Chapter 855: The Unknown Silent Shadow Watcher
Chapter 855: The Unknown Silent Shadow Watcher
The guard made a sound that wasn’t quite a word.
I stepped out.
Six feet two inches of godly-supernatural impossibility in a Tom Ford suit that probably cost more than his annual salary. Dark hair catching the strange luminescence. Features that made women forget their own names and men question their sexuality.
Eyes that promised things most religions condemned.
Madison emerged from the passenger side with the grace of a woman who’d grown up knowing she was beautiful and had simply decided to be generous about sharing it with the world.
The guard was still staring. At me. At Madison. At the car. At me again. His hand twitched toward his radio, stopped, twitched toward his weapon, stopped, settled for hanging uselessly at his side.
"We’re here to see Charlotte Thompson," Madison said, voice smooth as honey over silk. "She’s expecting us."
The guard found words. Sort of. "The... vehicle, sir. What... what is that?"
I smiled.
"Mine."
They let us in with no question, Madison was known here, not just her title as the Torres Developments heiress but as Charlotte’s friend. The security team had recognized her—Charlotte’s best friend, the Torres heiress, practically family at this point. They stepped aside with respectful nods, one murmuring into his earpiece to announce our arrival.
We walked toward the elevator, leaving him to contemplate the nature of existence and why his training hadn’t covered alien automobiles driven by walking impossibilities.
Behind us, the ghost car went dormant.
Not off. Never off. Just... waiting. The blue headlight-slits dimmed to a gentle pulse. The gold veins faded to spider-silk traces. The impossible surface settled into stillness.
Watching.
Patient.
Ready to wake the moment I returned.
The lobby of Quantum Tech was all sleek minimalism—white walls, holographic screens displays cycling through AR.NuN achievements, ambient lighting that cost more per fixture than most people’s furniture.
Security guards in tailored black suits stood at precise intervals, maintaining professional expressions despite clearly wanting to ask about the vehicle currently redefining their understanding of automotive engineering.
Three women staffed the reception desk.
All three stood up the moment I walked through the glass doors.
That kind of standing.
The kind where bodies decide to be vertical before brains give permission. Where instinct overrides professionalism because something in the hindbrain screams pay attention, this matters, this is important.
One of them—brunette, wedding ring, probably in her early thirties—dropped a pen. It clattered to marble and she didn’t notice. Couldn’t notice. Too busy staring at what had just entered her workplace.
Another—younger, redhead, cheaper blazer suggesting intern status—had her mouth literally hanging open. The third maintained composure through what appeared to be superhuman effort, but her cheeks had flushed crimson and her knuckles were white where she gripped the reception desk.
Madison chuckled beside me. "Every single time."
"Jealous?"
"Please." She squeezed my arm. "I’m the one who takes you home. Let them look."
But their eyes stayed on me.
Eros Velmior Desiderion. The hidden name on contracts that had changed Quantum Tech’s destiny. The voice on encrypted calls guiding billion-dollar decisions. The phantom partner who’d helped transform an $8 billion company into a $2.4 trillion empire.
Now here. In person. Real.
We were halfway to the elevator when ARIA’s voice cut through my thoughts.
"Master. Someone just photographed you."
I stopped.
Madison noticed immediately. "What is it?"
"Location?" I asked silently.
"Twentieth floor. The Langham Hotel, across the street. Southeast corner suite. Telephoto lens. The photograph was taken approximately two seconds ago."
I turned.
Slowly. Deliberately. Not hiding that I was looking.
The Langham rose above Quantum Tech’s modest twelve stories—twenty floors of boutique luxury casting afternoon shadow across Charlotte’s headquarters. Glass windows caught California sun, turning them to mirrors that reflected everything and revealed nothing.
But I had godly 2000+ stats now in my Eros Mode. Eyes that could count a hummingbird’s heartbeats at a hundred yards. Perception that made binoculars feel like training wheels for children.
I squinted against the sun blazing directly into my face—
There.
Twentieth floor. Southeast corner.
A silhouette.
Just a shape against the glass. Human? Standing. Something in their hands that caught the light—the telephoto lens ARIA had identified. The sun hit my eyes like a weapon, washing out details, turning the figure into nothing but darkness framed by brilliance.
