The Crimson Eden Noire nightclub quickly buried the supernatural frost incident caused by Phei.
The cold lingered for a few minutes—frost clinging to couches, one girl still shivering and confused—but the relentless bass, flowing drinks, and crimson strobe lights refused to let the atmosphere die.
The unspoken rule of such places kicked in: check your trauma at the door, dance it off, deal with tomorrow later.
The PheiCrush Simps moved first.
Emily didn’t even have to signal.
She never did anymore. Twenty-sothing girls from Downtown Paradise’s oldest money hadn’t built a fan organisation around a boy by sitting pretty and waiting for permission—they’d built it by being ruthlessly operational.
Their mission:normalise the anomaly, erase any trace of the near-catastrophe, and make it seem like a minor glitch.
The auburn-haired one—the sa girl who’d grilled about Delilah and Sierra earlier—vaulted the bar without asking, snagged two bottles of Cristal like they were water, and carried them straight to the nearest knot of shell-shocked bystanders.
She poured with theatrical generosity, laughed too loud, launched into an animated recap of the basketball ga—"Did you SEE that dunk in the fourth? Air walk, straight out of a highlight reel"—
redirecting every stunned gaze with the precision of soone who’d spent her childhood managing PR disasters at her mother’s black-tie galas.
Three more Simps mirrored her instantly.
Then five
Within ten minutes, tension was erased. Conversations resud, laughter returned (forced at first), the emptied dance floor refilled.
The DJ, who’d been frozen mid-transition with headphones dangling and mouth slack like a landed fish.
Amber Castellano had already climbed into the DJ booth, barefoot—heels kicked off, bare feet planted wide on the platform, one hand on the DJ’s shoulder, the other jabbing at his screen while she barked instructions he obeyed without question.
Faster tracks. Harder drops. Songs that didn’t ask permission to accelerate your heartbeat.
Amber—who had never once joined the PheiCrush group chats, never worn the rch, never voted in the weekly "who wore it better" brackets or refreshed the tracker spreadsheet Emily maintained like scripture—had been helping since this morning.
Emily watched her from the edge of the dance floor. Suspicion still coiled tight in her gut.
In Paradise nothing arrived without strings.
A princess who suddenly threw herself into your operation either wanted sothing badly or was setting a trap so elegant you wouldn’t see the jaws until they closed.
But Phei had looked at her earlier—eyes still rimd with frost but softening—and said the exact words: "Learn how to take wins, Em. Sotis you just take the fucking win and let the world figure out the rest."
So, she was taking it.
If another princess—beyond Yuki, who’d been ride-or-die from hour one of the ga challenge announcent—was willing to throw weight behind them, Emily would swallow the paranoia and accept the assist. If he approved, that was gospel.
She shook it off.
Stepped fully onto the floor.
Brian was already there—big, grinning, moving with the liquid grace of a centre forward who’d learned rhythm from his mother and would take that secret to his grave. David had materialised from whatever shadow he’d vanished into, phone finally pocketed, actually present for once.
He dragged two wide-eyed boys behind him by their sleeves like captured prizes.
"My chaos crew!" David bellowed to the room at large, shoving the newcors forward.
Both boys looked like they’d forgotten how lungs worked—vibrating, scanning the crimson chaos with the overwheld awe of kids who’d only ever seen this world through Instagram stories. "They actually ca! Tell them they’re allowed to breathe, Em—they’ve been holding it since the parking lot."
"Breathe," Emily said, deadpan.
They inhaled like it was a revelation.
Landon appeared at her shoulder—quiet, steady, the point guard who never needed volu because his presence did the talking. He looked at her. She looked back. No words. Just the small, shared nod of two people who’d survived sothing surreal and were mutually deciding to archive it under "weird shit that happened."
He shrugged one shoulder.
She let a real smile crack through.
They joined the dance.
For a few stolen minutes—just a few—the Crimson Eden Noire rembered what it was built for. Music. Movent.
Bodies caught in crimson strobes, laughing too loud, grinding too close, being young in that specific, moneyed, reckless way teenagers could be when the night ahead felt like an empty eight-lane highway and no one was watching the speedoter.
The princesses were leaving.
They filtered out the way predators retreat when the hunt turns unexpectedly lethal—ones and twos, casual enough to look accidental.
