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

Chapter 802: Dark Regent



Chapter 802: Dark Regent

Genuine, pathetic hope flared in those ruined eyes—one last, trembling spark.

There was hope. Small. Guttering. Pathetic. The human animal’s capacity for self-deception truly was a marvel—almost admirable if it weren’t so contemptible. The man had heard the stories whispered in back rooms. He had seen the aftermath dragged out in black bags or left as warnings on concrete floors.

He knew—bone-deep, soul-deep—that the Dark Regent was not a man who could be fought, outlasted, or bargained with. He was something older wearing a tailored suit, something that smiled while it peeled away layers of sanity and flesh.

And still he hoped.

Because when everything else has been stripped away—dignity, future, functioning limbs—hope is the last cheap drug left in the system.

"You... you mean it, boss?" The words came out wet and small, blood dripping in thick strings from his split lip to his chin.

"Absolutely." The Dark Regent’s smile was warm sunlight on winter skin—kind, almost paternal. "Beat me. Put me down. Even once. And you walk. My word on it."

They released him.

He dropped like a sack of wet meat. Destroyed knee folding inward, shattered ankle collapsing sideways, torso crumpling under the weight of ribs that no longer held shape. He hit the turf face-first with a soft, meaty thud. Lay there gasping—each breath rattling through a throat already filling with blood—trying to remember how standing worked.

The Dark Regent waited. Patient. Almost gentle in his stillness.

Slowly—agonizingly—the man began the climb back to verticality. One trembling arm levered against the ground.

Shattered shoulder grinding bone shards together with every ounce of pressure. He dragged the ruined leg underneath him like dead weight. Pushed. Groaned. Somehow—through sheer animal refusal—got his one working leg planted. Rose.

Swaying. Vision tunneling. Blood streaming from mouth, nose, ears. One arm dangling like a broken branch. One leg bent at angles biology never intended. But standing.

He raised his one good fist. The gesture was laughable. Heroic in the most futile, heartbreaking way.

Hope.

"Good," Dark Regent said softly. "I respect a man who refuses to lie down and die."

He circled once—slow, relaxed, hands loose at his sides.

The man lunged.

A single, desperate haymaker. Slow. Telegraphed. The swing of someone whose body had already quit but whose mind hadn’t caught up. The effort alone nearly toppled him forward.

The Dark Regent didn’t step aside. Didn’t raise a hand to block.

He caught the fist in his open palm. Closed his fingers. And squeezed.

Metacarpals compressed first—pinky and ring buckling inward with wet pops. Middle finger followed. Index. Thumb. Each knuckle gave in sequence like firecrackers under skin. The hand folded backward on itself, bones grinding into splinters, ligaments tearing free in wet snaps.

The scream started high and thin—then climbed into something raw and endless.

Dark Regent released him. Let the ruined hand fall. Watched the man stagger back three steps, cradling the mangled claw against his chest, tears cutting clean tracks through the blood mask on his face.

"That was your free shot," the Dark Regent said quietly. "My turn."

He moved.

Not fast. Not flashy. Just efficient. Every motion calibrated for cruelty disguised as economy.

A short jab to the throat—precise pressure on the cricoid cartilage. The windpipe collapsed inward just enough to turn every inhale into razor blades without killing him outright. Air whistled through the narrowing passage in wet, panicked gasps.

A palm-heel strike to the left ear—perfect alignment—ruptured the tympanic membrane and drove pressure waves into the inner ear. Blood trickled immediately, warm and bright, down the side of his neck. Balance vanished; the world tilted violently.

Then the knee.

A single rising strike to the floating ribs on the right side. Surgical. The impact folded two ribs inward; jagged ends tore through intercostal muscle and drove into the soft tissue beneath. Something punctured—likely lung, possibly diaphragm.

The man folded. Dropped to his knees. Then to his face. Body convulsing in short, helpless jerks.

"Stand him up."

The guards obeyed without expression.

"You know what your real crime was?" The Dark Regent studied his own knuckles—still clean, still unmarked. "It wasn’t the deviation itself. It wasn’t even the arrogance of believing your judgment superior to mine."

He stepped close. Cupped the man’s swollen, blood-slick face between both hands—almost tender, almost reverent.

Then drove both thumbs into the pressure points just below the ears—mastoid processes—pressing inward and upward with slow, increasing force.

