Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs - Chapter 387
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- Chapter 387 - Chapter 387: Gnawing Silence
Chapter 387: Gnawing Silence
With ARIA’s help, she was already compiling a list of replacements—a bloodless coup ushering in a brilliant new era.
The public’s response was a vindicating roar. Tommy, the “genius” I’d strategically placed, was being hailed as a savant. Charlotte’s name was not just cleared; it was gilded. The employees who had once whispered behind her back now looked upon her with a mixture of reverence and awe.
A company meeting in the coming days would formally mark the death of the old Quantum Tech and the birth of my empire.
The fallout hit like a social media explosion. The Riveras—freshly vindicated, glowing in every headline—were suddenly the darlings of Wall Street and the Internet alike.
Thompsons sprayed across every outlet from CNBC to gossip blogs pretending to be journalism. Stocks spiked, headlines purred, and somewhere, a thousand investors whispered our names like a new religion.
Their stock was rocketing, ours right alongside it. But honestly? The money wasn’t the real flex. The brand was.
Tommy’s face—smug, brilliant, and somehow photogenic despite looking like he’s been built out of leftover gym memberships—was plastered across billboards in Times Square. The man had gone from caffeine-fueled code gremlin to national treasure in under a month. Charlotte too, of course—perfect posture, perfect hair, perfect everything. Together, they were the glossy PR version of a dream I’d built out of insomnia and duct tape.
That’s their stage now. I trust her, though. Completely. She’s got ARIA riding shotgun—my digital alter ego, same brainpower, none of the existential breakdowns. Charlotte can steer the whole empire without breaking a sweat. Me? I’m fine haunting the backend like some tech ghost—half legend, half rumor, all caffeine.
She basically lives here now. Mom treats her like the daughter she always wanted: home-cooked meals, unsolicited advice, the whole Hallmark treatment. My mother really adores her—calls her “sweetheart” in a tone I haven’t heard since before grief remodeled her into something smaller.
Margaret—the original ice queen—moved into the guest house of the estate, like she’s trying out humility for once. The mansion’s starting to feel less like a fortress and more like a sitcom where everyone’s pretending nothing weird ever happened.
But I can feel it. Underneath the laughter and photo ops, something’s still moving. Old tension. Familiar looks that linger too long. The kind of silence that hums like a live wire right before it sparks.
“Advisory: Elevated heart rate and cognitive drift detected. Would you like me to initiate a mindfulness routine?”
ARIA’s voice, cool and metallic, but I swear there’s a smirk buried somewhere in the algorithm.
“No, ARIA,” I murmured. “Let the noise stay. I need the static—it reminds me I’m still human.”
“Understood. Logging ’emotional volatility’ as functional, for now.”
The world was busy celebrating—articles, interviews, champagne-soaked congratulations—but I can’t shake this low hum in my chest. A disconnect. Like I’m watching my own success from behind glass.
And then there’s Sable.
No calls. No messages. Not even a passive-aggressive emoji. I thought she’d reach out after the Empress’s little warning, after Rivera Media’s supposed “internal purge.” But no—radio silence. My phone sits there on the desk, black screen reflecting me like it’s waiting for me to crack first.
The Empress always plays careful. She doesn’t dive into dark water unless she knows what’s waiting underneath.
And me? I’m still there in the deep—patient, quiet, smiling.
Waiting for her to look down.
But the whole professional intrigue? Background noise. Static in a storm. What really mattered—what really mattered—was the gnawing, feral panic chewing holes through my composure. The entire evening had been an act: cooking, eating, laughing. Every smile choreographed, every joke a smokescreen. Because while my hands moved, my mind stayed locked on one thing—the black slab of glass on the coffee table.
My phone. My tormentor. My confession box.
I’d sent texts that vanished into digital purgatory. I’d called—once, twice, too many times—and each ring ended in the same hollow silence, the kind that mocked you for caring. Not busy. Not asleep. Just ignoring you.That wasn’t emptiness. That was strategy.That was Madison.
She’s doing it on purpose.
Of course she was. She knew exactly what she was—my addiction, my undoing. And this was withdrawal. Cold turkey. I could almost feel the chemical crash behind my eyes.
If it went on much longer, I’d fold. So, I made a decision the way most people breathe—automatically, instinctively, dangerously. Five minutes. That’s how long it would take to get to the Morrison estate. The new house had been a blessing in disguise: close enough for family dinners and far enough for plausible deniability.
Or invasion, depending on how you look at it.
The clock struck ten. Each chime landed like a gavel against my skull.
The twins were herded upstairs—half-asleep, sugar-drunk—and Charlotte paused at the stairs to look back at me. That look again. Concern, sure. Understanding, maybe. But underneath it? Something darker. A kind of quiet thrill that mirrored my own.
Then she was gone, and the house fell into that heavy, sentient silence. The kind that listens back.
Only the TV murmured in the corner, pretending to be company while I stared at my phone like it might blink first.
Ten o’clock. If she doesn’t text in ten minutes, I’m out. I swear to God, I’ll drive over there.
My thumb hovered over her contact again. I hated how desperate I felt, how clingy, how cliché.But hell — love’s supposed to be a little stupid, right?
Yeah. Stupid. That’s me.
I was alone. The quiet fed the chaos in my head. I was on my feet, car keys already a cold weight in my hand, ready to storm the castle and demand an audience, consequences be damned.
But I didn’t have to.
The phone lit up, vibrating with a soft, insistent urgency that seemed to shake the very table. The screen glowed, cutting through the darkness with a single, sacred name: Madison.
My heart didn’t just hammer; it felt like it was trying to shred its way out of my chest. A violent wave of relief mixed with sharp apprehension. I snatched the phone, my thumb swiping to answer before the first vibration had even faded.
“Madison,” I said, my voice a low, rough growl, stripped bare and laden with the weight of every silent hour.