A bathroom trip that never circled back. A phone call taken outside that ended with headlights sweeping the curb.
A murmured excuse followed by a side-corridor exit.
Natasha Sinclair first. Then Clara Moreau. Then three others whose nas Emily hadn’t learned yet but whose family crests she’d clocked glinting on delicate chains and signet rings.
Whatever intentions they’d carried in tonight—whatever strategies plotted between the final buzzer of the basketball ga and the velvet rope—had been obliterated by Victoria’s public dismantling.
Two words from Phei had shattered their courage.
Two more had nearly turned her into ice art.
Every girl who’d been rehearsing lines in a mirror, adjusting necklines, whispering tonight’s the night to herself—had just watched the first mover get eviscerated.
They weren’t quitting.
Emily could read it in the way they left: not fleeing, not traumatised, just recalibrating.
Retreating to lick wounds, adjust timing and approach.
Paige and Brielle Heavenchild slipped out together—champagne flutes abandoned mid-sip on a high-top, coats retrieved from VIP check, twin silhouettes lting into the night through the main entrance.
Still smiling.
Emily caught the tail end of it as they passed: that private, conspiratorial twin-language satisfaction that hadn’t dimd since Victoria’s humiliation.
Gone.
While the princesses slipped out like smoke—recalculating, rearming—the rest of Paradise poured in to replace them.
The academy stragglers arrived first. They ca hungry. Behind them ca the rest of Downtown Paradise—the party kids, the trust-fund heirs, the beautiful and the terminally bored.
Hot-blooded teenage girls in dresses priced like sports cars, boys in watches that could buy houses, all of them rich, all of them restless, all of them magnetised toward the VIP section where the Main Legacies had suddenly gathered in numbers no single venue had seen in years.
Paradise’s young elite, all here to orbit, to pay homage, to suck up to the families who still owned their futures.
The bass ratcheted louder. Drinks arrived faster—shots appearing on trays before orders were even spoken.
The dance floor turned into a living crush: bodies, perfu, sweat, the sharp tallic tang of money and hormones and the specific electricity of a room full of teenagers pretending the frost incident an hour ago had been a lighting glitch, nothing more.
A club employee appeared at David’s elbow.
Young. Uniford. Moving with the brittle precision of soone who’d been handed instructions from a manager who’d been handed instructions from soone wearing a na tag that actually mattered.
He leaned in close—close enough that David could sll the nervous sweat under the cologne—and whispered.
David’s eyes ignited.
Not his usual gossip-sparkle, the one that preceded viral threads and DM screenshots. This was brighter. Hotter. The wide-eyed, barely-contained euphoria of a boy who’d just been handed intel so good it hurt to hold.
He nodded—sharp, fast, twice. Followed the employee through the crowd without glancing back, vanishing into the shadowed back corridor like he’d been summoned by sothing holy.
Emily clocked it from across the floor. Filed it under David being David.
Let it go.
She wasn’t worried. Not yet.
The music kept climbing. Amber’s takeover had locked in: speed-house aggression, BPM ratcheting into triple digits, the kind of relentless pulse that turned controlled movent into frantic survival. Bodies blurred. Sweat flew.
The dance floor beca a living organism of limbs and light and lust.
Emily danced.
For the first ti since the episode—actually danced... letting the bass hamr her ribcage like fists, letting crimson strobes paint her skin in slashes of blood-red, letting the night take whatever scraps of control she’d been clinging to.
Three minutes. Maybe four.
Then the sa club employee materialised at her shoulder.
Sa rigid posture. Sa nervous tremor under the uniform. Sa whispered directive from soone higher up the chain.
He leaned in.
Emily listened.
Her body stilled mid-motion—like soone had hit pause on her skeleton.
She nodded once. Turned. Followed him through the crowd—past the glowing bar, past the writhing dance floor, past the last ring of laughing, oblivious teenagers drunk on bass and vodka—straight into the sa shadowed back corridor David had vanished down minutes earlier.
She didn’t know yet.
Couldn’t know.
What waited behind that door wasn’t cleanup, wasn’t damage control, wasn’t another Legacy tantrum to smooth over.
It was carnage waiting to be born.
And from the wreckage of whatever was about to happen, sothing new—sothing sharper, hungrier, more dangerous—was going to claw its way into existence.
The night wasn’t ending.
It was just getting started.
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