Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs - Chapter 326
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- Chapter 326 - Chapter 326: The Day That Changed Everything
Chapter 326: The Day That Changed Everything
The charcoal suit felt different tonight—not just expensive fabric against my enhanced skin, but armor for a battle already won. I adjusted the cufflinks Charlotte had given me, watching her reflection in the mirror. She applied lipstick with the precise, unhurried movements of someone who’d spent the day systematically dismantling her enemies on live television.
Twelve hours ago, we’d hovered between cautious optimism and outright dread. Now, we stood in the stunned silence of total victory. My mind still raced to comprehend the scale of what we’d accomplished.
This morning’s press conference had been both glorious carnage and an unanticipated nightmare. I’d lingered at the back of the packed auditorium, watching Charlotte seize the podium like a queen reclaiming her throne. But within minutes, I was forced to flee like I’d stumbled into a goddamn zombie apocalypse.
The moment I removed my mask for a clearer view, every woman within a fifty-foot radius erupted in vivid sexual fantasies. My upgraded Lust Presence, amplified by the new Plea ability, let me see their thoughts—and holy shit. The professional journalists and executives in that room were imagining things that would make pornstars blush… during a corporate fraud briefing.
The Reuters correspondent mentally undressed me while demanding answers about accounting irregularities. The Bloomberg reporter fantasized about being bent over her own desk. Even the elderly Wall Street Journal contributor entertained thoughts involving boardrooms and wildly unprofessional uses for conference tables. I’d retreated to the back hallway, mask slammed back on, just to function. The abilities that made me a god in intimate settings rendered public appearances a sensory hell.
Charlotte, meanwhile, was magnificent—calm, precise, devastating. As she spoke, ARIA began dropping evidence packages like coordinated artillery strikes. First, the joint Harvard-Stanford authentication documents landed, their official statement obliterating every fraud claim Rivera Media had manufactured.
Then came the nuclear option: the wives’ testimonies. Professor Chen’s wife, Professor Kirkman’s—all two women shattering on camera as they described torture, threats against their families, and the coerced lies their husbands they’d been forced to tell on threat of holding the wives hostage.
The media erupted. Rivera Next Media’s stock nosedived in real-time as ARIA flooded the internet with proof of their criminal enterprise. Not just the kidnappings—everything. Bank records showing payments to Vincent’s mercenaries.
Communication logs proving Antonio’s ‘only’ direct role in extortion. Video evidence of some of the Rivera board members being coerced into compliance. ARIA had used our initial $23 million, shorting their positions and riding the collapse all the way down. When the dust settled, she’d turned that investment into 40 million profit. It was like watching someone play Monopoly with real money, only the bank kept multiplying.
Around 1 PM, Mom’s video call lit up my screen. Seeing Sarah and Emma’s faces glowing with pride was pure gold.
“Peter, we saw the press conference!” Emma practically shouted. “I know you helped save the company from the shadows!”
Sarah, ever the analyst, added, “You’ve gone from the Carter kid who got bullied to the Carter kid who’s apparently some kind of business genius.”
“What bullying do you mean?” Sarah had slipped but recovered fast.
“Nothing mom, he just had this… build bullies like, but all good now, hahaha.” she laughed awkwardly, Emma joined while pinching Sarah.
“HEYYYY!!!”
“Peter, sweetheart,” Mom said, the exhaustion of her ICU shift momentarily lifting from her voice and the twins shenanigans, “I saw the news about Charlotte’s company. You really helped her through all this?”
“Yeah, Mom. We make a good team.”
Sarah leaned into the camera, her eyes sharp. “The news says her stock spiked. Does that mean you’re… okay financially?”
“We’re fine, Sarah. Better than fine.”
Emma bounced in her seat. “My brother knows a CEO! Can you get me an internship?” She teased me with a wide grin playing on her beautiful face.
“Emma,” Mom chided, but her smile crinkled at the corners, a softness cutting through the weariness. “Peter… PRIDE. That’s what I feel watching you stand with Charlotte. She’s got light in her, that one—a resilience that burns bright. After everything she’s endured…” Mom’s voice shifted, that quiet, ferocious tone she used guarding her patients in the ICU. “You take care of her now, hear me?”
Her eyes held mine, pure maternal pride warring with that constant, low-hum worry mothers wear like armor. “Thank you,” she breathed, wiping a stray tear. “For Charlotte. For this… justice.” She paused, fingers brushing the screen where Charlotte’s face lingered. “But sweetheart—remember your promise. When the dust finally settles? You bring that girl home. I want to see her again. That pure soul.”
“I will, Mom. Swear it.”
