Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs - Chapter 564
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- Chapter 564 - Chapter 564: Algorithms of Desire
Chapter 564: Algorithms of Desire
She sat back, mind clearly reeling, gears spinning at a million miles an hour, processing new data like a stock algorithm on Red Bull.
I allowed myself a private smirk, imagining Kayla as a slightly less competent Elon Musk if he were trapped in high school, and Lea like Zendaya narrating the chaos with a side-eye sharp enough to draw blood.
And yes—I loved every second of it.
Kayla cleared her throat, the sound thin and strangely fragile, like guilt wearing heels. “For what it’s worth… I did feel guilty. I do feel guilty. I saw what you were capable of and I—” She paused, breath trembling in her chest. “I took advantage. And I’m sorry. Really sorry.”
“Sorry enough to split your salary for the past year?”Lea’s voice arrived lacquered in saccharine venom, a poisonous confection wrapped in politeness. “Since you built your entire career on his work?”
“Lea,” I said, my voice firm, cutting through her like a gavel through glass. “Enough.”
She looked at me—really looked—and in that instant something flickered behind her eyes. A bruise of emotion. Hurt, sharp and unexpected, as if my defense of Kayla had slapped her with the backhand of betrayal.
“She doesn’t deserve your forgiveness,” Lea said quietly. “And you’re an idiot for giving it.”
“Maybe. But anger is exhausting. A languid, useless emotion. And I have better things to do than stay mad at someone who accidentally taught me a valuable lesson.”
“What lesson? That people are awful?”
“That I need to stop being nice. That I need to be the one doing the taking. That the world respects power, not kindness.”
I let that truth settle. Heavy. Unignorable.
“You’re tired of pretending,” Lea said, her tone sharpening again, crystalline and cutting. “Tired of me insulting you while secretly caring. Tired of her staring at you like she’s trying to estimate your new liquidity. You wanted this room. You wanted the collision. You wanted us to stop dancing around the truth.”
“And what do you want?” Kayla whispered, the question coiled with danger.
“That’s what we’re here to find out.”
Lea studied me as if she were dissecting a rare creature. The mask slipped. Her eyes exposed something raw, flickering like a candle in a draft.
“You’re different,” she murmured. “Not the clothes. Not the money. Something fundamental shifted. You’re not the boy who let Kayla walk off with his work. You’re not the boy who took Jack Morrison’s abuse for years. You’re…” The word caught on her tongue.
“I’m what?”
“Dangerous,” she whispered. “You’re dangerous now. And I don’t know if that terrifies me… or fascinates me.”
Kayla let out a sharp laugh she hadn’t meant to release. “She’s not wrong. You’re nothing like I remember.”
“Good,” I said. “Because the version you remember doesn’t exist anymore.”
“Then who are you?”Lea leaned forward, every neuron aligned, hungry for the answer. “Really. Because I’ve spent two weeks analyzing you, breaking you down like a math theorem, and I can’t. You’re a paradox. Kind to Sofia but merciless with Jack. Effortless with Madison yet you let me verbally carve you up without retaliation. You forgive Kayla but promise you’ll never be used again. Who the fuck are you?”
“Someone who finally figured out he doesn’t have to choose. I can be kind and ruthless. Charming and dangerous. Forgiving and unmoving. I don’t need one mask. I can wear all of them.”
“That’s not an answer.”
“It’s the only answer that matters.”
She opened her mouth—then shut it. Her brilliant mind, usually aflame, was momentarily vacant. A blackout.
“Master,” ARIA sang in a lilting whisper, “Lea is short‑circuiting. Cognitive meltdown detected. Would you like me to initiate a remote reboot?”
I ignored her. Lea would reboot herself.
Kayla picked up her bourbon, fingers trembling. “You know what? Screw it. I came here to apologize. To explain. Maybe to—” She hesitated, eyes bouncing between Lea and me. “I don’t even know anymore. You’re right. I saw you in the cafeteria. Saw how you’d changed. And I thought… maybe I made a mistake. Walking away.”
“You did,” Lea said, her tone flat as a guillotine. “But not for the reasons you think.”
Kayla’s jaw tightened. “Oh? Enlighten me. What did I miss?”
