Running for my life from my family's suffocating control, I was cornered by my father's security team in an empty private airport terminal. Desperate, I crashed into a tall stranger to use him as a human shield, only to realize I had just assaulted Hoyt David. He was an untouchable Wall Street billionaire and, worse, my best friend's uncle. Instead of handing me over to the guards, he seamlessly lied to my pursuers. "This young woman is my guest," he told them, his voice an absolute wall of authority. He pulled me into a dark, narrow maintenance closet to hide. I was terrified he would turn me in, but he didn't. He was the perfect gentleman, gently calming my panic, respecting my boundaries, and offering his private Bentley to take me to a safe hotel. I was overwhelmed with gratitude. My parents had always treated me like a puppet, but this powerful man made me feel seen and protected. I couldn't understand why a man of his status would go to such lengths for me, but I was too desperate to question my luck. I thought I had finally escaped my family's hell. I had no idea that the "safety" he offered was a trap, and that this untouchable billionaire had been obsessively waiting for seven years for me to walk willingly into his gilded cage.
Her lungs burned. Every breath felt like swallowing broken glass.
Jordyn Shepard's heels slammed against the polished marble floor of the Teterboro private terminal, the sharp clicks echoing like gunshots in the empty corridor. She didn't dare look back. She didn't need to. The steady, measured footsteps behind her were enough to freeze the blood in her veins.
"Miss Jordyn," Gus Cavanaugh's voice cut through the hum of the ventilation system. It wasn't a shout. It was worse. It was calm, absolute, and utterly lethal. "Please stop running."
She couldn't stop. If she stopped, she was going back to that house. Back to the silence. Back to the control.
Her vision blurred at the edges, the sleek gray walls of the corridor swimming before her eyes. She had to get out. She had to find a door, a window, anything.
Then she saw him.
At the far end of the corridor, standing with his back to her, was a man. He was tall, impossibly broad across the shoulders, wearing a suit that probably cost more than her tuition. He held a phone to his ear, his posture radiating a quiet, absolute authority.
A crazy thought sparked in her panic-fried brain. A distraction. A shield. Anything.
Jordyn didn't let herself think. She just moved. She drove her legs forward, closing the distance between them in a few desperate strides. Just as the man began to turn, sensing the commotion, she lost her footing on the slick marble, stumbling forward with a cry. She crashed into his chest, her hands flying up to grab the lapels of his suit jacket to keep from falling.
The impact sent him stumbling back a step, his body a solid, unmoving wall. His phone slipped from his hand, clattering against the marble. The screen shattered, spider-webbing into a million tiny fractures.
Jordyn didn't give him a second to react. She clung to his jacket, pressing herself against him, and looked up, her voice a harsh, breathless whisper. "Don't say a word. Just play along."
Under her hands, the muscles of his chest were like slabs of granite. She could feel the sudden, rigid tension in his body, the shock of the impact. But what terrified her was his heartbeat. It wasn't racing like hers. It was steady. Slow. Like a metronome counting down to something inevitable.
He didn't push her away. He didn't grab her. He simply lowered his chin, his gaze dropping to where her trembling hands were twisted in the fabric of his suit.
Jordyn finally looked at his face.
Her brain short-circuited.
It was a face carved from stone and shadow. High cheekbones, a sharp jaw dusted with dark stubble, and a nose that looked like it had been broken and reset with precision. But it was his eyes that stopped her heart. They were gray. Not the pale gray of a winter sky, but the dark, turbulent gray of a storm at sea. And they were looking at her with an intensity that made her feel entirely seen.
She knew this face. She had seen it in photographs, on the rare occasions it graced the financial pages. She had seen it across the room at a charity gala two years ago, though he had never looked at her then.
This wasn't a stranger.
Her lips parted, but no sound came out for a second. "Mr... David?"
Hoyt David. The Wall Street Saint. Carleigh's uncle.
Her hands recoiled as if she had touched a live wire. She stumbled back a step, her spine hitting the opposite wall of the narrow corridor. Her entire body locked up. She had just assaulted a billionaire. A man whose net worth could buy the airport they were standing in.
Seven years. The thought drifted through Hoyt's mind, clear and cold amidst the chaos she had brought to his quiet corner. I orchestrated a thousand scenarios for our first meeting. I never imagined you would hunt me down and throw yourself into my arms.
He let his gaze travel over her face. Her cheeks were flushed red from the run, strands of dark hair escaping her chignon and sticking to her damp temples. Her blue eyes were wide, the pupils dilated with fear. She looked like a hummingbird caught in a hurricane.
You are even more vivid in person, he thought, his pulse finally picking up, just a fraction, in the presence of his obsession. So fragile. I could break you with one hand.
He didn't say any of that. He simply straightened his cuffs, his movements unhurried, and bent down to pick up his ruined phone. He turned the shattered screen toward him, assessing the damage with a faint sigh.
"Miss Jordyn," Gus's voice was closer now, right at the mouth of the corridor. "The game is over."
The remaining color drained from Jordyn's face. She looked toward the corner, then back at Hoyt. Her eyes were huge, pleading, desperate. She was drowning, and he was the only piece of driftwood in the sea.
Perfect timing. Hoyt felt a dark thrill curl in his chest. My little bird needs a cage. And I have the perfect one waiting.
He looked at her, and for a fraction of a second, the corner of his mouth twitched upward. It wasn't a smile. It was the look a collector gives a masterpiece he has finally acquired.
Jordyn saw only silence. He was going to hand her over. Of course he was. She had just attacked him. Why would he help her?
Gus rounded the corner, his two security men flanking him. He took a step toward her, his hand already reaching for her arm.
Hoyt moved. It was a single, fluid step forward. He didn't touch her, but he shifted his body so that he was standing directly between her and the security detail. He was a wall of dark wool and expensive cologne, completely blocking her from view.
"Mr. Cavanaugh," Hoyt said. His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of a closing vault door. "I believe there is a misunderstanding. This young woman is my guest."
Jordyn stared at the broad expanse of his back. She inhaled shakily, and the scent hit her-clean, cold cedarwood, with a faint trace of smoke. It was the scent of absolute control.
She didn't understand. Why was he lying for her?
Trapped In The Billionaire's Gilded Cage
Julian Reid
Romance
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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