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The Captive Runaway Wife Of The Billionaire

The Captive Runaway Wife Of The Billionaire

Author: : Alma
Genre: Romance
Kayla McFarlane's life ends the moment she signs a marriage contract her father forces on her. But a clerical error at City Hall binds her not to a monster-but to Sterling Kensington, the cold, ruthless "Shark of Wall Street." He needs a wife to unlock a billion-dollar trust. She needs protection from a father who sold her. The deal is simple: act devoted in public, share his penthouse, and keep her mouth shut. But when Sterling's first love, Serena, returns from Zurich-and his venomous sister Lola makes sure Kayla knows it-the gilded cage begins to close. Stripped of her job, her freedom, and her dignity, Kayla is imprisoned in his oceanfront estate while Sterling races to the airport to welcome the woman he truly loves. Until a desperate call about her dying grandmother changes everything. Kayla climbs out a window, scales a wall, and runs into the storm. But Sterling Kensington doesn't let go of what's his. And he's just realized-he never wanted to.

Chapter 1

"Sign it, Cayla."

The cheap plastic pen slid awkwardly across Kayla McFarlane's trembling fingers. The fluorescent lights of the Manhattan City Hall office hummed overhead, their monotonous buzz echoing deep within her mind. Her stomach churned, a sharp, unbearable pain shooting through her. She was about to sign a marriage contract; her father was selling her to a notorious man for ten million dollars.

Her father, Richard McFarland, tapped the crystal face of his luxury watch. The sharp, metallic clink echoed in the sterile room, a sound more commanding than any words he could have spoken. It was a countdown. A threat.

A harried clerk, his face a mask of exhaustion, shuffled two identical green folders on the worn countertop. His attention was split, diverted by a shouting match erupting at the next window over a misspelled name. He slid one of the folders toward Cayla without a second glance.

Cayla closed her eyes. A wave of nausea washed over her, hot and acidic. She could smell the stale coffee on the clerk's breath and the faint, cloying scent of her father's desperation. This was it. The end of her life as she knew it. For a business deal. For a man she despised. She pressed the tip of the pen to the dotted line, her signature a shaky, unrecognizable scrawl.

Just as she finished, a presence filled the space beside her. A tall, broad-shouldered man in a bespoke Tom Ford suit stepped up to the counter. His cologne, a clean, sharp scent of sandalwood and leather, cut through the room's stale air, demanding attention. He moved with an unnerving stillness, an apex predator in a room of pigeons.

Without looking at her, Sterling Kensington picked up the same green folder. His jaw was a hard, clenched line. He signed his name with three quick, aggressive strokes of a heavy, expensive-looking fountain pen. The movements were precise, brutal, and final.

The clerk, eager to be done with them, slammed a heavy rubber stamp onto the document. The thud echoed like a gavel, making Cayla flinch. Her eyes snapped open.

As the clerk pulled the paper away, her gaze caught the name next to hers. Sterling Kensington. Not Harvey Tucker.

Her breath hitched. A gasp escaped her lips, small and choked. "Wait," she whispered, her voice barely audible. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird. She reached for the paper, her fingertips just brushing the rough edge, but it was too late. The clerk had already slid it into a thick manila envelope and sealed it.

Sterling turned. His eyes, the color of a storm-clouded sky, locked onto hers for a fraction of a second. There was no recognition, no curiosity, just a cold, dismissive assessment before he looked away. His expression was completely unreadable, a mask of bored indifference.

In one fluid motion, he buttoned his suit jacket, turned his back on the life he had just legally bound himself to, and walked toward the exit, flanked by a team of lawyers who materialized as if from the shadows.

"What did you do?" Richard hissed, his fingers digging into Cayla's arm like talons. The grip was bruising, painful.

"That wasn't... The name was wrong," she stammered, her mind reeling. "It said Sterling Kensington."

Richard ignored her, his face pale with a different kind of panic. He dragged her out of the building, the bright afternoon light blinding her. He shoved her into the back of a waiting black town car, the door slamming shut with a sound of finality. The locks clicked.

The car moved silently through the city traffic, a hearse carrying her to her own damnation. It pulled up to the grand entrance of The Plaza Hotel. The engine idled, a low purr against the wet pavement. Richard yanked her out of the car, his grip relentless.

