Scaring Cathleen
The wheels of the jet kissed Xavier Knight’s private tarmac with a soft whisper of privilege, the sound of money even cushioning the landing. Cathleen’s eyes sliced across the cabin like a blade, cutting through the silence and locking onto Xavier. She had learned to cut with her eyes, every glance honed by years of courtroom battles.
“I can take care of myself; thank you,” she said, her voice frosty. The words were not just a statement, but a challenge. The coldness in her gaze was at odds with the vulnerability that her wheelchair suggested-a contradiction that she wore like a suit of armor.Property © NôvelDrama.Org.
Xavier met her coldness with a glacial calm of his own. The line of his lips remained a strict one, as unyielding as his realm. He did not speak, but his eyes, piercing and devoid of compassion, drifted down to the wheelchair. The silence stretched between them like a taut thread that was ready to snap.
It was in this wordless exchange that he was conveying a clear message: As far as his domain was concerned, she was dependent on him, whether she liked it or not. It was a reminder of the power he wielded effortlessly. It was as natural to him as breathing and as calculated as the moves he made in the shadows of his enterprises.
For Cathleen, the familiar burn of betrayal flared in her chest, reminding her of Avery and Finn’s mistake, Edward’s dislike, and the Knight family’s intricate web of betrayals and oaths. But Cathleen was used to dealing with problems; they were the very thing that made her so strong-willed.
The only sign of her anger was her fingers clenching the armrests of her wheelchair. Xavier watched, impassive, as if in some kind of assessment of her strength and the extent of her defiance. There was an electric charge in the air between them, charged with unspoken recriminations and the heavy weight of past violence.
In this silent battle of wills, Cathleen refused to be the first to give in. She was not going to show weakness, not to Xavier, who thrived on controlling, nor to anyone else in the Knight Dynasty. Her pride wouldn’t allow it. Neither would the relentless drive that had brought her to the pinnacle of her profession.
And so, in a testament to the complex dance of power and resistance, they remained, locked in a standoff on the edge of Xavier’s vast empire, two formidable forces colliding without ever touching.
Xavier’s arms were a cradle of contradiction as he lifted Cathleen from the plush leather seat of her wheelchair, her form light and yet unyielding as she lay against him. The metallic tang of jet fuel lingered in the air as they descended onto the tarmac, an expanse of land reserved for the opulent silence of wealth and privacy. His eyes darted to the line of cars, the sleek curves of the sports models beckoning-a siren’s call to which he had routinely succumbed. But not on this occasion.
He made his way to the Maybach, its stoic frame a vault on wheels that promised to provide solace from prying eyes. Cathleen, always a fortress in her own right, remained calm in his arms, her wheelchair folded up, and waited at the side of the car like a silent sentinel. Xavier couldn’t help but notice the irony: the man who commanded empires was now transporting his wife, a woman who was as calculating and sharp as if she had been born to curse people.
“Are you comfortable?” His voice was a shard of ice, the words shattering the silence that lay between them.
“Your concern is touching,” Cathleen replied, her tone tinged with the sharp bite of sarcasm, “but unnecessary.” Xavier had the feeling that he should just throw her into the car, but no, he just sat her with anger boiling but refused to let her see it.
As he placed her in the Maybach’s spacious back seat, Xavier’s touch was methodical, devoid of tenderness-a mere transaction of duty. He despised the spotlight, yet here he was, performing an act that could be mistaken for care in the eyes of any onlooker. His reputation as a ruthless tycoon, a lover of women, and a shirker of fame-it all seemed like a ridiculous facade in this moment of reluctant chivalry.
“I bet you miss the excitement of your little roadsters, don’t you, Xavier?” Cathleen’s voice broke the silence. Her words were a challenge wrapped in velvet.
Xavier’s jaw clenched as he slammed the door shut with a soft thud, the sound an echo of the frustration he was suppressing. “I’ll manage,” he muttered, more to himself than to her. She was tied to a chair, but it was he who felt trapped, shackled by a marriage that was devoid of affection but full of obligation.
As the car glided away, the distance between the jet and their destination growing, Xavier sat across from Cathleen. The room was full of unspoken words and unacknowledged truths. He knew what people saw: Xavier Knight, a mystery tamed through marriage. What a farce this was! At least a few of them knew who he really was.
Cathleen looked back at him, undaunted. “Don’t think that makes us even,” she said, her voice a crack of the whip in the chill of the interior.
“I wouldn’t dream of it,” he replied, the words coming out of his lips like a bullet, aimed straight at the heart of whatever it was that lay between them. It wasn’t love, but it was powerful all the same.
“Are we there yet?” The words slipped out of Cathleen’s mouth, her voice steady despite the turmoil brewing within. Her eyes, used to scrutinize the finest details in a courtroom, sought answers in his gaze.
Xavier turned, his cold gaze locked with hers, his demeanor unyielding as steel. There was something about Cathleen that threw him off balance, a defiance that unnerved even his disciplined restraint. “Not yet,” he replied, an icy edge to his tone meant to unsettle her. “The people who are supposed to cut you to pieces haven’t arrived yet. Where would the fun be?”
Cathleen’s pulse quickened, and her instinct to flee was growing. The luxury of the Maybach felt like a gilded cage, and the sumptuous leather beneath her was a mockery of comfort. Jumping out was a tempting but impossible thought; she was shackled by more than fear. She couldn’t move, her body betraying her desire to escape.
All she did was stare back at Xavier, meeting his challenge with silent resistance. She knew hunger, not for food but for victory, and it gnawed at her now as she declared, “I am starving. Each word dripped with the weight of their shared history, a testament to their resilience and the games they played-a game of chess where hearts were the pawns and every move was a calculated risk.
Tension hung heavy between them, a palpable force in the tight confines of the car. It was a dance they both knew well, steps marked by confrontation and the palpable anticipation of what cruelty or kindness fate might bring next.