Chapter 949: Collision with Senithe
Chapter 949: Collision with Senithe
Peter stepped out of the private room with Elise’s deal promise still warm in his pocket—twenty-five billion for Sterling’s twenty-three, plus a new player in the Premium Tier who’d probably spend the next week staring at that tablet like it was a religious relic.
The door clicked shut behind him with the soft finality of a contract sealed in blood and ambition.
The gallery’s second-floor balcony overlooked the round auction hall like a Roman emperor’s box at the Colosseum.
He moved to the railing, forearms resting on the cool iron, eyes sweeping the floor below in the slow, deliberate arc of a predator who no longer needed to hunt but still enjoyed watching the herd move.
Charlotte was easy to find—near the central pillar, surrounded by her usual constellation: Helena, Isabella and Janet laughing too loud at something Celeste had just said, Amanda, Madison, Rebecca, Anastasia, Sophia, Ashby, Gabrielle, Vivienne.
All my other women apart from Mom, Emma, Sarah, Sofia, Catherine, Dominique were here to support Celeste standing close enough that their arms brushed in that casual-but-possessive way they’d developed.
They were fine. Better than fine. Charlotte looked... calm. Not the old calm she used to fake when she was drowning inside, waiting for someone to throw her a rope.
Real calm.
The kind that comes after you burn the damsel costume, scatter the ashes, and realize you look better in the firelight.
Aurelia was already drifting the other way—toward the east wing, probably bored of the crowd or just looking for the next interesting thing to break. Charlotte caught the movement.
Her head tilted—just a fraction.
Then she raised a hand—quick, casual wave to Helena, Amanda, Celeste.I’ve got this. Let it go.
No hesitation. No chasing.
She turned and walked off in the opposite direction, hips swaying with the kind of confidence that says I don’t chase people anymore; they chase me.
Peter’s mouth curved—just a flicker. Good.
That was the new her. The one who didn’t need saving. The one who’d finally buried the girl he’d found waiting to be rescued.
Watching her walk away without looking back felt like watching a weapon clear its holster—smooth, inevitable, beautiful in the way only dangerous things can be.
He pushed off the railing and started toward the far stairs. Long way around. Didn’t matter. He kept his eyes on Charlotte the whole time—watching her move through the crowd like water through rocks, never once glancing back to see if anyone was following.
He wasn’t going to get in the way. She wasn’t a damsel in distress anymore. That identity had died—quietly, painfully, probably in some dark corner of her mind where old versions of herself still whispered wait for him, he’ll come.
It had to die if she was going to live.
But like he’d expected of the new her, she handled it perfectly—waved the girls off, let Aurelia wander, and kept walking like she owned every inch of floor she stepped on.
Halfway to the stairs his instincts prickled. Incoming.
He’d been so focused on Charlotte he’d nearly walked straight into someone.
He sidestepped—clean, automatic, no wasted movement.
The other person wasn’t so lucky.
A startled cry—high, feminine, surprised—cut the air.
Time slowed the way it does when your body knows something stupid is about to happen.
She was stepping forward in a hurry—emerald silk dress catching viciously on her stiletto heel, clutch swinging wide, champagne flute tilting dangerously. The golden liquid sloshed upward in a perfect, glittering arc—liquid diamonds suspended, defying gravity for one shimmering heartbeat.
Her body pitched forward, off-balance, arms windmilling in elegant, helpless panic, full breasts heaving beneath the low-cut neckline as she fought to stay upright.
Peter moved.
Fast.
One arm hooked her waist—firm, possessive without apology—yanking her back from the fall with enough force that her hips slammed against his. His other hand came up instinctively, palm flattening high on her sternum just below the delicate hollow of her throat, fingers splayed to anchor her momentum.
He kept contact high—respectful, controlled, nowhere near the soft swell pressing insistently against him.
Physics didn’t care about manners. Her breasts crushed fully against his chest—warm, heavy, the stiff peaks of her nipples dragging visibly through thin silk as her body molded to his for one long, electric second.
She gasped—sharp, throat-exposed sound—then melted against him, weight surrendering, hot startled exhale feathering across the side of his neck. Her scent flooded him: ripe jasmine, dark amber, warm skin, and underneath it all the faint, unmistakable musk of sudden, involuntary arousal.
