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Now reading: Chapter 848: When the Past Comes Calling from Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs, a Action novel by almightyP.

Charlotte’s office at Quantum Tech was quiet.

The comfort of it also ca from having Amanda Wells—forr runaway bride turned executive assistant—handling the day-to-day chaos with the efficiency of soone who’d survived her own personal apocalypse and decided organization was her new religion.

Amanda sat at the smaller desk positioned perpendicular to Charlotte’s, tablet in one hand, phone in the other, hair pulled back in a professional bun that sohow made her look both competent and dangerous.

Like she could schedule your eting or bury your career with equal efficiency.

Charlotte was reviewing quarterly projections on the transparent giant screens floating in her office—numbers so large they’d lost aning sowhere around the hundred-billion mark—when Amanda’s phone rang.

"Amanda Wells," she answered, voice crisp and professional. A pause. "Yes, this is Ms. Thompson’s office. How can I help you?"

Charlotte didn’t look up. Phones rang constantly. That was the price of running a company valued at $2.4 trillion. Everyone wanted a piece. Everyone thought their call mattered.

"Mm-hmm." Amanda was making notes on her tablet now. "A eting request with Ms. Thompson. May I ask regarding what matter?"

Another pause.

Charlotte signed off on a projection showing Quantum Tech would generate $16.84 billion in revenue this month alone. The number should have felt surreal. It didn’t anymore.

That was concerning in its own way—when billions beca background noise, when world-changing wealth felt routine, when you started wondering if the next zero was just another Tuesday.

"I see." Amanda’s tone had shifted. Subtle. Professional ice replacing polite warmth. "And this is from Kingsley Private Equity. Ms. Aurelia Royce specifically."

Charlotte’s pen stopped moving.

Just froze mid-signature like her entire nervous system had hit an ergency brake.

That na.

Aurelia Royce.

Amanda must have noticed because she glanced over, eyebrow raised in silent question. Charlotte shook her head.

Hard. Emphatic.

The kind of head shake that ant absolutely fucking notin every language humans had ever invented.

"Ms. Royce would like to discuss potential investnt opportunities," the voice on the other end continued, audible through the phone’s speaker that Amanda activated.

The assistant’s tone suggesting this was routine, that of course Charlotte Thompson would want to et with Aurelia Royce, that this was an opportunity of a lifeti.

Charlotte’s hands clenched on her desk.

mories flooding back like a dam breaking. Not recent mories. Old ones. That the scar tissue grown over them but never actually healed.

One year ago.

Before Peter. Before Liberation Holdings. Before Quantum Tech beca the most valuable company on Earth.

When she’d just inherited her father’s $8 billion tech company at twenty-five years old and the entire world had opinions about it.

Her mother had convinced her to watch the interviews. "You should know what people are saying," Margaret had said gently. "Won in power always support each other. You’ll see—other successful won will have your back."

Charlotte had been naive enough to believe that.

Had actually thought that maybe, just maybe, the female CEOs and executives who’d fought their way to the top would recognize a fellow traveler. Would offer support or at least neutral professionalism instead of judgnt.

Then she’d watched Aurelia Royce’s interview.

Bloomberg had asked the Kingsley Private Equity princess—likely to be coronated soon her father’s retirent—what she thought about Charlotte Thompson’s appointnt as CEO of her father’s company.

Aurelia hadn’t hesitated.

"Nepotism dressed up as succession planning,"she’d said, voice cold and clinical, like she was dissecting a failed business model rather than a human being. "Thomas Thompson built that company from nothing through genius and ruthless execution. His daughter inherits eight billion dollars and a board seat because she shares his DNA, not because she earned it. She didn’t build anything. She didn’t risk anything. She just had the extraordinary luck of being born into the right family."

The interviewer had tried to soften it. "But Ms. Thompson has degrees from Stanford and Harvad—"

"Degrees probably her father’s donations paid for," Aurelia had cut in smoothly, voice sharpening like a blade finding bone. "Let’s not pretend those were earned through rit. Everyone knows how legacy admissions work. The Thompson family has been donating enough to both institutions for generations. Thomas’s acceptance letters were signed before her applications were even read. Her professors knew who her father was. Her grades reflected that awareness."

She’d leaned forward slightly, and Charlotte rembered how the cara had caught that predatory shift.

