Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs Chapter 972: The Harem Lord’s Code 2
"Ready to order?" he asked, bravely.
Genevieve didn’t look up.
"The club sandwich," she said. "Extra fries. Extra sauce."
She paused, then gestured vaguely in my direction.
"And whatever he’s having."
"I’ll have—"
"He’ll have the sa," she interrupted, still studying the nu.
"He just doesn’t know it yet."
The waiter looked at .
I shrugged, which is the international symbol for I have lost control of this situation and I’m perfectly fine with that.
He nodded and retreated.
Genevieve lowered the nu when the food arrived and picked up the sandwich — an architectural marvel of bread, at, and questionable structural integrity that rose nearly to the height of her face.
She took a bite.
Closed her eyes.
And made a soft, satisfied sound that probably violated at least three local noise ordinances.
I leaned back in my chair, watching her with quiet admiration.
Her eyes slid shut the mont the first real bite landed, head tipping back against the chair like a woman briefly communing with a higher power made entirely of carbs and butter.
"Oh my God." She said it the way people say it in church... slightly disbelieving.
The chewing that followed had the focused determination of soone settling a long-standing personal vendetta.
"I missed this," she murmured, almost tenderly. "I missed this so much."
Across the table, I leaned back in my chair and watched with the quiet, scholarly fascination of a man observing a rare behavioral phenonon in the wild.
"Should I give you two so privacy?"
"Shut up," she said imdiately, pointing the sandwich at like a loaded firearm. "You don’t understand."
Another bite followed— bigger— the sort of bite like the food might develop survival instincts and try to escape.
"Do you know how long it’s been since I ate bread?" she demanded through a mouthful. "Bread, Peter. With butter. Actual butter. Not whatever olive-oil spiritual cleansing ritual I’d been eating—"
Another bite.
At this point the sandwich had clearly achieved full conversational priority.
Pleasure. Choice. Every bite felt less like a al and more like a quiet act of rebellion.
Each satisfied sound she made was a small middle finger aid squarely at every kale smoothie, every aggressively portion-controlled dinner plate, while curating her body like she was an exhibit in a museum titled Things I Own.
"You sound as if you’ve been in prison," I said.
She stopped chewing.
I leaned forward and brushed a sar of sauce from the corner of her mouth with my thumb.
She let .
Just those dark eyes lifting slowly to et mine.
For a brief mont the restaurant seed to dissolve around us. The clatter from the kitchen softened into distant noise. The music blurred into background static. Even the waiter pretending very hard not to stare at the woman wearing nothing but my jacket across from a man young enough to make the situation legally interesting seed to fade out of existence.
It was just her eyes.
My thumb.
The sar of sauce.
And the silence stretching between us.
"Yeah," she said finally, still chewing a little as she nodded. "In a way? It was."
There was a fragile pause then —
The sandwich rose again, pointed directly at my face like a legal docunt being served.
"Now," she said firmly, "can you let enjoy this?"
The sandwich moved closer, an edible threat.
"Please," she added. "You’ve already ruined my marriage tonight. You ruined my underwear. You ruined my ability to walk like a civilized human tomorrow. Let have the sandwich. That’s all I’m asking."
I lifted both hands in full surrender.
"The sandwich is yours."
"Thank you."
"I won’t even look at it."
"Good," she said gravely. "She doesn’t like being watched."
Then she took another bite and released a deeply satisfied groan.
"Oh," she murmured lovingly to the sandwich, "we’re never breaking up."
She was talking to the sandwich.
I was about ninety percent sure she was talking to the sandwich.
Mine arrived a mont later.
For a few minutes we ate in a comfortable silence that only exists between two people who have already shared sothing significantly more intimate than polite conversation.
She had sauce on her chin and made absolutely no effort to correct it.
Her hair was still beautifully chaotic from earlier activities, and she hadn’t even attempted damage control.
My jacket kept slipping off one shoulder and she’d tug it back into place without looking, the movent already becoming an unconscious habit.
