Home / Mafia / The Pleasure Directive / CHAPTER 2 – THE BILLIONAIRE’S CAPTIVE [Part 2]

Share

CHAPTER 2 – THE BILLIONAIRE’S CAPTIVE [Part 2]

Author: Mercy V.
last update Last Updated: 2026-01-12 05:43:51

He picked up the tablet again and flicked through files until a still image appeared: her penthouse, from another angle she hadn’t seen. A schema of data flow overlaid the walls—light lines representing network traffic, all converging on that space.

Another swipe: a map of the city with three pulsing dots. Her building glowed brighter than the others.

“Your apartment is one of three hubs in this city routing encrypted traffic tied to Siren Protocol,” he said. “We raided the other two. Empty faces, burner accounts. No feedback.” His eyes met hers. “You, on the other hand, tried to fry my brain with a kiss.”

He set the tablet on the mattress within her sightline, as if he was giving her a chance to see how bad this looked.

“I have more,” he added. “A ledger. Off‑books transactions. Someone moved a significant sum through one of my dormant holding accounts the same night those codes hit your tower. Someone paid Siren for something using my name.”

She felt the old, familiar burn in her throat at the word ledger. But if he expected her to flinch, he was going to be disappointed.

“And you think I did that,” she said.

“I think you were in that apartment,” he said. “I think you’re wired with tech I’ve only seen on death tables. And I think you’re alive right now because something in that mess you called a kiss linked your system to mine and kept us both conscious.”

He took one slow step closer to the bed.

“So. Who is she?”

“Who?” Lys asked, letting confusion color her voice just enough.

He tilted the tablet. A still image of a woman’s face took up the screen.

Not a photo. A composite. Features smoothed, hair blurred. But the eyes were right. The mouth. Enough that Lys felt, for a split second, like she was looking into a smeared mirror.

Designation in the corner: SIREN‑7. CODENAME: LYS.

She exhaled, slow and amused. “She’s pretty.”

“Don’t,” he said, voice dropping.

It sent an involuntary shiver down her back.

“I know there’s a siren asset called Lys operating in my territory,” he went on. “I know she’s been used as a weapon. I know she was sold through a chain that touched my accounts.” He studied her. “I don’t know yet if that woman is you. Or if you’re a plant meant to distract me from finding her.”

He leaned forward, bracing one hand on the mattress near her hip. His shadow fell over her.

“So you’re going to tell me who trained you. Who installed that hardware. Who gave you the order to come into my world.”

She met his eyes. “And if I don’t?”

He smiled then. Very small. Very polite. The smile of a man who’d watched people die slowly and gone to lunch afterward.

“Then I send you to people less patient than I am,” he said. “And I let them take you apart until they find something useful.”

Aria hissed, “He’s not bluffing. Tolya’s on his payroll. You remember his files.”

Lys did. Too well.

She let a breath out, shook her head a fraction, as if exasperated.

“I told you,” she said. “I’m an escort. The club sends me where I’m booked. If some hacker used my Wi‑Fi to piss in your pool, that’s not my problem.”

“No club,” he said. “No booking.”

He reached out, thumb catching her chin, forcing her face up. The collar hummed. A small surge arced between his fingers and the metal band, prickling up her jaw.

Her body remembered him. The link flared—tiny, but there.

His own breath shortened barely, a ghost of the earlier loop.

“We’re done pretending,” he said softly. “You’re dangerous. That makes you useful. Or dead. I haven’t decided yet.”

Her pulse ticked faster. The collar betrayed it; a faint blue light at the panel beat quicker under his thumb.

He noticed.

His eyes dropped to that light, then back to hers.

“You feel it too,” he murmured.

Lys let her mouth curve into a slow, reckless smile. “What, your charming personality? I’ve had worse.”

He released her abruptly and stepped back as if putting physical distance between them would help.

“Here’s your situation,” he said. “My world is shifting. The Bratva elders want blood for what Siren did. They want a show. A traitor. A head.” He glanced at her wrists. “You’d make a very pretty head on a spike.”

“Flattered,” she said.

“But I have other pressures,” he went on, tone cutting through hers. “A vacated seat on a legitimate board I need to claim. Partners who like symbols and wives and things that make them forget I’ve buried more men than they’ve met.”