"Charlotte Thompson didn’t claw her way up from nothing," Aurelia had continued, warming to her subject now, each word precisely calculated to wound. "She was born on third base and genuinely believes she hit a triple. Everything she has—her education, her position, her wealth, her opportunities—all of it ca from her father’s checkbook. The suit she wore to her first board eting? Daddy’s money. The car she drives? Daddy’s money. The penthouse she lives in? Daddy’s money. Hell, the underwear she’s probably wearing right now—daddy’s money paying for designer labels she did nothing to earn."

The interviewer had actually looked uncomfortable. "That seems rather—"

"Rather what? Harsh?" Aurelia’s smile had been ice over stone. "I’m being factual. Charlotte Thompson has never earned a single thing in her life. She’s never struggled. Never faced real consequences. Never had to prove herself in an environnt where her last na didn’t open doors before she even knocked.

"And now we’re supposed to believe she’s qualified to run an eight-billion-dollar company because... what? Because daddy said so before he died?"

Charlotte rembered her mother’s hand on her shoulder, tightening with helpless rage, nails digging in slightly as they both watched this public execution continue.

"She’s a child playing dress-up in her father’s office," Aurelia had continued, and her voice had dropped to sothing almost pitying—which sohow hurt worse than the anger. "Wearing expensive suits that can’t hide the fact that she has no idea what she’s doing. Making decisions that real executives will have to quietly reverse. Sitting in etings where everyone is too polite to tell her that her ’insights’ are undergraduate-level observations that any actual CEO would be embarrassed to voice."

The interviewer had tried one more ti. "But she’s been working at the company for—"

"Working?" Aurelia had laughed. Actually laughed. Short, sharp, dismissive—like soone who’d just heard the punchline to a joke everyone else was too stupid to get. "She’s been playing office. There’s a difference. When you’re the boss’s daughter, people smile and nod and tell you you’re doing great while doing the actual work when you’re not around. That’s not experience. That’s expensive babysitting."

She’d straightened in her chair, preparing for the killing blow.

"My prediction? Within two years, the board will quietly push her into a ceremonial role while actual executives run operations. They’ll give her a fancy title—’Chief Innovation Officer’ or so aningless vanity position—let her cut ribbons and give speeches written by PR teams, and keep her far away from actual strategic decisions. It’s what always happens when sentint overrides competence. When inheritance is confused with qualification."

Aurelia had looked directly into the cara then. Directly at everyone watching. Directly at Charlotte, though she couldn’t have known Charlotte would see this.

"Charlotte Thompson is daddy’s money playing CEO," she’d said, each word landing like a hamred nail. "She’s a participation trophy in human form. A living example of how wealth perpetuates incompetence by protecting it from consequences. And the tech industry—which already has enough challenges—doesn’t need incompetent heiresses cosplaying as executives while real innovators can’t get funding because all the capital is locked up in legacy nepotism."

Aurelia had continued for another full minute, analyzing Charlotte’s first quarterly report with surgical precision, pointing out every rookie mistake, every decision that showed inexperience, every place where her father’s forr executives had clearly overridden her choices to prevent disaster.

"The company will be lucky to maintain current valuation," Aurelia had concluded. "More likely, we’ll watch it slowly bleed talent and market share as people realize the person at the helm has no idea how to steer the ship. Thomas Thompson built sothing remarkable. His daughter will be a case study in how dynastic succession destroys value."

Charlotte rembered feeling each word land like a physical blow.

Rembered her mother’s hand on her as they both watched this public execution continue.

Rembered crying so hard she couldn’t breathe.

Rembered her mother crying with her, both of them helpless against this public execution that had been broadcast to millions of people who now thought of Charlotte Thompson as the incompetent heiress playing dress-up with daddy’s money.

That had been one year ago.

Charlotte had cried herself to sleep that night.

Not because Aurelia Royce’s opinion mattered in any cosmic sense—strangers’ judgnts shouldn’t have that power—but because it hurt. Because Charlotte had known, deep down, that was the truth, that she wasn’t ready.

That her father’s death had thrust her into a role she hadn’t prepared for. That Aurelia was right.

That had been one year ago.

Before Peter walked into her life with his impossible smarts and created the now impossible formidable ARIA right before her in a car.

Before AR.NuN launched and proved that Charlotte Thompson wasn’t daddy’s incompetent heiress—she was the woman who’d built technology that contributed more to human advancent in one month than most companies managed in decades.

Before Quantum Tech’s valuation had exploded from $8 billion to $2.4 trillion.

And now?

Now that Charlotte had proven every single one of those doubters wrong?

Now that Quantum Tech was the most valuable, most important, most world-changing company on the planet?

Now Aurelia Royce wanted a eting?

"Tell them to go to hell."

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