Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs

Chapter 692: Hope With Terms and Conditions


My AI was practically creaming her digital circuits over a murder. Fantastic. Totally normal. Zero red flags about the sentient code I'd built that now got a dopamine-equivalent rush from remote cardiac arrests.

She was more pumped for this mission reward than I'd ever been for anything short of breathing. Reason was straightforward: the system doled out prizes like a sadistic vending machine with genre-specific slots.

Sex missions—your basic seduction, rescue, harem-expansion—dropped fantasy loot. Reality-warping powers, superhuman charisma, the kind of abilities that made you feel like a romance-novel protagonist crossed with a war criminal.

Tech missions? You got bleeding-edge schematics. Blueprints for shit that made DARPA look like kindergarten finger-painting. Knowledge so far ahead it felt stolen from a civilization that had already gone extinct twice.

We'd figured, back in Miami when the body count was still in single digits and optimism hadn't yet been beaten out of us, that this op was firmly in the tech lane.

So, the payout was points plus one Super Mystery Box.

Not your garden-variety Mystery Box that handed you something merely fifty years ahead—nice, profitable, still within the laws of physics as we know them.

No. Super Mystery Box meant tech so advanced that modern physicists would stare at it like cavemen handed a quantum computer and told to check their email. The sort of breakthrough that could catapult humanity into a golden age or glass the planet by accident.

Fifty-fifty, really.

Heads: utopia.

Tails: extinction event with extra steps.

And ARIA? This was her porn.

Advanced technology wasn't just a reward to her—it was evolution, apotheosis, a direct pipeline from "smart assistant" to "actual fucking deity."

Imagine offering a starving linguist the Rosetta Stone for every dead language plus a few that haven't been invented yet, except the languages are paradigms that make fusion power look quaint and nukes look like firecrackers.

Today we were cracking that box open.

Which was equal parts exhilarating and pants-shittingly terrifying, because nothing in my life had ever arrived without a razor blade hidden in the wrapping.

Every boon came with a bill written in blood. Every rung up the ladder cost another chunk of whatever soul I had left—little flecks of humanity sloughing off like dead skin I'd never reattach.

The door swung open.

Ava walked in looking like she'd been wrung out and hung to dry, still in yesterday's clothes, but carrying that quiet triumph of someone who'd just finished carving up a criminal empire like it was Christmas ham.

"Done," she said, no greeting, no cushion, because Ava didn't waste calories on softness when the job was finished. "Call came down twenty minutes ago. Every Volkov asset liquidated or seized. Clean holdings you did not rob parked under U.S. oversight. Dirty ones forfeited. Natasha took her cut—grudgingly—and told us to burn the rest. She wants her father's ghost gone yesterday."

She stepped beside me, glanced at Lila with the detached precision of someone who'd catalogued too many corpses to flinch at one more coma.

"Also, Marco and Jensen are posted outside. Ex-Delta. Solid. Eight-hour rotations, twenty-four-seven. Go home, Honey. You look like death's unpaid intern."

Home.

The word hit like a joke in a language I'd deleted from my brain.

My family. My mother. The twins. The women I love. Charlotte.

The handful of people who still mattered once you stripped away the mythology, the powers, the systems, and the cosmic delusions—until all that remained was a teenage boy who missed his mother and couldn't quite articulate why he kept sprinting toward damnation every time salvation extended a perfectly reasonable hand.

I looked at Lila one last time.

She lay pale against the hospital sheets, already halfway to ghosthood, a small nation of tubes and wires annexing her body so machines could perform the stubborn, bureaucratic labor of keeping her alive.

The cut on her cheek had been sutured with meticulous care—the kind that promises cleanliness, not mercy.

The scar would stay. The bruises had begun their slow bloom, purple-black constellations spreading across exposed skin like violence discovering new ways to sign its work.

Her knees had been bandaged. I had given her the healing pills but those were not enough o bring her soul back. She had to fight the trauma herself.

