Chapter 994: The Prelude
Chapter 994: The Prelude
Apart from eating Sable’s pussy until her thighs shook like she was trying to earthquake office floor—until her voice cracked into little broken prayers and her hips bucked so hard she nearly launched herself off the desk—until I’d tongue, finger-fucked and teased her with my cock so thoroughly that she’d spend the entire time I’d be in Paris, clenching every time she remembered how I’d pinned her wrists and made her beg just to breathe—
—going to Paris still meant cleaning up the rest of the board first.
Most of the cleanup wasn’t even for me.
One piece was currently wrapped around my hand like a living promise.
Rory’s fingers were tiny, hot, and locked around mine with the grip strength of someone who’d already learned the world likes to let go when you need it most.
We stood outside Elite & Bright Academy, staring up at the marble-and-gold monument to inherited wealth and curated cruelty that pretended to be a school.
White stone so pristine it looked photoshopped. Gold trim that screamed old money trying to look tasteful.
Twin buildings—Elementary and Junior High—framed by an arch so arrogant it had its own crest: a bunny that somehow managed to look imperial instead of cartoonish. Palm trees. Fountain. A parade of six-figure cars sliding in and out like they were late for their own coronation.
This place was the upgrade for her. The last school had been open season on the fatherless girl: the quiet one with no pickup line hero, no proud parent waving from a minivan. Kids had smelled the absence like blood in the water and circled accordingly (bullying her for it)—small, precise cuts, every day, until she learned to keep her head down and her mouth shut.
Not this time.
This time she walked in with a daddy.
And on my left—tall, lethal, radiating the kind of cold beauty that makes people straighten their spines before they even know why—stood Charlotte Thompson.
Charlotte would swear on a stack of depositions that she was here for purely tactical reasons. Association value. Social armor. In elite ecosystems, your last name is a caliber; your reputation is the magazine.
Show up as nobody’s kid and you’re chum. Show up as Charlotte Thompson’s daughter—even if the paperwork is still a fiction—and the ecosystem recalibrates overnight.
Truth? Charlotte loved Rory the way apex predators love soft things: silently, possessively, with a violence held in perfect check.
She’d never say it.
She simply existed at full spectrum and let the gravitational field do the work.
Rory’s grip tightened until her knuckles bleached. I could feel the micro-tremors she was trying to strangle.
"Ready?" I asked.
She looked up at me. Then at the arch. Then back. Gave one sharp nod—brave, brittle, the exact motion of a child who’s decided I’m terrified but you’re here so fuck it.
We crossed.
The courtyard felt the shift before their brains caught up.
Kids in identical uniforms froze mid-step, mid-laugh, mid-text. Heads swiveled. Eyes widened. Then Charlotte stepped fully into the sunlight and the entire space tilted like someone had yanked the horizon.
Within twenty heartbeats she was swarmed.
Girls first—eyes huge, voices overlapping in a breathless rush of questions they’d rehearsed in their heads for celebrities they’d never actually meet. Then boys, hanging at the edges, trying to look too cool to care and failing so spectacularly it was almost endearing.
Thirty seconds later Charlotte was the calm center of a polite, star-struck mob of children who suddenly understood what it meant when someone more important than their parents entered the frame.
She handled it like she handled everything: flawless surface tension, zero visible effort, private amusement flickering only in the micro-expression she let me see.
Rory and I traded a glance—silent, conspiratorial, the kind that says there she goes again, rewriting gravity—and we kept moving toward admin.
Charlotte would drop the bomb later. Casually. Like it was nothing.
Oh, Rory? She’s mine.
Not step. Not goddaughter. Mine.
By the end of first period every kid on campus would know the new quiet girl with the too-cute eyes was radioactive in the safest possible way. Not because anyone threatened them. Not because Charlotte flexed muscle.
Simply because the association was a loaded gun pointed at anyone stupid enough to test it.
Nobody bullies Charlotte Thompson’s daughter.
Nobody even dreams about it.
We left Rory in a small, perfect storm of new alliances. Two girls had already claimed her elbows like territory; a boy with catastrophic bed-hair had offered to show her the library with the earnest desperation of someone who’d never volunteered for anything in his life and suddenly realized this might be his one shot.
Rory was going to be more than fine. She was going to be quietly unstoppable and make friends she never had on her last school.