He looked at her too long, as if measuring whether her destruction or her possession would feel better.

“I need a public asset,” he said. “A wife. Decorative enough for cameras, tough enough for this life, dangerous enough that nobody touches what’s mine without thinking twice.”

He looked right at her when he said “dangerous.”

Something cold brushed her spine.

“Let me be clear,” he added. “I can hand you over. Put you in a hole until Tolya and his friends decide you’re empty. Or I can keep you where I can see you. Leash you. Point you in the direction I choose.”

Her throat went dry.

He didn’t soften it.

“You sign what I put in front of you,” he said. “Marriage contract. Prenups. NDAs. You become mine legally, socially, personally. I get to stand in front of the Bratva with a ring on your finger and say, ‘This one is under my protection. Anyone who touches her touches me.’”

He let the threat in that last word vibrate between them.

“Or,” he said quietly, “I give you to them. And I never see you again except on a table.”

The restraints at her wrists pressed into her skin, a reminder of how few choices she had.

Lys laughed once, too sharp. “You’re proposing?”

His mouth twitched. “Not the way my mother imagined it.”

He tapped the tablet. A document flickered up in the air between them, projected in cold blue. The header burned across the top in tidy legal text:

**MATRIMONIAL MERGER & ASSET PROTECTION AGREEMENT.**

Lines of clauses and subclauses scrolled beneath—obedience, exclusivity, non‑disclosure, and liquidation penalties. It read less like a love contract and more like the hostile takeover of a human being.

“The digital signature requires biometric confirmation,” he said, his eyes never leaving hers. “A drop of blood. Or another kiss.”

Internally, every calculation she had screamed.

“Say yes,” the siren part of her urged. “Get inside. Get close. Burn him down.”

“Say no,” something older and smaller whispered. “Die on your own terms.”

Lysandra looked at the hovering contract—her death warrant or her ticket to the heart of his empire—and smiled like glass.

“I’ll take the blood,” she said. “It’s cleaner.”

For a heartbeat, something unreadable moved in his eyes. Approval, maybe. Or amusement.

Kael’s smile was slow and sharp. “Of course you will,” he said.

He lowered the tablet; a small lancet slid out of the frame with a soft click. He caught her hand, thumb rubbing her pulse once before he pressed the point to her fingertip. A bright bead of red welled up and fell toward the glowing signature line.

“Welcome to my world, wife,” he murmured.

Lysandra bared her teeth. “Don’t get ahead of yourself, husband.”

The new collar at her throat pulsed twice, a faint vibration against her skin, as if it agreed with him.

She stared up at the man tying her to him on paper and in blood and smiled like she wasn’t already planning how to cut the leash the second she could.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 40 – THE TIMER AND THE TRIGGER

    Exile did not feel like freedom.It felt like work.Lys moved through the underbelly of a port city that smelled like salt, diesel, and old secrets, hands shoved in the pockets of a stolen jacket, head down.The docks were a maze of stacked containers and half‑functional lights. Siren had used this place once—still did, in quieter ways. Their fingerprints were everywhere if you knew how to feel for them: in the way certain yards were always “under repair,” in the cargo that never quite matched its manifests.Her nervous system was a mess.Every step sent a faint ache up her spine. Her fingers tingled off and on as if the nerves couldn’t decide whether to fire. Headaches came in waves now, less discrete events than a constant pressure with spikes.“Left,” Aria murmured. “Two rows, then we hit the access panel.”“I know,” Lys thought. “We cased it yesterday.”“Humor me,” Aria said. “Your brain’s buffering like a cheap feed. I’m not trusting your spatial memory alone.”Lys snorted softly

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 39 – THE EMPTY TOWER

    Time blurred.The tower did not.It changed.Two months after Lysandra Petrov vanished, Petrov Tower felt less like a headquarters and more like a fortress wound too tight.Security doubled on every floor.Cameras—visible and not—multiplied in corners and hallways. Metal detectors appeared at entrances that had once been for VIPs only. Random checks stopped being random.Staff whispered in break rooms and service corridors.About the boss whose wife had betrayed him.About how he hadn’t thrown her off the roof or had her quietly disappeared, the way older bosses would have.About how, instead, he had turned his anger outward.The building reflected it.Colder lighting. Fewer flowers and soft touches. More locked doors.Valeria remarked, once, to Nika over drinks in an upper‑level lounge that the place felt like it was waiting for impact.“You mean like it’s already been hit, and the shockwave just hasn’t reached us yet?” Nika replied.Valeria smiled. “Exactly.”***Kael barely left th