He pushed her through the opulent lobby, past the curious glances of tourists and businessmen, and into a gilded elevator. He pressed the button for the penthouse floor.

"Harvey is waiting," he said, his voice flat. "He's ready to finalize the deal. Don't screw this up, Cayla."

The elevator doors opened onto a dimly lit, silent hallway. The thick, plush carpet absorbed the sound of her reluctant footsteps, swallowing any evidence of her passage. Richard stopped in front of suite 4A. He opened the door and shoved her inside so hard she stumbled, catching herself on a heavy console table.

The door slammed shut behind her.

The deadbolt clicked into place.

Panic, cold and sharp, clawed its way up her throat. The air was thick with the smell of strong whiskey and cheap cigar smoke. It was the smell of Harvey Tucker.

He emerged from the bedroom, a portly man in an unbuttoned silk robe. His small, piggy eyes raked over her body, stripping her bare with their undisguised lust.

"There she is," he grunted, a wet, predatory smile spreading across his face.

He lunged.

His sweaty hands grabbed her shoulders, pinning her against the heavy mahogany door. The rough wood scraped against her back. Cayla turned her head, the stench of him making her gag, as his wet mouth aimed for her neck. Her hands scrambled behind her, frantically searching the surface of the console table.

He laughed, a low, mocking sound. "Don't fight it, sweetheart. Your daddy already cashed the check. Ten million dollars for a capital injection. You're the final part of the transaction."

The words hit her harder than his hands. Sold. Her father had sold her.

Her fingers curled around something heavy and cold. A brass decorative statue, solid and unforgiving. The cold metal seemed to leech the panic from her, replacing it with a white-hot, clarifying rage.

Harvey's hand moved to the collar of her dress. He ripped it. The sound of tearing fabric echoed in the silent, suffocating room.

That was it.

With a guttural cry wrenched from deep inside her, Cayla swung the brass statue with all her might. The heavy base connected sickeningly with the side of Harvey's head.

He groaned, a sound of pained surprise, and stumbled backward. He clutched his temple, his eyes wide with shock as blood began to seep through his fingers.

Cayla dropped the statue. It hit the marble floor with a loud, ringing clang. Her chest heaved, sucking in air as she fumbled with the deadbolt. It finally gave way.

"You bitch!" Harvey shouted, his voice a string of violent curses. He lunged again, his hand wrapping around her ankle.

She kicked backward, blindly, desperately. The heel of her shoe struck his knee. He howled in pain, his grip loosening just enough.

Cayla ripped the door open and sprinted. She ran down the carpeted hallway, her bare feet silent on the plush wool, her only thought to find a place to hide, a place to disappear. The hallway stretched before her, a long, dim tunnel with no end in sight.

Her breath tore through her throat in ragged, burning gasps. Cayla risked a glance over her shoulder, seeing the open door of suite 4A, a dark mouth in the dim corridor.She ran faster, she rounded a corner near the private elevators. She slammed into a wall.

A wall of solid muscle, wrapped in expensive wool. The impact knocked the wind out of her, a painful jolt that made her vision swim with black spots.

Strong, large hands gripped her upper arms, steadying her, keeping her from crumpling to the floor. The grip was firm, unyielding, and strangely familiar.

She looked up, blinking to clear her vision. Cold, gray eyes stared down at her. The man from City Hall. Sterling Kensington.

Chapter 2

Sterling Kensington brow furrowed in a slight frown. His gaze dropped from her face to the torn collar of her dress, then to the faint red marks blooming on her pale skin where Harvey's fingers had dug in. His jaw tightened, a muscle flexing almost imperceptibly.

"Please," she stammered, trying to pull away from his grip. "You have to let me go. Security... he's coming. I need to hide."

A soft chime sounded, and the golden doors of a private elevator slid open beside them, spilling warm light into the hallway. It revealed his imposing silhouette, a dark monolith against the glow.

Harvey's angry, slurred voice echoed from down the hall. "Get her! Don't let that whore get away!"

Without a word, Sterling pulled her into the elevator. The doors slid shut, cutting off the noise and plunging them into a tense, suffocating silence. The elevator began its smooth, silent ascent.

Cayla leaned against the mirrored wall, her body trembling with the adrenaline crash. She could see her reflection-wild-eyed, disheveled, pathetic. "I'm sorry," she stuttered, the words feeling useless. "I... I ruined your suit jacket."