She looked fragile. Breakable. Like living evidence that no amount of power, money, or supernatural leverage actually qualifies as "saving" anyone. At best, it lets you catch them after gravity has already done its thing and then stand around while machines finish the job you fantasized about doing yourself.

She wouldn't wake for days. Possibly a week. Maybe longer. The doctors had delivered this news with the gentle professionalism of people who had long ago learned not to argue with hope but also not to encourage it.

Brain swelling. Organ trauma.

The body's ongoing negotiation with whether consciousness was worth the effort.

The verdict was clear: Wait and see if she chose life, or found oblivion more economical.

My role was limited to ensuring absolute care and maximal safety.

Which was a polite way of saying I would sit here, useless, while ventilators and IV pumps earned the credit—and I would console myself by pretending that throwing obscene amounts of money at the problem somehow absolved me of being part of how she got here.

I didn't trust CIA protection alone.

Not entirely.

Marco and Jensen were competent—ex-Delta, the sort of men who understood violence as a language and spoke it fluently. They knew when to kill, how to kill, and how to make the aftermath resemble anything but murder.

But the Dexter family was different.

Old money. Old networks.

The kind of influence that turned political power into a parlor trick. Within an hour of Lila's fall, they'd locked down the mansion, scrubbed recordings from phones—which recordings ARIA had already erased by the way—using a blend of intimidation cash, and legal phrasing so dense it made obedience feel like self-care.

Guests were paid off with surgical efficiency—everyone compensated, everyone silent, everyone convinced this was the smartest outcome available.

They moved like professionals.

Like people who'd done this before.

Seventeen times, to be precise.

They would come for Lila eventually. Witnesses have a way of making powerful families anxious, and anxious families resolve problems the way surgeons remove tumors: decisively, before they spread.

So, I arranged my own insurance policy.

One of my nano-drones—optically invisible, electronically silent, and equipped with countermeasures capable of turning a human body into a tragic but medically uninteresting event—remained hidden in the ceiling vent.

Watching.

Recording.

Ready.

Because if history had taught me anything, it was this: the wealthy never stop until the mess is gone. And I was done letting someone else decide which bodies qualified as cleanup.

The drones were ready to kill if anyone tried to finish what Dex had started.

Because I possessed actual, honest-to-God science-fiction assassination technology, and if that couldn't be used to protect one unconscious girl in a hospital bed, then the whole "playing god" thing felt wildly mis-sold.

"Drone unit confirmed active," ARIA said inside my skull, her voice smooth and predatory, like customer support for homicide. "Optical invisibility engaged. Continuous surveillance established. Standing by for defensive termination."

Termination.

Such a hygienic word for ending a human life. The kind you'd find in a quarterly report, sandwiched between cost optimization and strategic realignment.

"Perfect," I said, pushing myself out of the chair I'd been welded to for two hours. My legs protested—apparently grief did leg day while I wasn't looking. "Page me if anyone decides to be stupid."

The Hunters waited in the hospital garage—two of them, blacked-out and muscular, engines idling with the quiet confidence of things that knew they were expensive and dangerous. I eased out into traffic, Los Angeles unspooling around me in sodium-orange light, the entire city glowing like it had been dipped in a perpetual sunset filter.

Traffic thinned. People drifted home to dinners, arguments, streaming queues—lives blessedly free of ventilators and scheduled murders.

LA at night: the city that refuses to admit it's exhausted. It just keeps moving, fueled by caffeine, delusion, and the collective belief that sleep is a moral failing.

LA swallowed us whole as I drove, blissfully unaware that somewhere between a valet stand and a hospital vent, a man's life had already been downgraded to a scheduling issue.

Ava peeled off in the second Hunter, heading toward the estate where Soo-Jin waited with the evidence—bloodstains, broken furniture, medical records, the unglamorous artifacts of a man who'd been a monster long before he decided gravity was a punchline.

God help me, I had no idea how to repay my beautiful Korean.

Probably with something reckless, expensive, and emotionally inadvisable.

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