My boyfriend Grant and I built our tech startup from the ground up. I wrote the code, he handled the money. I trusted him with my life. Then, the FBI raided our office. I was arrested for embezzling three million dollars. The proof was a wire transfer with my perfect, forged signature. Grant, the man I loved, stood by and watched me get hauled away. He whispered the real price of my freedom: take the fall, or he'd cancel my grandmother's life-saving heart surgery by noon. My accounts were frozen. With the hospital's deadline looming, I had no choice. I signed the confession, selling myself into slavery just to keep my grandmother alive. My first task as his "assistant" was to serve drinks at an exclusive club, forced into a cheap corset and a skirt that was barely there. That's when I saw him. The ruthless billionaire from the other night-the man Grant's setup had thrown me to. When I stumbled and fell at his feet, he caught my wrist. The look in his eyes wasn't pity. It was possession.
The rain fell in relentless, slanting sheets, waging a percussive war against the tinted windows of the Maybach. It was a soundless battle from within the vehicle's tomb-like silence. The vibrant, chaotic pulse of Manhattan was reduced to a blurred, impressionistic smear of neon and shadow, a world away from the suffocating intimacy of the back seat. The partition was up, a pane of dark glass that separated them from the driver, from the city, from reality itself.
It cocooned them in an oppressive bubble of supple Nappa leather, polished burr walnut, and the crackling, high-voltage tension that had yet to dissipate. The dim ambient light, a soft, honeyed glow, was just enough to trace the stark contrast between a man, impeccably dressed and in absolute control, and a woman whose designer gown was a ruined testament to a night gone horribly wrong.
"Your first time?" The voice was a low, smooth baritone, utterly devoid of surprise or judgment. It was a voice that belonged in a boardroom closing a ten-billion-dollar merger, or in a hushed lecture hall at Columbia, dissecting complex financial models with surgical precision. It was the voice of Brendon Powell, and it commanded attention without ever needing to be raised.
Fiona Palmer couldn't form words. Her response was a choked, trembling gasp, a sound of profound violation and despair. A single, hot tear of shame broke free, tracing a burning path through her meticulously applied foundation. She watched, as if from a great distance, as he leaned in. He didn't offer a word of comfort. Instead, he pressed a lingering, almost clinical kiss to the damp spot on her cheek, his lips cool and firm. It wasn't an act of passion or solace; it felt like an assessment, a collector cataloging a new, damaged acquisition.
The sheer, crushing absurdity of the moment threatened to shatter her completely. It was only two months ago-a lifetime ago-that she had stood at the shimmering Ivy League alumni gala, her hand tucked confidently in the arm of her boyfriend of three years, Grant Vance. They were the golden couple, the poster children for ambitious, brilliant futures, their path seemingly paved with gold. She remembered the precise moment Brendon Powell had approached them. He moved through the crowded ballroom with an unnerving, predatory grace, parting the sea of socialites and bankers. Holding a flute of champagne, he had assessed them with those dark, unreadable eyes from behind his bespoke frames. "A perfect match," he had commented, his voice a silken murmur. Even then, the words had felt less like a compliment and more like a final, dispassionate verdict.
Now, that perfect match was a smoldering ruin. Grant was engaged to Camilla Rhodes, a billionaire's daughter whose fortune could transform his tech startup from a promising venture into a global empire. And Fiona? She was a loose end, a liability to be neutralized. Tonight, at a party ostensibly celebrating Grant's new funding round, his sister, Megan, had smiled with saccharine sweetness while sliding a gin and tonic into her hand. A drink that had tasted faintly, cloyingly of something bitter and chemical. The drug had been brutally efficient, turning her limbs to lead and her mind to a thick, terrifying fog, herding her like a lamb towards a hotel room where a lecherous, pot-bellied investor waited to claim his prize.
Her survival had been a fluke, a final, primal scream of her subconscious. She had stumbled from the venue, her vision tunneling, and collapsed directly into the path of Brendon Powell's departing car. His security detail had moved to intercept her, but he had stopped them with a single, sharp gesture.
The rustle of expensive wool broke the silence. Brendon adjusted the cuffs of his Tom Ford shirt, his movements economical and precise. He seemed utterly unfazed, as if her traumatic, life-altering ordeal was nothing more than a minor, unscheduled detour in his evening. He poured a measure of amber liquid from a crystal decanter into a heavy glass.
"You were drugged," he stated, not a question but a confirmation. He swirled the bourbon, the heavy ice clinking softly against the glass, a sound that seemed deafening in the silence. "Grant's doing?"
Fiona hid her face behind a curtain of damp, disheveled blonde hair, a pathetic shield against his penetrating gaze. Her stomach twisted with a potent cocktail of humiliation, violation, and a white-hot rage that had nowhere to go. "Professor Powell... please," she whispered, her voice raw and broken. "Just... forget tonight ever happened. Please, just drop me off here."
A flicker of something-predatory amusement, cold curiosity-gleamed in his dark eyes. He didn't dignify her plea with a verbal response. Instead, he reached into the breast pocket of his jacket and produced a business card. It was a thick, heavy rectangle of what looked like brushed platinum, his name and a single phone number engraved in a stark, minimalist font. It was an object that radiated power. "Call me," he said. The two words were not a suggestion. They were a command.
She recoiled as if the card were a hot iron, shaking her head mutely. She scrambled to pull the torn bodice of her dress together, a futile gesture of preserving a dignity that had already been stolen from her. When the car finally glided to a stop at a rain-slicked corner near her Brooklyn walk-up, she practically fell out of it, not daring to look back.
But the nightmare was far from over. As she fumbled in her clutch for her keys, her hands shaking uncontrollably, the blinding, strobing pulses of red and blue light slashed through the rainy darkness. An NYPD squad car had pulled up silently behind her. Two uniformed officers emerged, their faces grim, their movements all business.
"Fiona Palmer?" one of them asked, his hand already resting on his holstered handcuffs. "You're under arrest for corporate embezzlement and wire fraud. A complaint was filed an hour ago by your employer, Mr. Grant Vance." The click of the handcuffs around her wrists was the sound of one world ending and another, terrifying one beginning.
Bound to My Former Professor
Eileen
Romance
Chapter 1 1
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Chapter 2 2
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Chapter 3 3
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Chapter 4 4
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Chapter 5 5
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Chapter 6 6
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Chapter 7 7
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Chapter 8 8
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Chapter 9 9
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Chapter 10 10
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Chapter 11 11
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Chapter 12 12
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Chapter 13 13
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Chapter 14 14
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Chapter 15 15
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Chapter 16 16
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Chapter 17 17
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Chapter 18 18
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Chapter 19 19
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Chapter 20 20
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Chapter 21 21
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Chapter 22 22
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Chapter 23 23
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Chapter 24 24
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Chapter 25 25
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Chapter 26 26
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Chapter 27 27
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Chapter 28 28
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Chapter 29 29
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Chapter 30 30
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