The Billionaire’s Bride: Our Vows Do Not Matter

Remember your place, Cathleen



A day full of meetings meant Xavier was in a bad mood. His thumb pressed the screen, and a message launched into the void. He tapped his expensive pen on the maple table, each click echoing his growing disinterest. Suits and ties blurred into a parade of greed around him, their mouths moving in a symphony of bullshit. His thoughts were with Cathleen, his wife. He wanted to know how she was doing after she heard about her stepmother. He knew she wasn’t going to attend the funeral. One thing about Cathleen, she didn’t know how to pretend, and Xavier knew that very well. “Mr. Knight?” A voice cut through. Xavier didn’t flinch. The meeting room felt small, and claustrophobic. “Excuse me,” he growled, standing abruptly. Chairs scraped. Murmurs swelled. But he was out, the door slamming behind him. He then sent a text message to Cathleen with an address for her to come meet him. The drive was smooth, an antidote to the stifling hours before. He pulled up, a sleek black car purring to a halt. Xavier straightened his jacket, an armor of fine threads. Sunglasses perched, hiding eyes that missed nothing. He leaned against the cool metal, waiting. Cathleen approached, her stride confident, unwavering. She slipped into the passenger seat, her presence in the air. “What about my car?” she demanded as Xavier was about to start the engine. “Someone would pick it,” Xavier replied, voice low, gaze fixed on her. “I just want a me and my wife moment.” A smile played on her lips. “Where are we going?” “To a little shop, I like to go.” His chuckle was dark, a secret shared between shadows. “What shop?” Persistent as always. “You see when we get there,” he teased, starting the engine. The city passed by in a blur. The drive wasn’t long. Xavier held Cathleen’s hand tightly as they entered the building. From the outside, it seemed ordinary, but once inside, his true intentions were revealed. The walls were adorned with glass cases and shelves displaying various leather and lace items, hinting at taboo desires not spoken of in proper society. Sultry jazz music filled the air, setting the mood for this collection of illicit objects for sale. “A sex shop?” Cathleen’s voice sliced through the melody, an edge of challenge beneath her inquiry. “Looks can be deceiving,” Xavier murmured, dark eyes scanning the expanse. He released her hand, a sign of the game afoot. “But sometimes, they’re spot on.” Cathleen’s gaze followed the trail of his exploration. “Don’t you already have all the stuff you need in the dungeon?” Her words, sharp, clipped, carried weight. “Can you ever really have enough things to play with?” Xavier retorted, the corners of his mouth ticking up in the shadow of a smirk. “You don’t need these things.” She leaned into her logic, arms folding across her chest as if bracing against a gust of his capricious whims. “True, but I want them.” His voice was a low rumble, desire thinly veiled by indifference. She rolled her eyes, a silent rebuke. The selection beckoned, and Xavier found himself torn between collars and floggers, a testament to both restraint and punishment. It was there amidst the leather and steel that he paused. His hands hovered, then settled on a collar-a statement piece, a declaration. “I believe we agreed a ring was enough, Xavier!” Cathleen’s voice rose, laced with heat, echoing off the walls. “You will need one for the club.” His justification was matter-of-fact. He lived in a world where boundaries were meant to be pushed, so it was no surprise that this outcome was predetermined. “Club?” Disbelief tinged her query, eyes narrowing as she sought the truth in his. “Aren’t we too old to be going to clubs?” “Age is just a number, darling.” Xavier’s tone mocked the cliche. “We have Bella to raise. We don’t have time for clubbing. Let’s stick to what we have.” Her argument was sound, practicality versus his indulgence. “Yet here we are.” Xavier let the silence linger, his gaze never leaving hers. “You wanted this life. So be the mama that you are-and still fulfill your wifely duties, and being my sub, yeah?” The roll of her eyes was almost audible, a punctuation mark to their silent standoff. Xavier’s fingers traced the contours of the leather, his touch reverent. The collar rested in his palm, its weight a promise. He lifted it, eyes glinting with a possessive gleam, before placing it alongside a collection of floggers on the counter. Steel studs caught the dim light, winking like stars in a dark sky. He turned to Cathleen, his gaze an unspoken challenge. “Choose what you want,” he commanded, voice low, every syllable a caress and a command all at once. Cathleen’s eyes swept the array of deviance displayed before her. The air was thick, laden with the scent of leather and latent arousal. She paused, lips parting slightly as she considered her options. Then, like a magnet drawn to steel, her gaze fixed on the chrome gleam of the nut grabber. “That,” she said, her lips curving into a knowing smile as she pointed at the nut grabber.Original content from NôvelDrama.Org.

Xavier’s eyes narrowed slightly, the ghost of amusement that had played on his lips now replaced by a cooler expression. “Good choice,” he acknowledged, his voice dripping with ice. “But you forgot I am the Dom, not you.” Cathleen’s smile faltered, a sigh escaping her lips like the release of a valve, pressure momentarily relieved. It was a dance they knew well, steps memorized, every move a battle for control. “I remember perfectly,” she retorted, defiance sparking in her eyes. “Then don’t test me.” His words were a cold whisper, a threat disguised as advice. “Of course,” she murmured, her tone betraying a flicker of defiance that refused to be extinguished. A spark that Xavier both adored and sought to tame. He stepped closer, invading her space, asserting his claim. Their eyes locked-a silent showdown. He held the power, yet she wielded influence, an equilibrium precariously perched on the edge of a blade. “Remember your place, Cathleen,” he whispered, the words velvet and venom. “Never forget yours, Xavier,” she shot back, her voice equally soft and equally lethal. Cathleen exhaled, a sound halfway between frustration and resignation. Her shoulders dropped ever so slightly-a white flag in their silent battle. Their exchange hung in the air, a declaration of war swathed in the trappings of their twisted love. In this game, they were both players and pawns, master and servant bound together in a relentless tug-of-war. With a final glance at the array of instruments destined for their personal chamber of secrets, Xavier motioned to the cashier, an unspoken command to finalize their purchase. The transaction was complete, and the promise of future encounters was sealed with the exchange of currency for contraband. “Shall we?” he asked, gesturing toward the exit, the implicit challenge clear. “After you,” Cathleen replied, her poise unshaken, her spirit untamed. They left the shop side by side, silence enveloping them like a cloak. Outside, the world remained oblivious to the storm brewing between them and to the inevitable clash that awaited behind closed doors.


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