“You missed the part where he was worth investing in. You saw someone you could use. A tool. A stepping stone. You never saw Peter. Just what Peter could do for you.”She leaned in, voice edged with a predatory calm. “So yes. You made a mistake. You walked away from someone who was always going to become this. And now you’re here, trying to slip back in because you finally realized what you missed.”
Silence followed—dense, electric, unsparing.
The kind of silence where entire futures pivot.
Kayla stared at Lea, gears turning like she just downloaded the DLC to reality. “You’re really defensive of him. For someone who calls him an idiot every chance you get.”
“He is an idiot,” Lea fired back, crisp as broken glass. “But he’s my idiot to call out. You lost that privilege the moment you stole his work and Houdini’d out of campus.”
“My idiot?” I raised an eyebrow, letting a slow, wicked smile glide across my face.
Lea went red. Not blush-red. Full tomato broadcast-quality red, like she was about to guest-star in a cooking show where the main ingredient is humiliation. “I didn’t—that’s not—shut up, Carter.”
“I didn’t say anything.”
“You’re thinking it. Stop thinking.”
“Can’t help what I think.”
“Then think quieter.”
“Master,” ARIA practically trilled in digital ecstasy, “she just claimed you. Out loud. In front of your ex-manipulator. This is richer than Selena-Gomez-watching-Hailey-Bieber-do-a-skincare-routine levels of drama.”
Kayla laughed. A real one, for once. “Oh my God. You two are—” She paused, scanning between us like she was reviewing CCTV footage, then to Lea. “Wait. Are you—”
“No,” Lea cut in. Olympic-speed fast. “Absolutely not. Never. The concept is absurd.”
“She spent three hours rewriting my calculus algorithm.”
“To protect my academic ecosystem—”
“She gave me a three-hundred-page annotated physics dissertation.”
“So you’d stop asking stupid questions—”
“She defended me from Jack in the hallway.”
“Someone had to. He was a public health hazard—”
Lea froze, realizing each denial was basically a confession wearing sunglasses. “I hate you.”
“Sure you do.”
She snapped up the menu, using it as a riot shield. “I need food. This conversation is giving me a migraine that’ll trend on TikTok.”
Kayla was glowing like she’d been waiting for this season’s plot twist. “This is the best apology dinner I’ve ever had. And I haven’t even apologized yet.”
“Don’t bother,” Lea muttered behind the menu. “He already forgave you. Apparently, he’s ascended past petty emotions and now resides in some enlightened emotional penthouse I, a mere mortal, cannot access.”
“You’re being sarcastic,” Kayla said.
“I’m being correct.”
I caught the waiter’s eye. Poor guy looked like he was approaching a live grenade with a notepad. “Ready to order?”
“Give us a few minutes.”
He nodded like he’d been pardoned and fled.
The tension settled, simmering like a pot someone forgot on the stove but is too scared to check.
Kayla leaned back. “So. If this isn’t about me apologizing—which I still want to do, by the way—what is this about?”
“He wants to watch us fight,” Lea answered flatly, still hiding behind the menu. “Classic alpha-male behavior. Very predictable. He’s basically a Discovery Channel documentary.”
“Is she right?” Kayla asked.
“Partially,” I said. “I wanted to see what would happen if I put you both in the same room. Forced you to deal with each other. With me. With… whatever this is.”
“And what is this?” Lea’s voice cut sharp.
“Honestly? I don’t know yet. But I’m curious to find out.”
Lea looked at me, eyes calculating behind those black frames, something dangerous brewing like an academic storm. “You’re insane.”
“Probably.”
“And arrogant.”
“Definitely.”
“And I’m still not sure I don’t hate you.”
“That’s fine. But you’re still here. You’re both still here. So whatever you think you feel—hate, curiosity, regret—you chose to walk through that door tonight.”
Silence spread across the table, intricate as spider silk.
Outside, two blocks west, my professional-grade stalker sat in their sedan, scribbling notes, absolutely unaware that the real show wasn’t out there.
It was here.At this table.With these three volatile creatures who’d arrived as strangers, or enemies, and were now beginning the slow, dangerous evolution into something else.
Whatever that something would be.
The game had officially begun.
And I couldn’t wait for the next move.