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Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs - Chapter 566

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  2. All Mangas
  3. Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs
  4. Chapter 566 - Chapter 566: The Apology
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Chapter 566: The Apology
The Bentley dove into the downtown canyons like it was hunting something worth bleeding for. Glass towers flashed past in shards of sapphire reflections, the city multiplying the car into a thousand versions of sin. Kayla drove like she’d stolen the night and was daring it to chase her, but beneath all that curated control, I could feel the nerves under her skin, vibrating like a phone she was trying not to look at.

She slid into a private underground garage beneath a building so sleek and anonymous it practically whispered NDA at passing pedestrians.

When the engine cut, the silence hit like a dropped guillotine.

“Where are we?” I asked.

“My apology,” she said.

No smile. No flourish. Just those two words, quiet and lethal.

The private elevator swallowed us whole. Concrete, steel, mirrored walls. The air was tight with the tension of things people don’t say until they’re ready to set the floor on fire. Kayla stood close enough that her perfume curled into my lungs—jasmine, voltage, and the faintest threat of regret sharpened into purpose.

Her fingers tapped against her thigh, a tiny SOS. The predator was nervous.

The elevator dinged.

The hallway was all polished concrete and industrial lighting, that curated corporate minimalism that screamed tech money and sleepless ambition. At the end: double glass doors, frosted lettering glowing like a challenge.

NEXUS BLOCKCHAIN SOLUTIONS

She pulled out a keycard. Her hand shook. Not dramatically—just enough to betray her.

“After you,” she murmured.

Inside, the world opened like she’d carved it out of the city with a laser.

Three thousand square feet of raw, weaponized potential.

Floor-to-ceiling glass along the far wall, LA sprawled below like a galaxy flattened across the asphalt. But that wasn’t what hit me.

It was the ecosystem. The studio. The forge.

This wasn’t just an office; it was a high-end digital forge. Eight workstations formed the main floor, each a pinnacle of tech-savvy opulence. Curved Samsung Odyssey G9 ultrawide monitors, 49-inch beasts of glass and light. Herman Miller Aeron chairs, the kind of support you needed for 16-hour coding marathons.

Custom mechanical keyboards with Cherry MX switches, the satisfying clack of a true enthusiast’s tool. Each station was a fortress of productivity.

Against one wall, a serious server rack hummed with quiet, immense power. Dell PowerEdge systems, their blinking status lights a rhythmic pulse of life, housed in a climate-controlled enclosure.

This wasn’t for show.

This was a live, operational nerve center. A glass-walled conference room to the left held a massive display screen for presentations.

Every available surface was covered in whiteboard paint, scrawled with equations and systems architecture flowcharts—a visible record of frantic, brilliant brainstorming. And upstairs, visible through a glass railing, were two offices. Identical. Facing each other.

A blockchain development studio, I thought, drifting through the space like I was afraid it might vanish if I breathed too hard. My mind flicked instantly into calculation mode, running numbers and futures and worst-case scenarios.

A bespoke engine for rich people who didn’t understand crypto but desperately wanted to cosplay like they did.

A sanctum where tech-bros minted vanity coins. Where luxury brands bought digital immortality. Where pop stars pressed their egos into NFT ecosystems. A collision zone where stupid money prayed brilliant infrastructure would keep them from getting cleaned out.

Some tech-bro billionaire wants his own shitcoin? She builds the entire chain for him, pre-mined and polished, a digital monument to his insecurity. A luxury house wants shoppers to buy handbags with Ethereum? She smooths the rails, making every transaction glide without hemorrhaging fees.

Some pop star wants to sell glossy digital trading cards—those NFT things everyone was foaming over?

She doesn’t just mint JPEGs. She spins entire marketplaces out of logic and math, crafts the smart contracts, architects the living ecosystem beneath the glitter.

It was high-tech contracting at the top shelf of chaos. Kayla, the girl who could charm a room blindfolded and talk her way onto any yacht in any harbor, would be the face of it all. The voice CEOs trusted when they were too terrified to trust their own instincts. But someone still had to build the backbone. Someone with the depth to write code that could stare down nation-state attackers without flinching. Someone who could promise that digital fortunes wouldn’t dissolve into vapor.

Someone like me.

My fingers slid along the cold metal of a monitor arm. The setup was immaculate. And it was a snare.

I turned toward her. Kayla stood a few feet away, folded into herself, stripped of every sharp edge she’d shown in the car. No confidence. No hunter’s presence. Just a small, fragile version of her, like a kitten dropping a dead mouse at your feet and bracing for the reaction.

“What is this?” I asked, my voice an even line.

“My apology,” she whispered, the words barely rising above the hum of the servers.

“I thought about giving you money,” she said, her voice cracking at the edges. “Splitting my salary. But that felt insulting. Like I was trying to buy your forgiveness. Too transactional. I thought about a public apology, or giving the software rights back. Everything felt wrong. Too little. Too cheap.” She walked toward me slowly, heels silent, composure unraveling with each step. “So I did this instead.”

“This,” I echoed.

“A blockchain development studio. Nexus.” She gestured at the space, pride flickering in her eyes like a pilot light fighting to stay lit. “I bought this office three months ago. I put everything I earned—and I mean everything—into building it. The equipment. The servers. The LLC. Every last detail.”

She stepped close enough for her breath to brush my collarbone. “It’s fifty-fifty, Peter. Both our names. Equal ownership from the start. Not me giving you a slice of my company. Us. Together.”

My cynicism roared to life, a hard shell cracking and snapping inside my chest. This is the angle.

This is the long con.

She saw me at school—the new car, the new posture, the new girlfriend. She saw a resource leveling up fast and decided to pivot instead of discard. She threw this together in two weeks, no sweat, and now she’s playing the shattered penitent angel trying to win access to the real asset: my brain. Brilliant. Ruthless.

Exactly how I’d play it.

“ARIA”

“Master,” ARIA’s cool, logical voice cut through my calculations. “Scanning property and corporate records now. Standby.”

I said nothing. Just watched her, letting the silence stretch, my face a blank mask. Her composure was cracking, piece by piece.

“Master,” ARIA returned, her tone holding a new weight. “Property purchase confirmed. Commercial transaction closed three months ago. Equipment invoices and shipping records show a gradual rollout over the past six weeks—not a bulk purchase. Server installation logs date seven weeks ago. The LLC, ‘NexGen,’ was formed and registered eight weeks ago.”

Eight weeks.

“Master, I’m accessing the partnership agreement. It’s…Master, she signed the documents making you fifty-percent owner six weeks ago. The transfer papers exist, notarized, and have been sitting in escrow, waiting only for your signature, since—”

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