I couldn’t see features. Couldn’t identify gender, age, intent.
Just presence.
Watching me.
I chuckled.
"A fan... so soon?" I murmured. "What happens when the world learns I’m more than shadows?"
"Shall I identify them?" ARIA asked."Hotel registrations, facial recognition, surveillance—"
"No."
"Master?"
"Leave it."
Madison tugged my sleeve. "Peter. What’s wrong?"
I turned back to her, smile easy. "Nothing, love. Just admiring the view."
She didn’t believe me—her eyes were too sharp—but she let it slide. For now.
We continued toward the elevator.
Not everything required my attention. Not every shadow needed investigation. Not every mystery demanded solving.
I’d had a stalker recently—that black sedan following me for weeks, the hooded figure near the estate perimeter. Professional. Careful. Someone who knew ARIA’s capabilities and stayed just outside her reach.
But that ghost had vanished. Disappeared after finding nothing interesting enough to pursue.
And this? Some photographer in a hotel room?
Different signature entirely. Amateur. Opportunistic. Someone who’d seen an impossible car and wanted documentation.
Could it be the entity? The one collecting my enemies?
I almost laughed.
That entity could hide from ARIA even after she’d reached ASI. We’d tried and failed. Could blind satellites. Could erase footage from existence. Could take Jack Morrison, Trent Holloway, Harold—and replace Vincent Castellano and Antonio Rivera with human clones so perfect only microscopic analysis revealed the deception.
That entity would never make a rookie mistake like letting ARIA detect a photograph.
No.
You don’t chase ghosts. You trap them. Set bait. Wait for them to come to you.
When they did? I’d be ready.
But this photographer wasn’t worth the energy.
They’d probably get bored eventually. Find someone more interesting to stalk. Move on with their life.
And if they didn’t?
Well.
That might actually be fun.
The elevator doors opened.
Amanda Wells stood inside like she’d been waiting her entire life for this exact moment.
"Peter!"
She launched herself at me before conscious thought could intervene—arms around my neck, face buried in my chest, body pressing against mine with the desperate affection of someone who’d been counting hours since our last contact.
"Yesterday," she mumbled into my Tom Ford lapel. "You were gone all of yesterday. Do you know how long that felt?"
"Approximately twenty-four hours."
"Longer." She pulled back enough to glare, but her eyes were dancing with joy. "Way longer. Time moves different when you’re not around."
Madison cleared her throat. "Should I give you two a moment?"
Amanda’s cheeks flushed, but she didn’t release me. "Don’t act like you didn’t spend all night wrapped around him."
"I did. Which is why I’m not climbing him like a tree in the middle of an elevator."
I laughed—couldn’t help it—and kissed Amanda’s forehead. "Missed you too, lovely."
"Damn right you did."
She finally let go... but kept one hand firmly wrapped around my arm as we stepped into the elevator together. Doors closing. Three of us ascending toward Charlotte’s office. She’d been in this elevator probably since I told her I was coming.
Amanda leaned into my side. Blonde hair brushing my shoulder. The scent of her perfume—something expensive and floral she’d only started wearing after she discovered it was why I liked Reyna for it—filling the small space.
"Charlotte’s in back-to-back meetings," she said, slipping into assistant mode despite the cuddling. "Creative Team and Finance Team wants Version 2.0 pricing discussion, Japanese delegation requesting production facility tours, seventeen hedge funds called today alone trying to schedule investment conversations."
"Tell them all to wait but refuse the investment offers."
"Already did." Her smile turned soft. "I know my priorities."
The elevator opened on the executive floor.
Every head turned.
Women. Men. Engineers. Executives. People so focused on world-changing work they’d probably forgotten outside reality existed.
All of them looking at me like I’d materialized from myth.
I walked through the open office like I owned it—which, through Liberation Holdings, I partially did—and let them stare.
Charlotte’s office door was opening as we approached.
But I paused.
Turned one final time toward the windows.
Toward the Langham across the street.
Toward that silhouette on the twentieth floor.
Still there.
Still watching.
Whoever you are, I thought, I hope you got my face’s good side.
Then I stepped through Charlotte’s door—Madison and Amanda flanking me like queens attending their king—
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