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Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs - Chapter 563

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  3. Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs
  4. Chapter 563 - Chapter 563: Alpha, Tsundere, and...? Well, Kayla
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Chapter 563: Alpha, Tsundere, and…? Well, Kayla
Time.

The single, silent currency of the Grand Lumière. I let it stretch while adjusting my charcoal-grey jacket, the bespoke wool settling over my frame like a second, better, more expensive skin. I let my presence unfurl — not the full overwhelming gravity of Eros, just enough to shift the atmospheric pressure. A subtle reality-bend. A quiet omen.

Every woman in the restaurant noticed.

Conversations derailed mid-sentence. Silverware paused midair. The soft jazz piano seemed to soften itself, like even the music didn’t want to interrupt whatever the hell I was radiating.

I started walking toward their table.

Lea saw me first.

Her whole body went rigid. Water glass suspended halfway to her lips, frozen like someone had hit pause on her entire existence. Behind the dark-rimmed glasses, her pupils dilated in a tiny, explosive flicker of helpless admiration — the kind she’d sooner swallow razor blades than admit.

A heartbeat later, the fortress slammed shut. She looked down at her menu with violently forced composure. Her fingers trembled as she adjusted her glasses. Her other hand gripped the table edge, knuckles bleaching white.

But I’d seen it.

That unguarded, naked want. Pure. Unfiltered. Before the armor reactivated.

Then the mask returned: blank, clinical perfection. She adjusted her posture with surgical precision, staring at the menu like she was reading a treaty on quantum warfare.

A flawless performance.

A transparent one, now that I knew the genre.

Kayla turned next, following Lea’s freeze-frame reaction like a predator tracking prey movement.

Her lips curved.

Not warmth. Not welcome. A slow, predatory appraisal. Her eyes dragged over me — jacket, open collar, stride — like she was assigning me a dollar value.

She leaned back, crossing her legs. The shift pushed her crop top just enough to remind the universe why she made enemies by simply entering rooms.

“Well,” she said, voice a low purr dipped in trouble. “Look what finally showed up.”

I reached the table. Neither girl moved. Neither breathed. They just tracked me — Lea with the desperate focus of someone pretending to study astrophysics, Kayla with the languid certainty of a snake charmer–a lazy confidence of a cat lounging on a dead rival.

I pulled out the ornate chair between them and sat, slow and deliberate. The scrape of the legs against marble sounded like a countdown.

“Hope you weren’t waiting long.”

Silence charged the air. Silence with teeth.

Lea recovered first. She always does when panic forces her neurons into overdrive.

“Carter,” she said, flatly academic, knuckles still white on the menu. “I wasn’t sure you’d actually have the audacity to show up.”

“Why wouldn’t I?”

“Because—” She flicked a contemptuous glance at Kayla. An entire nuclear arsenal delivered in one side-eye. “—I didn’t realize this was a group charity event. Are you collecting strays now? First Sofia, now the leech who stole your software and vanished into a six-figure job.”

“Master,” ARIA purred in my ear. “Lea is defending your honor while calling you an idiot. Kayla looks like she’s about to recreate the Will Smith Oscars incident but with a steak knife.”

“Not helping.”

“Helping is subjective. Chaos is universal.”

Kayla’s smile died. Not faded — died. Like someone unplugged it from the outlet.

“Excuse me?”

“Oh, did I stutter?” Lea’s voice dripped precision-cut acid. “The entire school knows what you did. Connor made sure of it. You manipulated Peter into building your blockchain software, took the credit, and pranced off to Mirror Crypto House while he got nothing. Did I leave out any of the highlights?”

“I didn’t steal—”

“No, you just convinced him to do all the actual work while you smiled and looked pretty.” Lea adjusted her glasses, weaponizing the gesture. “Very entrepreneurial. I’m sure your LinkedIn bio includes ‘excellence in exploiting naive geniuses’ under the skills section.”

Kayla’s face went the kind of red usually reserved for broken thermometers. “That’s not how it happened—”

“Then enlighten us.” Lea turned to me, pinning me with a gaze sharp enough to perform surgery. “Actually, Carter, I’m curious. What’s your version? Because from where I’m sitting, you let Sarah’s friend manipulate you into building something brilliant, and then watched her walk off with the profit and the glory. Were you thinking with your brain? Or were you thinking with your dick?”

There it was.

The full tsundere paradox, delivered with the force of a Supreme Court ruling. Defending my honor while simultaneously torching my intellect. Setting herself on fire while claiming she wasn’t even flammable.

And Kayla?

Kayla wasn’t breathing anymore.

