Chapter 804: Senithe~
Chapter 804: Senithe~
Then footsteps—measured, eager, the stride of a man who had just finished dessert and was already anticipating the next course.
He stopped beside her. She felt his smile without looking—the particular curvature of lips that said he was proud of his work and hoping she’d noticed.
Removed her sunglasses with deliberate slowness, folding the arms with a soft, final click that somehow carried more weight than the earlier screams.
He opened his arms—wide, welcoming, the gesture of a man greeting his favorite co-conspirator, perhaps his favorite obsession.
She placed the folded glasses against the center of his chest and pushed.
Not hard. Not angry. Just... no. Know your place.
His arms dropped like marionette strings cut mid-performance. The smile flickered—almost died—then rallied, stubborn as ever.
"Did it fail?" she asked. Voice flat. Clinical. The tone one uses when inquiring about weather patterns on a planet one has already decided to ignore.
The Dark Regent laughed—genuine, delighted, the laugh of someone who had just been reminded how much fun it was to lose.
"The mission?" He gestured lazily at the blood-soaked putting green, the crimson Rorschach still spreading. "No, no—flawless execution. Everything delivered precisely as ordered. I was merely..." He shrugged, still smiling, still bleeding enthusiasm. "Conducting a small performance review. You know how particular I am about punctuations."
She made a small sound—neither agreement nor dismissal. Simply acknowledgment that he existed and was speaking.
Then she turned away and stepped past the railing.
Onto the deepest of the ledge.
Sixty-three floors of nothing waited below. One stray gust, one moment of inattention, and gravity would collect its due in spectacular fashion. She stood there as though the drop were a minor inconvenience—like a crack in the sidewalk she had decided not to step over.
The Dark Regent watched.
Couldn’t help himself.
His gaze traced her outline against the blazing afternoon sky: the long fall of her coat, the elegant curve of hips that seemed engineered to remind lesser beings of their place, legs that appeared to continue indefinitely.
The sun haloed her, turning her silhouette into something almost liturgical.
And he—billionaire, torturer, a deity—was standing squarely in the shadow she cast.
The realization landed like cold water down his spine.
Her darkness swallowed him whole.
A man who could make boardrooms tremble, who could reduce loyal men to red smears for the sin of slight improvisation, who routinely lived as a god among humans—
Reduced, in this single frame, to a figure dwarfed by the outline of a woman who hadn’t even bothered to acknowledge his existence yet.
She sighed—soft, world-weary, the sigh of someone who had heard every pickup line in creation and still found them mildly amusing.
"Men," she said without turning. "Always lustful for what they can’t have. Always overlooking what they already possess."
He stiffened. Caught.
She didn’t care.
Any creature who had spent more than five minutes in her orbit understood the fundamental law: she was not acquired. Not seduced. Not conquered. No pulse-bearing man in this reality—or any adjacent one—could ever claim even a fraction of her attention, let alone her body.
Ever.
The Dark Regent cleared his throat—once, twice—then stepped to the edge beside her. Not on the ledge. He wasn’t suicidal. But close enough that her shadow no longer completely eclipsed him.
"Your mission," he said, voice steadier now. "How did it go?"
She smirked—small, sharp, the kind of smile that could cut glass.
"What do you think."
Not a question. A statement of fact dressed in the clothing of inquiry. If it was a question at all, it was asking him to consider whether she had ever failed at anything.
He nodded slowly. Of course.
"You didn’t have to handle it personally," he offered, almost playful. "The Collector Maiden would have managed. The Oathfinders would have been overjoyed for the opportunity."
She tilted her head—acknowledgment without concession.
"Of course they would have," she said. "After all, I was only retrieving a handful of ordinary humans. Nothing that demanded my... direct intervention."
A pause.
Then that private smile again—small, secret, the expression of someone who had already read the final page of every story currently unfolding.
"Still," she added, voice dropping to something almost fond, "sometimes it’s nice to stretch the legs. Remind the universe who still holds the pen."
