Harem Startup : The Demon Billionaire is on Vacation

Chapter 326: Falling in Love Has Nothing to do With Pride



Mira blinked. "What?"

"You heard me."

"I… don't know."

"You'd want it to be a mistake?" Sira asked. "Something to regret?"

"No."

"Then what?"

Mira sipped slowly, the tea floral and sharp on her tongue. She let the silence breathe before answering.

"I'd want him to remember it."

Sira's gaze sharpened. "Ah."

"And I'd want to remember it too," Mira added. "Not because of lust. Or politics. Or heat. But because it meant something."

Sira leaned forward, eyes narrowed in satisfaction. "That's why he likes you."

Mira didn't deny it.

She stared into her tea like it held prophecy. The steam curled, fragrant and warm, but her voice came out cooler. Slower.

"That's why I'm afraid," she said finally, quietly. "I'm a dragon."

Sira's smirk twisted into something sharper—like someone finding irony in a divine comedy.

"And I," she said, tipping her wine glass toward the stars, "am the daughter of the Lord of Pride."

She took a slow sip, eyes never leaving Mira.

"Yet I sleep with him. We f*ck, and we love it. We do it shamelessly. Loudly. Repeatedly."

Mira nearly choked on her tea.

Sira kept going, utterly unbothered. "I curled my fingers in his hair while he made me scream. And I fell for him. Headfirst. And you know what?"

Mira coughed. "What?"

Sira's eyes glinted, feral and fond.

"Falling in love has nothing to do with pride. That's the scam. That's the lie we tell ourselves so we can keep control." She leaned in, voice lower. "But pride doesn't stop you from loving someone. It just stops you from admitting it."

Mira opened her mouth, then closed it again.

Because yeah. That hit.

"And dragons," Sira added with a slow, pointed smile, "are supposed to hoard things they desire. No?"

"…Yes."

"So why aren't you hoarding him?"

Mira looked away, her fingers tightening around the tea cup. "Because I don't know if I want him for real… or if I just want to win. To be the one he chooses."

Sira hummed. "The two aren't mutually exclusive."

"That's what scares me."

"I hope it scares you," Sira said, stepping closer now. Her voice lowered like a secret. "Because when someone like Lux chooses you? It's not casual. It's not a fling. It's a system-wide reallocation of intimacy capital. You don't walk away from that the same."

Mira breathed out slowly. Her mind was spinning in too many directions—logic, emotion, instinct, memory, desire. And beneath all that?

Longing. That same sharp, uncomfortable longing from earlier.

She glanced sideways at Sira. "So why are you telling me all this?"

Sira grinned. "Because I'm bored. And because you're not like the rest."

"That's not an answer."

Sira looked at her for a long moment.

Then said, softly, "Because you remind me of me. Before Lux."

Mira froze.

Sira swirled the last of her wine. "Arrogant. Controlled. Powerful. So damn sure we're better off alone because we don't need anyone. But need and want aren't the same. And sometimes? The want will undo you faster than any need ever could."

Mira swallowed hard. "And what happened to you?"

"I wanted him," Sira said. "So I took him."

"And now?"

Sira smiled—this time softer. Less sinful. More real.

"Now I stay. Because he didn't break me. He didn't control me. He didn't demand I change. He just… saw me. And then—he made room for my pride beside his."

Mira said nothing. Her heart was pounding. Her mind screaming a dozen rebuttals. But none of them mattered.

Not when her skin still buzzed from Lux's earlier words.

Not when Sira, of all people, was standing here—like a mirror from the future.

Sira turned, about to leave, then glanced over her shoulder.

"But if you're too scared?" she said, voice light again. "That's fine. I won't stop you."

"From what?" Mira asked quietly.

"From letting someone else take the spot you were meant for."

And then she was gone—just silk and sin and truth vanishing into the house, leaving Mira on the terrace with a half-cold cup of tea and a storm inside her chest.

The stars didn't offer advice.

But maybe—just maybe—they were watching.

Because Mira?

She stood there too long.

Too still.

Too unlike herself.

Dragons weren't supposed to doubt. They were supposed to decide. Burn through doubt with clarity and fire and strategy. But here she was—wrapped in her own hesitation, sipping jasmine like it could dilute the ache behind her ribs.

Lux Vaelthorn.

Incubus. Demon. CFO of Hell. Greed-born. Lust-blooded. A man engineered to seduce and consume and discard.

But he didn't discard.

Not Fiera.

Not Naomi.

Not even Sira, who was technically made of pride and fire and too many sharp smiles.

Lux had something none of the other men did.

Discipline.

And in that discipline, there was a kind of seduction no one warned her about.

The restraint. The kindness. That precise, razor-sharp focus he used to study people—not to manipulate, but to understand. To evaluate them like assets, yes, but also like something precious. Something with value beyond utility.

She hated how much that turned her on.

It wasn't about power. It wasn't even about the suit. Okay—maybe a little about the suit. It was the way he made everyone feel like they were being seen and sorted—and he did it without ever making them feel small.

That was terrifying.

That was… intoxicating.

She let the wind cool her cheeks a moment longer, then turned on her heel and walked back inside.

The house was quieter now.

The music had dimmed to something jazzy and lazy, coming from the enchanted harp in the corner. Most of the guests had retreated. Empty glasses lined the sideboard like soldiers after battle. The lights were low—warm and golden, casting soft shadows on the polished floors.

And there he was.

Lux.

Standing by the far end of the dining room, one hand in his pocket, the other swirling something amber in a cut-crystal glass. Shirt still crisp. Collar open just enough to hint. No tie. No dishevelment. No lipstick smears. Just him.

Untouched.

Unbothered.

Fiera was gone.

He looked up as she entered, his expression unreadable, but his gaze—that gaze—cut right through her hesitation.

Ely was near the door, wrapping a light coat over her shoulders. "I'm heading out," she said gently, giving Mira a smile. "Tonight was… something."

"It was," Mira agreed, voice calmer than she felt.

Ely gave Lux a polite nod. "Thanks for the hospitality, Mr.Vaelthorn."

"Always a pleasure," Lux said smoothly.

The door clicked behind her.

Mira took two steps like she was going to follow her friend out.

Then stopped.

Turned back.

Looked directly at him.

And asked, quiet but clear, "Do you have another guest room?"

Lux tilted his head, just a fraction. "Of course."

"Good," Mira said, shrugging her coat off and draping it over one of the velvet chairs. "I'm staying the night."

No stammer.

No coyness.

Just a decision.


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