“And Peter?” Her gaze sharpened, the nurse cutting through the mom. “Don’t you dare let this victory swell your head. You’re still my boy. The one who cried for hours after stepping on an ant.”
“Jesus, WTF, Mom. Really, right now?” But I was smiling.
“Language, young man!”
***
The arrests weren’t just justice; they were performance art. Vincent Castellanos? Frog-marched out of his chrome-and-glass fortress in handcuffs, cameras flashing like paparazzi snapping a fallen emperor. Antonio Rivera?
Hauled from his penthouse mid-shredder frenzy, scattering confetti of incriminating docs ARIA had already weaponized. Both men looked gutted, invincible predators suddenly reduced to whimpering prey—decades of ruthless arrogance peeled away in a single, brutal morning.
Quantum Tech’s stock didn’t just soar; it detonated. Charlotte’s vindication, layered with ARIA’s masterful whispers about “revolutionary API tech auction” and “strategic alliances,” sent investors into a blood-frenzied stampede. Like watching God play a slot machine rigged with infinite jackpots.
ARIA had ridden the wave and engineered the tsunami. With ruthless, inhuman precision, she flipped another $20 million, then another—money breeding money at a rate that defied sanity. Treating nine-figure sums like pocket change was her new normal.
Tommy’s call around 2 PM was pure, uncut adolescent ecstasy vibrating through the phone. “BRO! I’m a fucking LEGEND at Lincoln Heights! Kid livestreamed the presser—heard Charlotte drop my name! ‘Tommy Chen from Lincoln Heights’! The whole cafeteria erupted! I’m trending harder than Jack Morrison’s ex! They’re scraping at my DMs like I suddenly invented oxygen!”
His voice crackled, equal parts awe and delirious laughter. “Tech millionaire status? It’s popularity napalm, man. I burn brighter now.”
The corporate landscape didn’t just shift; it splintered. Giants who’d sneered at Quantum Tech weeks ago now groveled for meetings.
Sycophants who’d licked Rivera’s boots scrambled to scrub their association like rats fleeing a sinking ship. In twenty-four hours, the entire tech industry’s power pyramid hadn’t just been rearranged—it’d been leveled, rebuilt on the smoking ruins of Rivera Media, with Charlotte Carter and her shadow architect perched atop the rubble.
The new kings were winning and rewriting the rules of the game itself.
The true disquiet didn’t settle on Vincent’s arrest or Antonio’s ruin. It coiled around the emptiness where Dmitri Volkov had been.
By three, ARIA’s confirmation arrived—not as surprise, but as cold validation to what I thought might happen. No jet trails. No border blips. Not a whisper across the dark web’s frozen void. Dmitri hadn’t fled. He’d been unmade. A figure excised from the ledger of the living, leaving only a silence that hummed like a tuning fork struck in a tomb.
“Master,” ARIA’s voice sliced through the stillness, each syllable sharp as a shard, “Dmitri Volkov is either dead, or he has gone beyond our sight into shadows we cannot yet map. His silence… is conspicuous.”
Conspicuous. The word lodged beneath the ribs. Vincent and Antonio had shattered because they clung to visibility—kings who mistook broken glass for stained glass when the whole cathedral burned. Dmitri was different. He moved through the world like mercury, sensing the tremors long before the quake.
He’d read the omens scrawled in blood and vanished before the searchlight could carve his silhouette.
Maybe the very moment Helena confirmed Vincent’s betrayal, the bastard had already vanished into the wind.
That failure was mine to own.
ARIA had been watching, yes— ARIA had eyes everywhere, yes, but even she wasn’t limitless—her omniscience and omnipresence only stretched as far as wires and signals could carry, confined to what was digital, what could be hacked, what could be watched, where circuits pulsed, where a door could be pried open with code. Beyond the grid, beyond the digital veins of the world, she was blind.
Two possibilities now knotted in the gut. Either he ran—a notion as plausible as a wolf sheathing its Own fangs—or he prepared. And Dmitri Volkov is an international criminal. They do not prepare. He engineer.
More unnerving still: the static crackle across ARIA’s intercepts. The underworld’s whispered questions gathering like storm clouds. Three titans erased between sunrise and sunset? Someone had turned the world upside down and shaken it hard. The rumors slithering through encrypted channels didn’t speak of power anymore.
They spoke of a myth. The kind that walks among men and leaves only erased kingdoms in its wake. The tutorial was ash. I’d cracked the puppets. Now came the puppeteers. Men who didn’t just understand shadows—they wove them. They’d be architects of ruin. Methodical. Invisible. Cold-blooded.
And I’d meet them blade for blade.