"And this mission was one I had to do myself."
The Dark Regent studied her profile. The curve of her lips. The set of her jaw.
"Boss’s orders?"
She didn’t answer. Didn’t confirm or deny. Just smiled softly, and somehow that silence said more than words ever could.
He tried another angle.
"How is the Boss?"
"Fine." She kept her eyes on the city below. "As long as everything works as planned and expected, the Boss remains... content."
"Of course." The Dark Regent nodded. Eager to please. Eager to prove his worth. "Anyway, the mission is a success—Marcus Webb, Vincent Castellano, and Antonio Rivera have all been delivered. Successfully. Cleanly."
"I know." Her voice carried the barest edge of impatience. "You already told me the mission was successful."
"I know, but—" He straightened. "Just confirming. The CIA won’t ever notice. No trails. No evidence. No connections back to us."
"I know." She finally turned to look at him. "That’s the whole point of success, isn’t it? The CIA not noticing."
He nodded. Accepted the mild rebuke.
"We were only out done with Dmitri."
Then his jaw tightened. His hands curled into fists at his sides. When he spoke again, his voice vibrated with barely contained fury.
"If only the Soul Shepherd didn’t fail."
His whole body was shaking now. Rage bleeding through the cracks of his composure. The same rage that had driven him to destroy a man with golf clubs for minor disobedience—but deeper. More personal.
"If only—"
"Calm your ass down."
Her voice cut through his anger like a blade through silk. Cold. Final.
He stopped.
"Failing to recruit Helena Voss cannot be helped," she continued, each word precise. "That’s precisely why the Shepherd was sent. The likelihood of success was calculated. The risk was known. No one can be blamed for outcomes that fell within acceptable probability ranges."
She turned to face him fully. And there was something in her eyes now—not glowing, not yet, but present. Something that reminded him exactly who he was talking to and exactly how far beneath her he stood.
"The Boss knew that. Everyone knew that. The Shepherd knew it most of all."
"But still—" he started.
"You’ve failed more than the Shepherd ever has."
The words landed like physical blows. The building seemed to shake—or maybe that was just his perception, his bones responding to the weight of her displeasure, the architecture of reality bending around her anger.
"So shut your trap this instant."
Silence.
Long. Heavy. The kind of silence that made strong men reassess their life choices.
The Dark Regent shrugged. Tried to look casual. Probably failed.
"Whatever."
She turned back to the city. The moment passed. The pressure eased.
He stood beside her for a long moment, watching the humans below, processing everything that had just happened.
Finally, he spoke again.
"Say, Senithe..."
She didn’t react to the name. Just waited.
"When do you think it will happen?"
She smiled. Wide. Genuine. The first real expression of pleasure she’d shown since arriving.
"The first appearance," she said softly, "will be in Paris."
Below, something caught her eye. Movement. Speed. Two shapes cutting through traffic with a velocity that made other vehicles look frozen in comparison.
Motorcycles. Black. Sleek. The kind of machines that didn’t exist in any humanity catalogue, any showroom, any reality that normal people inhabited.
On the first bike—a Korean woman. Dangerous in every way possible, her riding aggressive and precise, her form speaking of training that went far beyond civilian. Yet somehow, impossibly, she also radiated something innocent.
Something almost cute.
A contradiction that shouldn’t exist but did.
On the second bike, coming from behind—
Two figures. A man and a woman. His arms around her waist as she drove, both of them moving through the city like they owned it.
Because they did.
Senithe’s smile widened.
She watched them weave through traffic, watched the heads turn, watched the ordinary people stop and stare at something extraordinary passing through their mundane lives.
"Very soon," she murmured, almost to herself.
The Dark Regent followed her gaze. Saw the bikes. Saw the riders.
But he didn’t understand. Not really. Not the way she did.
Senithe watched Peter Carter—watched Eros—disappear into the city with his women flanking him like queens protecting their king.
And she smiled.
"Very soon indeed."
Read Novel Full