He ignored the apology. He pulled a sleek, black phone from his inner pocket and spoke into it, his voice a low, cold command. "Mason. Handle the trash on floor four. I don't want to hear about it again." He ended the call without waiting for a reply.

The elevator doors opened again, not into a hallway, but directly into a sprawling, ultra-modern penthouse. Floor-to-ceiling windows revealed a breathtaking, panoramic view of Central Park, the city lights glittering like a carpet of scattered diamonds.

Sterling stepped out, tossing his keys onto a massive marble counter with a sharp clatter. He turned to face her, his expression hard.

"Now," he said, his voice dangerously quiet. "Would you care to explain why my legal wife is running around a hotel half-naked and hysterical?"

Cayla froze. The words didn't compute. "Your... your wife? No. You don't understand. It was a mistake. A clerical error at the City Hall."

He walked to the wet bar, his back rigid with controlled irritation, and poured two glasses of scotch from a crystal decanter. The amber liquid swirled as he set one glass down on the counter with a heavy thud.

He turned, sliding a tablet across the polished stone towards her. On the screen was a high-resolution digital copy of the marriage certificate. Her shaky signature was there, right next to his aggressive, confident one. It was real. It was legally binding.

The reality of it crashed down on her, a physical weight that made it hard to breathe. Her hands began to tremble. She was married. Not to Harvey Tucker, but to this cold, terrifying stranger.

Desperate to calm the frantic beating of her heart, to numb the spiraling panic, she grabbed the glass of scotch and downed it in one burning gulp. The liquid seared a path down her throat, making her eyes water.

Sterling watched her, a faint, mocking smirk touching the corner of his lips as she choked on the expensive liquor.

She coughed, her cheeks flushing a hot, mortified red. "We need to annul this. Immediately."

He stepped closer, invading her personal space, his sheer size overwhelming. He smelled of power, money, and something else... something dark and possessive. "An annulment," he stated, his voice flat and devoid of emotion, "would interfere with my trust fund's disbursement timeline. It's not an option."

A wave of dizziness hit her. The scotch, on an empty stomach ravaged by stress, was going straight to her head. She swayed slightly, gripping the edge of the counter for support.

His phone buzzed on the counter, the vibration loud in the quiet room. The screen lit up, displaying an unknown number. He walked away from her, toward a sofa to retrieve a blanket, leaving the phone vibrating, insistent.

Cayla stared at it. Disoriented, her judgment clouded by alcohol and panic, she thought it might be her father, calling to threaten her again. On pure, unthinking impulse, she reached out and swiped the screen to answer.

She pressed the cold glass to her ear.

"Sterling, darling," a woman's voice, elegant and sharp as a shard of ice, purred through the speaker. "Don't tell me you actually went through with it. Did you really marry that little nobody from the file today?"

Cayla froze, the phone feeling like a block of ice against her skin. This had to be Serena Beaumont. The name Lola, Sterling's sister, had spat with such venom.

Sterling turned, his body going rigid. His eyes, which had been cold before, were now blazing with a sudden, terrifying fury as he saw her holding his phone.

In two long strides, he was in front of her. He snatched the phone from her hand, his fingers brushing hers, sending a jolt of something like electricity through her. He pressed it to his own ear, his voice dropping to a dangerous, intimate whisper.

"Serena. Stop calling this number." A pause. "It means nothing. The marriage means nothing. It's a piece of paper. You know that."

Cayla stepped back as if she'd been struck. The words hit her like a physical blow, each one a stone sinking in her gut. A piece of paper. It means nothing. She wasn't just a mistake. She was a pawn in a game she didn't understand, caught in the crossfire of a twisted love triangle with the most powerful man she had ever met.

Chapter 3

The room began to spin. Cayla dropped her hand to her side, Sterling's harsh words echoing in her ears, mingling with the buzzing in her head from the scotch.

Sterling ended the call abruptly, tossing the phone onto a plush sofa as if it were contaminated. His chest heaved with a tightly suppressed, violent anger. He turned to face her, his mouth opening to reprimand her, to unleash the fury simmering in his gray eyes.

But he stopped.

He saw her face, the way the color had drained from it, leaving it a sickly, greenish-pale.

A sudden, severe wave of nausea hit Cayla. It wasn't just the alcohol; it was the stress, the fear, the raw, visceral humiliation of the last few hours. She clamped a hand over her mouth, a desperate attempt to hold back the inevitable.