The man’s entire body seized. Every muscle locked at once. Spine arched backward in a bow that should have snapped vertebrae. His mouth stretched impossibly wide—silent scream, throat too crushed to make sound—tendons in his neck standing out like steel cables. Eyes bulged, whites flooding red with burst capillaries. Veins throbbed at his temples.

Dark Regent held the pressure. Five seconds. Ten. Fifteen.

Watching—almost clinically—the way agony danced across the features like fire eating dry paper.

Then released.

The man sagged instantly. Guards caught him before he hit the ground again. Barely conscious. Barely breathing. Barely anything resembling human.

"Your crime," the Dark Regent said, wiping his thumbs on a fresh towel one guard extended without being asked, "was planting doubt. Making me wonder—if you bent this order, what other orders have you quietly rewritten? What other instructions have you ’improved’ behind my back?"

He tossed the towel aside.

"You infected the chain of command with uncertainty. And uncertainty is a cancer I excise without anesthesia."

He stepped in again.

Combination now—clean, merciless sequences that looked almost like dance if you ignored the wet sounds and the blood.

Hook to the liver—deep, twisting—made the body jackknife forward as bile and blood surged up the throat. Uppercut to the point of the jaw—snapped the head back so violently teeth clacked together and cracked. Elbow to the temple—short arc, full torque—turned the world black for three full heartbeats.

"Stand him up."

They dragged him vertical again. He no longer resisted. No longer tried. Just hung there—rag-doll limp, blood streaming from mouth, ears, nose. One eye already swelling shut. The other staring blankly at nothing.

The Dark Regent seized a fistful of hair. Yanked the head back. Forced the ruined face toward the sky—endless, cloudless blue, indifferent and perfect.

"You see that?" he asked softly. "That’s likely the last clean sky you’ll ever look at. How does it look to you right now?"

A gurgle. A wet, choking rasp that might once have been words.

"I can’t hear you."

"...beautiful... boss..." The whisper was barely air. "...beautiful..."

"It is, isn’t it?" The Dark Regent’s smile was almost wistful. "I think about that sometimes. How many last skies I’ve given out. How many final sunrises. How many clean breaths of open air. Most people die in fluorescent rooms, tubes in their arms, machines beeping. But the ones I finish? They die up here. Sun on their face. Wind in their hair. It’s almost a kindness."

"It’s something I enjoy."

The final blow was beautiful in its brutality.

A spinning elbow—full hip rotation, perfect weight transfer, every ounce of his body channeled into a single, devastating point. It caught the man’s left cheekbone dead-center. Bone caved inward like wet cardboard.

Blood sprayed across the Dark Regent’s shirt—$3,000 silk, ruined, didn’t matter. The sensation of impact, the crack of orbital bone, the way the body jerked in the hands of the men holding it—

Satisfying.

He hit him again. And again. Each blow precise. Each blow purposeful. Not the wild flailing of anger, but the calculated destruction of an artist working in a medium of flesh and bone.

The face became unrecognizable. The body became a canvas.

And the Dark Regent painted.

"You want to know the best part?" he asked finally, shaking blood from his knuckles, watching the ruin that used to be a man hang limp in his guards’ grip. "The best part is this feeling. Right here."

He grabbed what was left of the face—palm covering destroyed features—forcing the one working eye to focus. Forcing him to see the smile. The genuine, uncomplicated pleasure.

"Not just playing god. But being one!" The words came quiet. Almost intimate. Almost loving.

The rooftop door opened.

Sixty-three floors up, across a distance that should have swallowed the sound, the Dark Regent heard it. A soft click. Metal on metal. The whisper of hinges that cost more than most people’s salaries to keep silent.

His guards didn’t react. Didn’t turn. Didn’t reach for weapons.

They hadn’t heard anything.

But he had.

Dark Regent looked up from the ruin of a man hanging limp in his guards’ grip. Looked across the pristine putting green, past the sand traps and the bar setup and all the trappings of wealth so obscene it existed in the clouds—

And smiled.

She walked toward them with the unhurried grace of someone who had never needed to rush for anything in her existence. Black coat falling to her knees, moving like liquid shadow in the afternoon light. Heels clicking on concrete with a rhythm that felt less like footsteps and more like a countdown.

[Chapter continues...]


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