Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs Chapter 569: Repeats
It wasn’t a kiss of passion or lust—it was a fucking worship, a soft, reverent press of her mouth against mine that tasted like salt from her tears and the ghost of that expensive wine, like a benediction, a sealing of so sacred pact she was making with herself more than with .
Her hands frad my face, fingers tangling in my hair not to pull closer but just to hold on, to anchor herself to this mont of absolution like she was drowning and I was the lifeline.
This wasn’t about taking; it was about giving. She was giving everything she had left, emptying herself out onto the floor of this office she couldn’t actually afford, and Jesus Christ, I could feel it—the weight of it, the cost of it.
My hands moved from her knees to her waist, fingers splaying across her back, pulling her infinitesimally closer—not to escalate, but to deepen, to offer my own unspoken acceptance, this quiet yeah, okay, I see you that seed to matter more than any words I could’ve said.
The kiss deepened, this slow, tender exploration that was sohow more intimate than any frantic fucking we’d ever done. It was a conversation without words: I forgive you, thank you, I see you, please don’t leave.
Her breath hitched, this soft helpless sound against my lips, and I felt it echo in my own chest like a goddamn tuning fork.
This was the love-making she needed, the washing away of every shred of doubt. It wasn’t about bodies; it was about two weary souls finally finding their way ho in the quiet hum of a server room built for a future we’d now share.
When we finally parted, she rested her forehead against mine again, eyes closed, a single blissful sigh escaping. Her body was relaxed against mine, all the tension gone, replaced by this soft, pliant warmth.
We stayed like that for a long ti, silent and tangled in the heart of the digital temple she’d built.
Then I gently pulled back, helped her to her feet, led her not to the door but to this small plush sofa she’d clearly put in a corner for late-night crashes. We sat down and she imdiately curled into my side, head on my shoulder, hand finding mine and lacing our fingers together.
We didn’t speak. Just watched the city lights pulse beyond the glass, that profound silence between us more communicative than any conversation.
Eventually, I broke it.
"Kayla," I said, voice soft but clear.
"Hmm?" she murmured, sleepy and content.
"I accept it," I continued, tone getting more serious, more deliberate. "But when it cos to us... to anything else... I can’t rush that. We can’t just pick up where we left off, because where we left off was a fucking mistake."
Her expression didn’t fall, it just... softened. She understood. She got it.
"I need to see what this is," I said, gesturing vaguely to the space but aning so much more. I ant us. The partnership. The trust. "You’ve built the foundation, but we need to see what this office has to offer for our growth, first. As partners. We need to build the business. We need to learn to trust each other again, in this new way, before we can even think about anything more."
I squeezed her hand. "So for now, let’s just be partners. Let’s build this company. Let’s see where this goes. No pressure. No expectations beyond that. Can you do that?"
She looked at for a long mont, that slow understanding smile spreading across her face. The smile of the old Kayla—the smart, strategic one—but warr now, lit from within.
"Yeah," she said, voice clear and sure. "I can do that. Partners."
She leaned up and pressed one last soft kiss to my cheek. Then settled back against my shoulder, more content than I’d ever fucking seen her.
Out the window, the city was still awake, but inside our little corner of the world, for the first ti, there was peace. We didn’t have all the answers, but we had a starting point. And a very expensive office to figure it out in.
Kayla was curled into my side, her head this warm heavy weight on my shoulder, breathing soft and even in the quiet hum of the office. The kiss lingered on my lips—not the physical sensation, but its aning. An apology. A promise. A surrender.
Looking out at the sprawling galaxy of LA lights, my mind wasn’t on the city. It was on her. On us.
Maybe I was just a sucker for won who finally, after all the defenses and thorns, bared their hearts and souls to . There was this undeniable power in being chosen as the one to witness that raw, unvarnished truth, and my ego wasn’t immune—let’s be real, my ego ate that shit up.
Or maybe I was just a man who couldn’t help but forgive a genuine heart, especially when it ca with such devastating, tear-stained vulnerability.
Or maybe—and this felt most likely—I was still that 16-year-old boy buried sowhere inside this new god-like shell, a boy who still had a soft spot for Kayla. The girl who was brilliant and ambitious and broken in ways only I’d ever really seen.
Any way you sliced it, I’d completely let go of the past. It was surprisingly easy, really, because I don’t think I ever truly hated her. Resented, yes. Felt used, absolutely. But the foundation of our old dynamic, that quiet friendship beneath the academic rivalry, had always been there. It just got buried under all the bullshit.
So when I kissed her back, it wasn’t because I was suddenly, madly in love. It wasn’t so grand romantic reunion. It was because I was willing to let myself love her. Willing to see where the path led. And for now, that path was paved with business contracts and server racks.
The latter would have to co first.
This sleek, expensive office? It truly had no use for financially. I had billions. Look past the balance sheet, though, and see the 18-year-old girl who’d gotten her hands on millions and, instead of flexing, instead of burying herself in luxury condos and supercars, had chosen to create.
She’d chosen a future over imdiate gratification.
Sacrificed all the superficial shit for this. For a chance to apologize. For a chance to build sothing with .
Then there was the contract. A true 50-50 split. Let’s be honest—the original software, the core IP, was her idea. I was the code monkey who built it. If she’d wanted to be fair, she’d have given 20% of the initial sale. Generous, considering she’d conceived it. But she wasn’t just repaying for the past.
She was giving half her future. Half of everything this studio would beco. Not just an apology; an act of faith in a boy she’d left behind.
But consider the alternative perspective. Maybe I was just viewing everything through the lens of who I am now—hot, confident, disgustingly rich. Maybe that made it easier to be magnanimous, to look down from my penthouse and smile at her gesture.
But then I had to consider the other thing, the one fact that made every cynical calculation fall apart.
The tiline.
She’d started this the mont she sold the software. Been building this apology for months, fueled by guilt and ran noodles. The contract, the one making equal partner, had been signed and dated before I was anything. Before the Dark Seduction System, before Madison, before anything. Back when I was still just Peter Carter, the boy she’d used and abandoned.
She’d made this decision when I had nothing to offer her.
So yeah. I had my reasons.
The right reasons: I saw a fierce, ambitious woman who’d made a terrible mistake and was trying her damndest to fix it. I saw potential. I respected the sacrifice. I wanted to help her beco the powerhouse she dread of being.
And the wrong reasons: She’d started sothing. A business with imnse potential, client pipeline already in motion. My brain, my connections, my capital could turn her multi-million dollar idea into a multi-billion dollar empire. I was going to help her, of course. But I’d do it as partners.
We’d see how big we could beco. I’d elevate her, but in doing so, I’d elevate myself far more.
All for the right reasons and the wrong reasons, too.
I looked down at the top of her head, at the dark hair spilling over my jacket. Squeezed her hand gently, felt her fingers tighten around mine.
"Get so rest," I said softly. "We have a lot of work to do tomorrow."
She nodded against my shoulder, a soft sigh escaping. Contentnt. Peace.
The path forward wasn’t about love or romance. Not yet. It was about code, contracts, and conquering the world of decentralized finance. Together. And as I sat there in the quiet office she’d built for us, I realized that was a foundation far more stable than love alone could ever be.
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