Before I could turn she’d yanked my sleeve down—small hand surprisingly strong—and pinned me with a stare that belonged on a war criminal.
"You have to always be free when I call you,"she said. Flat. Non-negotiable. "Or you won’t be my daddy anymore."
I crouched. Met her eyes. Let her see every layer.
"Deal."
"I mean it."
"I know. You’re my daughter after all"
She searched my face—brutal, forensic, the way only children can hunt for betrayal—and then nodded once, verdict delivered. Hugged me so hard my ribs creaked. Let go. Ran toward her new orbit without a backward glance.
That was the proof.
She trusted the ground wouldn’t disappear when she wasn’t looking.
The car pulled away. Marble and gold shrank to postcard size in the mirror until they were just another memory I’d weaponize later.
Charlotte took her car while we left in another one...
Silence settled—thick, warm, satisfied, the silence that follows a clean kill.
Vanessa turned in the passenger seat, one brow arched like a drawn blade.
"Thank you," she said. Simple. Soft. It carried years of solo parenting, sleepless nights, ramen dinners, and quietly crying in the shower so the kid wouldn’t hear.
"For taking care of her. For all of this."
"Of course," I drawled, voice low enough that it stroked the back of her neck even though I hadn’t moved. "She’s like a daughter to me now too. So I ought to do this much."
She smiled. Warm. A little fragile at the edges—like cheap crystal about to remember it’s not bulletproof.
I let a beat pass. Then another. Let the silence get heavy. Let it press against her ribs.
"It’s weird, isn’t it?" I said.
She glanced at me, lashes flickering. "What is?"
"I know it weirds you out... how I suddenly treat Rory like my daughter. Just like that. Right after meeting her." I kept my eyes on the road—or rather, on the road the car was navigating itself through, because peasants drive, gods delegate.
"And there’s nothing between you and me. We’re not together. We’re not dating. I just... showed up and started being her dad." I turned to look at Vanessa. Slowly. Deliberately. Let my gaze drag down her throat, across the open V of her blouse, back up to those nervous hazel eyes. "I know that kinda weirds you out more than you let on. Doesn’t it?"
She was quiet for a moment. Then she nodded—slowly, honestly, the way people do when they’ve decided to stop pretending they’re not already soaked.
"Yes," she said. "I was... a little scared, honestly. When you suddenly called us to your place." She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear—classic nervous tell, exposes the pulse hammering under her skin. "You were polite. Kind. Everything at the restaurant had been... nice. But calling me to your home? That was weird. For someone I’d just met."
She paused. Swallowed.
"But Rory couldn’t stop talking about you. She was GodMan this and GodMan that. I had never seen her like that. She’s never—" Vanessa shook her head. "She’s never attached to anyone like that. Not that fast."
"And that scared you more."
"It terrified me." A small, broken laugh. "But then Ms. Chen convinced me you weren’t weird. Just...too much. That... when you’re fond of someone... she said you fall fast and hard and you don’t know how to do anything halfway. I am starting to see it now more than ever." Vanessa looked at me—really looked. "She also said you fell in love with Rory more than her mother."
I smiled. Couldn’t help it. Sharp. Predatory.
The kind that says I know exactly what that sentence just did between your thighs.
My fondness for Rory was weird. I knew that. From the outside it looked like grooming red flags wrapped in gift paper. But it was real. Immediate. The kind of connection that didn’t ask for permission, long time of knowing each other or offer explanations.
And thanks to the environment my women who had created for Vanessa and Rory—the warmth, the safety, the subtle scent of sex and expensive perfume in every room—that had convinced Vanessa to stay.
To trust.
To let her daughter be loved by a man who had no obligation to love her and did it anyway.
"So," I said, leaning back as the car glided through an intersection like it was too good to touch potholes. "You’re jealous..."
Vanessa blinked. "What?"
"Of your daughter. That I love her more than I love her mother." I turned to her with the kind of grin that had toppled governments and panties in the same calendar year. "Must sting a little."
Her mouth opened. Closed. A flush crawled up her neck like it was late for an appointment between her breasts.
"I am not jealous of my daughter!"
"The blush says otherwise."
"That’s not—it’s warm in here."
"The car is climate-controlled, Vanessa." I let my voice drop another octave—right into Whisper of Sin territory. "Sorry for me bluntness but your nipples have been diamond-cut since we left the driveway. So maybe it’s not the thermostat."
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