Without a word, she stumbled past him, her bare feet slipping on the polished marble floor. She was a mess of torn silk and tangled hair, a wreck in his pristine, perfect penthouse.

Sterling watched her go, his anger momentarily forgotten, replaced by a flicker of something else. Something that might have been concern. He saw her rush down a long hallway and push open a heavy, frosted glass door.

Cayla collapsed to her knees in front of the toilet in the cavernous master bathroom. Her body convulsed, but there was nothing in her stomach to come up. She dry heaved violently, her body shaking from the adrenaline crash and the emotional whiplash of the night. Each retch was a painful, tearing sensation in her empty gut.

He appeared in the doorway, his tall frame filling the space, casting a long shadow over her. He said nothing. He simply held out a cold, damp towel.

She took it without looking up, pressing the blessed coolness to her burning forehead. The humiliation was a physical thing, a hot flush that spread from her neck to her cheeks. To be so weak, so broken, in front of this man.

After a moment, she tried to stand, using the edge of a massive, freestanding marble bathtub for support. Her muscles trembled, her knees weak and unreliable.

They buckled.

The last of her strength evaporated, and she tumbled backward, landing in a crumpled heap inside the cold, empty tub.

"Dammit," Sterling cursed under his breath. He crossed the room in two quick strides and stood over her, looking down at her crumpled form.

She lay there, her eyes half-closed, the torn collar of her dress exposing the delicate line of her collarbone. She looked fragile, broken, like a porcelain doll that had been carelessly shattered.

He reached down. His large, warm hands slid under her knees and behind her back. With a strength that seemed effortless, he lifted her from the tub.

Cayla gasped at the sudden movement, the world tilting precariously. On pure instinct, she wrapped her arms around his thick neck to steady herself, her face pressing against the hard plane of his chest.

The contact sent a jolt of raw electricity through them both. She could feel the steady, rhythmic beat of his heart against her cheek. She could smell his scent-sandalwood, leather, and the clean, masculine scent of him. It was intoxicating. Dangerous.

His jaw tightened. He held her for a fraction of a second too long, his arms a steel cage around her. Then, he carried her out of the bathroom, the silence between them heavy with unspoken tension.

He walked into the master suite and laid her down gently on a king-sized bed. The dark silk sheets were cool against her heated skin, a stark contrast to her paleness.

He stepped back, his duty done, intending to leave her there. But as he turned, Cayla's hand shot out, her fingers blindly grabbing his wrist. She was completely disoriented, lost in a fog of alcohol and trauma, and all she knew was that she couldn't be alone. Not now.

"Don't," she murmured, the word a broken plea. A single tear slipped from the corner of her eye, tracing a path through the grime on her cheek. "Don't leave me alone. In the dark."

Sterling froze. His rigid control, the iron mask he wore for the world, seemed to crack. He stared down at the woman on his bed-the woman he had secretly watched from afar for years, the woman he had engineered this entire situation to possess.

He leaned down, his face close to hers, his voice a rough, strained whisper. "Do you have any idea what you're asking for?"

The alcohol had erased her inhibitions, her fear. All she felt was the cold terror of Harvey's hotel room, a chill that went bone-deep. She pulled him closer, seeking the warmth of his body, the solid reality of him, to chase it away.

His control snapped.

Sterling's lips crashed down on hers. It wasn't a gentle kiss. It was demanding, possessive, a raw expression of a long-suppressed hunger. It was the kiss of a man who was taking what he believed was his.

And Cayla, lost and desperate, responded with equal fervor. Her fingers tangled in his dark, thick hair, pulling him closer. It was a sensory overload-the taste of scotch and mint on his lips, the feel of his strong arms around her, the overwhelming sense of being protected, possessed, consumed.

He stripped off his ruined suit jacket, his movements urgent, and pressed her back against the soft pillows.

In the heat of the moment, a cold, rational corner of his mind supplied him with an excuse. This wasn't emotion. This wasn't a loss of control. This was merely the fulfillment of their prenup's spousal duty. A transaction.

Outside, the rain that had been threatening all evening finally broke, pounding against the floor-to-ceiling windows, the sound of the storm masking their ragged breathing.

Cayla surrendered to the darkness, to the storm outside and the chaos within, letting the overwhelming presence of the billionaire consume her completely.

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