didn't just stumble. She launched herself.

Gracelyn stepped forward, let the loose shoe slide, and threw her body into his path. It wasn't a graceful fall. It was a collision. She slammed into his chest, her hands grabbing the lapels of his coat to keep from hitting the floor.

A large hand shot out from the group-his head of security, Marcus-but Constantine raised a single finger. Marcus froze.

Gracelyn looked up.

The impact had knocked the breath out of her. She was pressed against a wall of solid muscle. The scent of him filled her nose-cedar, rain, and something cold, like steel. His eyes were black, bottomless, and they were looking down at her with a terrifying lack of surprise.

"Gracelyn!"

Elena's voice shrieked from the dining room entrance. She stormed into the hallway, her face twisted in fury. "What are you doing? Get up this instant!"

Gracelyn's fingers tightened on Constantine's coat. She could feel the fabric bunching under her knuckles. She didn't look at Elena. She stared straight into Constantine's eyes. Her lips parted. No sound came out-her throat had been locked for years-but she mouthed the words clearly, desperate for him to read them.

Help me.

Constantine didn't blink. His gaze flicked over her face, analyzing, processing. For a second, he saw a flash of something that wasn't recognition, but assessment. He didn't know her face, but he seemed to register the name, the situation, the desperation, as data points in a larger equation.

Elena skidded to a halt when she saw who Gracelyn was clinging to. The color drained from Elena's face. Her mouth opened and closed like a fish. "Mr... Mr. Durham."

Constantine didn't push Gracelyn away. Instead, his hand moved to the small of her back. It wasn't a gentle touch. It was possessive. Heavy. He pulled her closer, stabilizing her, or maybe trapping her.

He looked at Elena. He didn't say a word. He just looked at her with a cold, dismissive stare that reduced her to nothing more than a nuisance.

Preston appeared behind Elena, napkin tucked into his collar. "What's the hold up? The soufflé is-" He saw Constantine and choked on his own words. He took a step back, shrinking.

Constantine leaned down. His lips brushed Gracelyn's ear. His voice was a low rumble that vibrated through her chest.

"Using me is expensive, Miss Montgomery."

Gracelyn's heart skipped a beat. He knew. He knew she had thrown herself at him on purpose.

"Get her out of here," Constantine said, straightening up. He didn't look at Gracelyn. He looked at Marcus.

He turned, his arm still clamped around her waist like an iron band, and began to walk toward the exit. He forced her to move with him, his stride long and demanding.

"Wait! She's my daughter!" Elena yelled, finding her voice.

The Montgomery bodyguards stepped forward, blocking the path.

Marcus didn't even slow down. He and two other Durham security agents moved with practiced efficiency, stepping between them and the guards. It wasn't a fight. It was a displacement. They simply walled them off.

They burst out of the restaurant and into the cool Manhattan night. The air hit Gracelyn's flushed skin, chilling the sweat on her back. A line of black SUVs was waiting at the curb.

Constantine opened the back door of the lead Maybach. He didn't offer her a hand. He just gestured with his chin.

"Get in."

It wasn't an invitation. It was an order.

Gracelyn looked back at the restaurant door, then at the dark interior of the car. Out of the frying pan, into the fire.

She climbed in.

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