This table wasn’t dinner.

It was a battleground.

And I was the war.

The waiter appeared, eyes darting between us like he was estimating the blast radius of a nuclear meltdown. “Can I… start you with drinks?” His voice trembled as if he’d just walked into a Quentin Tarantino set with no stunt double.

“Bourbon,” Kayla said, clipped, precise. “Neat. Top shelf.”

“Sancerre,” Lea added, eyes pinned on mine, icy and unyielding. “2019 vintage.”

Both looked at me. Waiting. Breathing expectation.

“Water’s fine.”

Kayla arched one eyebrow, perfectly sculpted like a scandal-ready Kardashian social media post. “Water? That’s your power move? After all that buildup?”

“After what?” Lea’s voice sharpened, a scalpel slicing tension. “Oh please, Kayla. Don’t act like you’ve earned the right to all that. You stole his work, ghosted to your crypto job like a bored influencer dodging charity photos, and now you’re back—what, because he upgraded and you want another taste?”

“That’s not why I’m here—”

“Then why?” Lea’s pivot was surgical, every word a precise strike. “Mirror Crypto House success story, back at Lincoln High? Nostalgia? Or did the adult world finally run out of suckers to manipulate?”

“Lea—” I started, voice mild, but calm like a storm waiting to decimate a village.

“And you,” she snapped, rounding on me like a velociraptor in Vogue. In that moment, she wasn’t just attacking me; she was unpacking every insecurity she’d meticulously cataloged over years. “Why is she here? Why did you invite her? The girl who used you, walked away, left Sarah crying for months because she felt responsible? Are you really that stupid? Or is this your personal forgiveness tour, proving you’re too enlightened to hold grudges?”

Silence. The waiter placed the drinks with trembling hands and vanished like a ghost, no tipping required.

I picked up my water glass. Sipped. Let the silence fester, letting them drown in it like fish in a dark pond.

“You want to know what happened?” I said finally, quiet, weighty, carrying gravity like a black hole at a fashion show.

“Yes,” Lea’s voice was a sharpened blade. “I want to hear you admit you let her manipulate you because you were too blind to see it.”

I met her gaze. Then Kayla’s, defensive, eyes darting like a Tesla stock chart.

“I designed eighty percent of that software. Entire blockchain architecture, security protocols, foundational framework. Kayla contributed twenty percent—mostly UI design and late-stage optimization. We worked together. She knew I was building something valuable.”

Kayla opened her mouth. I kept going. My words held her still, suspended like a rumor on TMZ.

“When Mirror Crypto House came recruiting, she submitted it as her portfolio piece. Her name on it. Not mine. She got the interview, got the job. Thanked me after. Apologized. Asked if we could still be friends.”

“And you said yes,” Lea said flatly, disgust dripping like spilled chardonnay. “Because you’re an idiot.”

“I said yes because I wasn’t angry. She saw an opportunity and took it. That’s survival. I respect survival.”

“You respect—” Her voice climbed, losing clinical polish, becoming venomous. “Carter, she stole your work. Your brilliance. Your ticket out. And you just… let her? While you stayed here, getting tossed in trash cans by Jack Morrison like a failed Adam Sandler reboot?”

“Master,” ARIA purred, “Lea is defending you while roasting you. Beautiful contradiction. Archiving.”

“I let her because I was too passive. Too willing to be used. Too afraid to demand what I was worth.” I leaned forward, drawing them both in, gravitational pull unavoidable. “But I learned. She taught me the most important lesson: the world doesn’t give you what you deserve. It gives you what you take—or what you let people take.”

Kayla stared at her bourbon, smaller than I’d ever seen her, like a reality star who just realized her Vegas marriage was a franchise scam. “Peter—”

“I’m not angry. Not anymore,” I said, tone calm but absolute, no room for dissent. “And I’m not that person anymore. If you came here tonight expecting the old me—the easy mark who’d build something and hand it to you for free—you’re going to be very, very disappointed.”

Silence. Heavy. Electrostatic. Charged.

Lea leaned back, brain visibly spinning like a supercomputer overheating. “You’re really not angry at her.”

“No.”

“Why not? She used you. Took your work. Got a six-figure salary while you—” She blinked. “While you what, exactly? Because you’re clearly not broke anymore. The Range Rover. The clothes that cost a family of four a month. Dating Madison Torres. So what happened? Between her stealing your software and you becoming… this?”

“I stopped being passive. I stopped letting people use me. I started taking what I wanted instead of waiting for permission.”

“That’s not an answer.”

“It’s the only answer you’re getting tonight.”

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