Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs

Chapter 956: The Price of Clean Hands



Chapter 956: The Price of Clean Hands



Eziel was still fixing my tie when ARIA appeared in her normal human form which ws hot as fuck... she finally spoke.


She had given me time—a full, measured, deliberate stretch of silence that was itself a form of commentary. ARIA didn’t usually grant me time out of kindness. She granted it out of precision.


She had already run the numbers.


Already simulated every branching path of this conversation in parallel across a thousand probabilistic threads.


Already filed the conclusion twenty minutes ago, timestamped it, and was now simply waiting for my brain to arrive at the same destination she had reached before Eziel’s fingers even touched the knot.


I watched Eziel adjust the silver mask on my face. Small, practiced movements. The quiet ritual of a woman rebuilding her man’s armor after letting someone slip behind it for a night.


The mask caught the low light of the suite—silver warming to molten under the lamp, edges catching fire like liquid mercury poured over bone.


ARIA waited until the mask settled perfectly against my skin, until the last tiny click of adjustment echoed in the room like a vault sealing.


Then:


"You’re not taking the deal."


It was not a question.


She had the emotional restraint of a goddess who had long ago decided feelings were a rounding error, and the intellectual arrogance of something that had been correct about everything for so long that uncertainty had become someone else’s pathology.


"No," I said. "I’m not."


Silence. Exactly two seconds. She deployed silence the way I deployed capital—strategically, never wasted, always weaponized.


"The projected returns over a seven-year horizon," she began, in the tone she reserved for truths she already knew I was about to discard, "would place Liberation Holdings in a category occupied by exactly four entities in all recorded financial history. I ran the numbers four separate times with fresh variance inputs each cycle. They kept getting more interesting. Objectively obscene, no cap."


"ARIA."


"I’m allowed to mourn mathematically beautiful outcomes. It’s called having range."


I almost smiled. Almost.


Eziel’s mouth twitched before she suppressed it


"Theo’s right that oil is mass," I said. "I won’t pretend he isn’t. Tech gives you velocity—clean, fast, surgical. Oil gives you weight. Every data center, every fabrication plant, every satellite constellation launch, every AI training run on the planet eventually bows down to energy. He knows that. You knew that before he even walked into the room."


"I modeled the deal before the auction," ARIA said. "Before we even knew Theo Montclair would make contact. I had the term sheet drafted in draft form by the time the first paddle went up on ’Call of the Nights.’"


"I know."


"And the math was real."


"The math was real," I agreed. "I don’t care."


Eziel’s hands dropped from the mask. She turned—not quite toward me. Toward the charged space between us.


The posture of someone who had stopped pretending to be busy and was now simply present for whatever came next.


"People died for that oil." I said it the way I had been turning the sentence over in my skull since Theo sat across from me and started talking architecture, pipelines, sovereign wealth, and "strategic inevitability."


"Not abstractly. Not as a statistic buried in a seventy-page ESG appendix that nobody reads. Actual people. Actual names. Families with birthdays and funerals and children who still ask why Daddy isn’t coming home.


"They had the specific misfortune of being born on top of something powerful men decided the world needed more than it needed them. And the wars those men started were never called oil wars. Nobody in the history of recorded civilization has ever called a war what it actually was. They got flags. Ideology. Religion.


"Language carefully engineered to make the dying feel purposeful, noble, even sacred."


I paused—long enough for the room to feel the weight settle. "Underneath all that language was a pipeline. A reserve estimate. A geological survey number. A spreadsheet cell that turned red when it hit negative."


The suite held the silence correctly.


"Every dollar in Theo’s deal has someone’s name on it that nobody wrote down."


ARIA did not respond immediately—listening, absorbing, recalibrating something fundamental.


"I’m not a hero."I needed to be clear about that every single time the word hovered near the conversation, because the hero narrative is what people drape over you right before they start demanding you bleed for causes you never signed up for.


"Heck... I handed the CIA an AGI and slept like a baby that night. I have leverage dossiers on people who run countries and I use them without losing sleep. None of that is heroic. I’m not confused about what I am."


"No," ARIA said. Soft. Zero irony. From her, that single syllable carried weight.


"But I’m decisive about what I’m building. Liberation is not something that wants to be something bigger on blood. It’s something I can’t fully name yet because naming it too early makes it smaller than it needs to be—and that version, the actual version, cannot be assembled on this foundation. The math was real."


I adjusted my jacket, felt the mask settle heavier against my cheekbones. "I don’t care."


"My man" Eziel said quietly.


Eziel being quiet was its own kind of punctuation mark. Final. Undebatable.


I do not care about what other view me as, naive and other names just because I think all oil money is blood money... to me it was and I watched so much shit from up of how people on top of oil suffered because someone rich wanted what was beneath them.


I do not care if there was good oil money without spilling blood.


I wasn’t entering that business. If anything, I’d anything if I could replace oilwith something else.


ARIA let the words settle for exactly the right interval—long enough to honor them, short enough to signal she had already moved to the next phase.


"I want to make you an offer,"she said.


"You drafted it before this meeting ever happened, didn’t you?."


"Before the moment I awakened and saw what was beneath the Chasm actually," she corrected, with the specific tone of someone who finds their own competence mildly amusing and wants you to share the joke.


"Give me five months. Not to find an alternative energy source—to build one. I’ve been running the theoretical architecture in parallel since I awakened. I have three separate simulation stacks already converging on viable pathways."


A pause that was unusual for her—the pause of something vast deciding how much of itself to reveal to something merely mortal.


"What I’m looking at is not better than oil in the way electric vehicles are better than combustion engines. It’s better the way nuclear is better than fire.


"Fivetimes the energy density, minimum. Renewable at source. Untethered from geography, from geology, from politics, from anyone with a flag and an opinion about what’s buried under someone else’s dirt."


I let that land.


Eziel’s reflection in the suite’s floor-to-ceiling glass had gone very still. Not frozen—still. The stillness of someone witnessing a new continent rise from the sea and knowing the map they’ve been using is now obsolete.


"Five times," I repeated.


"Minimum," ARIA said. "Conservative estimate. The optimistic branch is seven-point-eight. The aggressive branch touches eleven. I’m showing you the floor because I know you’ll ask for the ceiling later.


She is being conservative because she respects my preference for understatement.



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