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 39 – VANISHING ACT

    Dawn was still a rumor when Lys moved.The city outside the glass was a smear of shadow and the first faint hints of grey. No sun yet. Just the pale anticipation of it.Kael slept.For once, completely.His arm was heavy around her waist, chest pressed to her back, breath slow and deep against the nape of her neck. The hand resting on her stomach twitched occasionally, fingers tightening as if even in sleep, he refused to let go.“Lys,” Aria whispered. “It’s time.”She stared at the ceiling.Every part of her that wasn’t made of metal or scar tissue wanted to stay very, very still.“He never sleeps,” she thought.“He does now,” Aria said. “Because he thinks you’re not going anywhere.”Guilt knifed under her ribs.She carefully, carefully lifted his hand from her waist, easing each finger loose like disarming a very personal bomb. He murmured something in his sleep, brow creasing, and she froze.His grip slackened.She slid out from under his arm and off the couch, moving slow to keep

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 37 – RAFE’S GAMBIT

    Lys didn’t wait for an opportunity.She made one.The day before the council session, she watched the schedule stack in her HUD: meetings, calls, and security briefings. Kael moved through them like a man playing whack‑a‑mole with grenades.He came back to the penthouse late.Too late.Shoulders tight, tie loosened, eyes shadowed.The guards straightened as he stepped off the elevator. One of them glanced at Lys, then away.“Out,” she said.Both men hesitated.“Mrs. Petrov, we have orders—”“From whom?” she asked mildly.“From—”The elevator chimed again behind them. Dima stepped out, moving more stiffly than he used to, a ghost of the beam in his posture.He took in the tableau in one sweep: Kael, exhausted; Lys, coiled; guards, uncertain.“Go,” Dima told the guards. “Perimeter only. Penthouse is secure.”They snapped to it.The elevator doors slid shut.“Careful,” Dima said to Kael. “Your containment is talking back.”“Let her,” Kael replied. “Somebody should.”He moved past them in

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 36 – THE ALMOST CONFESSION

    The knowledge sat in her chest like a second heart, beating out of sync with her own.If she died with the failsafe live, she might not die alone.It wouldn’t be a bullet that took Kael. Not a bomb under his car. Not some Bratva rival with bad aim and good timing.It could be her.A surge through the collar, a leap across the hardlink, his implant catching the blast like dry tinder. One moment he’d be glaring at her, telling her she was a liability. The next, his body would crumple, eyes open and empty.“Romantic,” she muttered to the ceiling of her room.Aria didn’t laugh.“I’ve run the projections six ways,” Aria said. “Best‑case, he gets cooked enough to need rehab and a full neural scrub. Worst‑case, he’s a body with a heartbeat and no one home. Either way, it’s you pulling the trigger, whether you mean to or not.”“I’ve pulled worse,” Lys said.It sounded hollow, even to her.She’d killed strangers for Siren. She’d killed men who would have gladly done the same to her. She’d kill

  • The Pleasure Directive   CHAPTER 35 – HIDDEN PAIN

    The first thing she noticed was the metallic taste in her mouth.The second was the pounding behind her eyes, a slow, brutal thud that felt like someone driving a spike from the base of her skull through the center of her forehead.Lys surfaced into morning with a hiss, hand flying up instinctively.Her fingers came away wet.She blinked at them.Blood smeared across her skin, bright against the pallor. A thin stream ran from her nose to her upper lip, already tacky.“Aria,” she whispered.“I see it,” Aria said, voice tight. “Don’t sit up too fast—”Too late.The room tilted when she pushed herself upright, the walls bending in a way that had nothing to do with architecture. Her HUD jittered, icons ghosting, the red numbers on her timer blurring before snapping back into awful focus.**78 : 04 : 11 : 22**Tick.Tick.She squinted.“Wasn’t it eighty‑something yesterday?” she asked.“It was,” Aria said. “We lost almost five days with the last jump. You bled in your sleep this time. Smal

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status