The Eyes activated without conscious thought. Desire map flared across her exposed collarbone and throat—glowing threads pulsing brighter at the hollow of her neck, the inner curve of her breasts, the soft skin just above her navel where the dress clung damply from spilled champagne. Arousal level spiking hard. Fast. Unnatural for a simple stumble.
Taboo Aura hummed in answer—stronger now, resonant. Generational Heat licking along his nerves like dark honey.
Cougar’s Instinct registering her age—mid-to-late forties, ripe, experienced, body still taut and hungry. Sin Resonance feeding off the engineered vulnerability, the calculated press of mature curves against him, the forbidden thrill of an older woman staging her own fall into younger, dangerous arms.
It was strange how all his Taboo Aura activated at once.
The champagne flute spun lazily, trailing comet stars. It struck marble and shattered—bright, expensive violence slicing through the gallery murmur like a gunshot in church.
Peter held her steady until her stilettos found balance again—longer than necessary, letting her feel the hard line of his body, the steady thrum of his pulse where her palm had instinctively flattened against his chest.
Then he stepped back—slow, deliberate, giving her space she didn’t want.
"You, okay?" he asked, voice low, calm, the way you talk to someone whose heart is still hammering from near-disaster... or something else.
She blinked up at him—eyes wide, glassy, pupils blown dark with something far beyond startlement.
Lips parted on a soft, stunned breath that trembled. Mid-forties beauty: auburn hair in an elegant updo now slightly loosened, strands clinging to the sheen of sweat at her temples, emerald dress molded to every curve, nipples still visibly peaked against silk.
She swallowed hard. Voice came out husky, catching. "I... yes. Thank you."
Her cheeks flushed deep rose—embarrassed, aroused, both. "I should have watched my step."
Peter inclined his head. Small, polite smile. "My fault. Wasn’t looking."
Already turning to leave.
Her hand shot out—caught his forearm. Light grip at first. Then firmer. Nails pressing just enough to bite through his sleeve.
He paused. Looked back.
She bit her lower lip—slow drag of white teeth over plump red—eyes flicking up at him through thick lashes.
"Are you... free sometime soon?" Voice dropped softer, intimate, almost a purr. "I’d love to buy you a drink. To thank you properly."
The last three words lingered, heavy with invitation, her thumb brushing once—deliberately—along the inside of his wrist.
Peter opened his mouth to say no need, really—
She was already pressing a business card into his palm. Heavy stock. Gold foil edging. Warm from her hand. No name visible yet—just the weight of intent, the faint tremor in her fingers betraying how badly she wanted him to take it.
He accepted it. Polite smile. Nod.
Turned the corner—out of sight.
Stopped.
Didn’t look at the card.
A low hum started in his throat—half growl, half dark amusement.
Something felt... off. Wrong and dangerous.
Like a smile too symmetrical, never quite reaching the calculating eyes he’d glimpsed for half a second.
Taboo Aura pulsed once—hard—feeding on the deliberate staging: older woman playing helpless, pressing mature breasts against him, nipples hard, body responding before her mind could catch up.
Everything she did... felt organized. and not the way other women wanted his attention. she had this smell, this stench of blood.
He exhaled through his nose.
Then—
"Mr. Eros."
Theo Montclair’s voice—smooth bourbon over ice, friendly in the practiced way sharks smile when circling.
Peter turned. "Mr. Montclair." Wherever he threw the card, he didn’t care. He did not usually treat encounters like this or even throw the cars away. But this one... he wanted to avoid.
Theo grinned—open, easy, old-money charm at full wattage. "Please. We’re past formalities. Friends, right?"
Peter mirrored the smile—slow, edged. "Why not."
They shook. Solid. Confident. The grip that says trust me while the other hand is already reaching for your wallet.
While Theo spoke—something about the deal... across the east wing shadows.
She was watching.
Grinning.
Senithe.
She had tried to hide. But his senses—razor-sharp even before full awakening—had already cataloged her: probably her stench of blood she can’t full mask from him.
The damsel act. The perfectly timed stumble. The startled cry pitched just right. The lingering, deliberate press of full breasts, nipples dragging against him like she’d spent the last hour thinking about exactly how they would feel. The card.
All bait.
And he’d let it dangle—untouched.
Just as she’d predicted he would.
Senithe’s grin sharpened—gleeful, predatory. Lips curving like she’d already tasted blood.
Because the game had just started.
And she’d landed the opening move—clean, bold, dripping with promise.
Her smile never wavered.
The night was young.
And the board had just grown far more interesting.
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