Chapter 323: The Illusion of Choice
Mira's stomach twisted in a way that wasn't entirely unpleasant.
"So what now?" Mira asked, voice softer.
"That's up to you," Sira replied. "You're mortal. You still have the illusion of choice."
"That's comforting."
Sira's smile was pure sin. "We demons prefer action. Not circles. If we want something, we take it. No questions. No shame."
"Sounds messy."
"Sounds honest."
Mira sat back, suddenly feeling a little too warm under her skin.
She wanted to deny it. To brush it off.
But the truth?
She was tempted.
Lux was…
Too calm. Too calculating. Too dangerous.
And still… she wanted to know more.
Because there was something under the surface. Something deeper than just seduction and sin.
A strategy.
A method.
Maybe even a vulnerability.
And Mira, for all her caution?
She wanted to crack it.
Just once.
Maybe.
Sira's voice broke the moment. "We're not enemies, you know."
Mira tilted her head. "Aren't we?"
"No," Sira said. "We're just in different stages of the same transaction."
"Which is?"
"Falling for him."
Mira didn't reply.
Because… maybe.
Just maybe.
She already was.
The dinner continued—music playing faintly from the enchanted harp in the corner, conversation dancing like wine on tongues.
But Mira's thoughts?
They were far from over.
Because in a house filled with demons, gods, and secrets dressed in tailored suits…
She wasn't sure who was seducing who anymore.
The plates had been cleared. The lavish dinner that Lyra orchestrated was gone, leaving only scattered snacks, half-melted chocolates, wine glasses rimmed in crimson, and an array of expensive liqueurs that smelled like sin and heritage.
Fiera slouched back in the velvet armchair like she was melting into it, one heel kicked off, the other dangling dangerously from her foot as she downed another sip of amber liquid. Her lipstick was smudged. Her eyes glossy. Her words?
Unfiltered.
"I swear, if she cries one more time and people still defend her, I will set the entire Ninevyn vault on fire."
Naomi blinked. Rava passed her a tissue like it was a regular Thursday.
Ely leaned forward, hands resting politely on her lap. "Fiera, honey—maybe slow down the wine."
"I'm venting," Fiera snapped, voice cracking. "I earned this trauma dump. This is my quarterly mental breakdown."
Naomi, sitting with one leg over the other in her usual calculated grace, glanced at Lux, who remained silent at the head of the table. Glass in hand. Suit immaculate. The kind of quiet that had weight. That made numbers panic.
Fiera sniffled, dabbing her nose with the tissue. Her voice pitched into despair. "You don't get it. Everyone—my parents, my uncles, my entire dumbass board of directors—they always take her side! Just because she's younger and plays the 'I don't know anything~' card like it's a damn limited-edition gacha drop!"
Mira made a small sound that might have been a snort.
Fiera pointed her wine glass like it was a dagger. "Don't you dare, Mira."
"Didn't say anything," Mira said smoothly. "But I am wondering how you haven't shanked her with a stiletto yet."
Fiera groaned, flopping back with a dramatic sigh. "Because then I would be the crazy one. The hysterical older cousin. The 'jealous spinster' who can't keep a man or a client. Not the 'poor little ingenue' with big eyes and no qualifications."
Rava gently handed her another tissue. "You are very qualified."
"I was on Fox Vogue last month!" Fiera wailed. "I got a seven-page spread! Do you know what Aelitha got? A selfie and half a million views from seducing a stupid influencer!"
Ely tried to soothe her. "Okay..."
Fiera groaned and flailed, hitting Rava's arm in the process. Rava didn't flinch. She simply pushed a bowl of sugar-glazed almonds toward her with a gentle tentacle.
"They treat me like I'm replaceable," Fiera whispered, suddenly small. "Like she's younger, so she deserves more time, more grace, more chances to fail. But me? One misstep, and it's 'Fiera, you are a failure.'"
The table fell quiet. The party ambiance dimmed. What remained was the soft glow of golden sconces, the scent of citrus oil from the polished mahogany table, and Fiera's quiet sobbing.
Lux didn't speak. He never did when it wasn't required. Words were investments. And most problems solved themselves if you just let them hit their own bankruptcy wall.
Fiera sobbed harder. "I tried so hard. I built everything myself. My brand. My name. My lines. But she always shows up like a glitch in my forecast and tanks everything. She's like a bad stock with viral luck."
Naomi gently rested a hand on her wrist. "Then maybe it's time you moved your portfolio. Diversified away from the Ninevyn board."
"You make that sound easy," Fiera whispered. "I'm still their blood."
Lux finally leaned forward.
His voice, smooth and casual, carried the weight of a corporate merger.
"Blood doesn't pay dividends. Loyalty does."
Fiera blinked. Looked at him. Her mouth opened like she wanted to say something poetic. Something tragic.
Instead she hiccupped.
Rava passed her a glass of water. "You're dehydrated."
Mira leaned back, sipping her wine. "You know what you should do?"
Fiera glared weakly. "What?"
"Start your own board. Your own brand. Drop the Ninevyn name, trademark something new. Watch how fast they panic when their golden goose walks off the fiscal cliff with all the eggs."
Fiera blinked again. Her mouth opened.
Naomi nodded thoughtfully. "Mira has a point. Detach yourself from the liability."
"But I am a Ninevyn," she said, voice cracking.
"And they use that against you," Naomi countered. "You said it yourself. They expect you to behave, to carry the weight, to be perfect. Let that go. Be... yourself. Build for you."
Rava chimed in. "If you want, I can help set up some off-shore design factories. Tentacles work fast."
Fiera laughed wetly. Then hiccupped again.
Naomi smiled. "That means yes."
Lux sipped his drink. Still watching. Still analyzing.
She was passionate. Talented. Unfiltered, yes, but fierce. He respected that. But he also knew something Fiera didn't yet, this night was the pivot point. The moment she stopped being a client and started becoming something more.
Maybe not yet. But soon.