The faint tan line on her ring finger caught the restaurant lighting every ti she reached for a fry.
She didn’t hide it. Didn’t turn her hand away.
She wore it like evidence — proof of sothing survived rather than sothing lost.
While she continued dismantling her al with the joyful enthusiasm of a woman discovering freedom one bite at a ti, I pulled out my phone and handled a few minor logistical matters.
A couple ssages.
A couple strings gently pulled.
Within seconds the managent team at the Celestial Grand responded with the sort of professional speed that appears when the owner texts instead of calls.
Suite secured.
Reservation under my na.
Discretion fully understood.
I slipped the phone away and looked back at her.
"So," I said casually, "I’ve got a place you can stay tonight. If you want."
She glanced at sideways mid-chew.
"A place."
"A hotel. One of mine. The Celestial Grand."
She blinked slowly.
"One of yours," she repeated. "You own hotels."
"A few."
"Yes, Ma’am."
She set the sandwich down.
Which, given the emotional relationship she had developed with it in the last several minutes, was the culinary equivalent of declaring a national ergency.
"I just had sex with an artist in a bathroom," she said carefully. "I fled from my husband in a Lamborghini. And now you’re telling you’re not only an artist, but you own hotels too."
"And a tech company," I added mildly. "But we don’t have to unpack that entire résumé tonight."
"What is happening to my life right now?"
"An upgrade?"
She stared at for several long seconds.
Then she calmly picked up the sandwich again.
"Okay," she said after another bite. "Yeah. I’ll take the hotel. But I will pay it. Because I’m not so damsel who needs rescuing," she warned. "I’m rich. I have options."
"I know," I said. "I just have better ones."
Her eyes narrowed.
Then a slow grin spread across her face.
"You’re insufferable."
"So, I’ve been told."
At the Celestial Grand, her husband wouldn’t be able to storm into the lobby demanding explanations like an emotionally unstable hedge fund manager in a courtroom drama.
He wouldn’t be bribing concierges or hurling landscaping materials at sports cars like a man attempting dieval siege warfare with poor equipnt.
Even if he sohow summoned the courage to attempt sothing — which felt unlikely, given that his boldest strategic maneuver tonight involved throwing a rock at a Lamborghini — he would discover very quickly that my hotel operated under one very simple rule.
They didn’t bend for anyone who wasn’t .
But the only reason he might even try to find her now would be the one n like him always circle back to eventually.
Money.
Divorce proceedings. Asset division. The unpleasant mathematics of consequences.
But that was his problem now.
His lawyer’s problem.
Possibly his therapist’s problem, assuming he ever discovered the concept of therapy, which n like that rarely do because self-reflection requires a level of emotional literacy that usually gets filtered out sowhere around the third promotion.
Because here’s the thing about n like .
I don’t really do one-night stands.
People assu that’s what this is—the thrill, the conquest, the ego stroke of stealing another man’s wife for an evening and then disappearing into the night like so kind of morally questionable Batman with better cars.
But that’s amateur work.
There’s an entire choreography that cos after the mont everyone else fixates on.
The logistics.
The protection.
The careful construction of a soft landing for the woman whose previous life you just detonated.
Most n burn down soone’s world and walk away from the flas.
I build the next one before the smoke clears.
Call it arrogance.
Call it responsibility.
Call it the professional standards of a man who cucks for a living.
I call it the Harem Lord’s code.
You don’t just take the woman.
You make sure she lands sowhere better.
And judging by the way Genevieve was looking at now — sauce still on her chin, sandwich half destroyed, wrapped in my jacket in a restaurant she hadn’t even known existed an hour ago — the logic was beginning to make sense to her too.
She didn’t know everything yet.
Not about the empire.
Not about the strange, ridiculous path that had turned a bullied kid into the man currently stealing fries off her plate while pretending not to enjoy it.
She would.
Eventually.
At her own pace.
For tonight she had a sandwich, a suite at the Celestial Grand, and a man who had already decided she was worth keeping.
And... that was more than enough.
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