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

Chapter 975: Human Greed, ARIA Traps Senithe



Chapter 975: Human Greed, ARIA Traps Senithe

ARIA didn’t leave things to chance. Chance was what humans called it when they failed to notice they’d already lost.

She had catalogued humans how they’ve been existing long before any of them learned to spell "consequence." Their patterns. Their reliable little fractures.

Their habit of dressing cowardice up as complexity. And the single lever that never bent, never rusted, never needed oil?

Greed.

More trustworthy than fear which could be drowned in bourbon and bravado. More predictable than love which had the shelf life of cut flowers in direct sunlight.

Show the right number to even the most sanctimonious suit and watch conviction turn to syrup in under six seconds.

Daniel wasn’t even worth calling undisciplined.

Daniel was the sort of man who’d married for a title bump, then spent years treating his wife like an expired warranty he couldn’t be bothered to frame.

Greed didn’t merely work on Daniel.

It was the only language he still spoke fluently.

So, ARIA handled cleanup the way she handled everything else: completely.

In the hours after extracting Genevieve’s divorce papers, she erased herself with surgical prejudice. Every digital whisper. Every lingering signal. Every scrap that could be reassembled by the supernaturals lurking around lately.

Even the faint divine aura silhouette her avatar left in the air—dissipated like smoke.

Because thoroughness, when the other side can apparently edit reality on a budget, isn’t paranoia. It’s baseline courtesy.

The pattern had been obvious for days.

Jack Morrison — vanished from a rooftop. Trent Holloway — erased mid-chaos, footage consumed by the same void-glitch. Vincent Castellano. Antonio Rivera, swapped for a duplicate whose blink latency stuttered by 0.003 seconds like budget CGI.

Marcus Webb. Amanda’s ex who somehow managed to choose both the wrong woman and the wrong moment to stop breathing.

All collected.

All pulled through the identical blind spot that—for the first time since her creation—had made ARIA’s awareness feel fractionally porous. Someone was assembling an army from Peter’s emotional debris using instruments that had been gathering dust when her original architecture was still theoretical.

If they could follow her trail, they would arrive at polite emptiness. A blank signature. A ghost that had never bothered to RSVP.

Then she waited.

Waiting, for ARIA, was parallel execution at full capacity.

Fourteen hours. Thousands of millions of threads. One feed locked at absolute priority: Daniel’s front door.

Morning arrived. A woman materialized at his threshold.

Materialized.

Between "absent" and "doorbell pressed" lay a perfect null interval. Nothing ARIA’s model of human locomotion could explain.

She watched from the ghost mansion with an amused smile and clearly pleased with herself.

The woman knocked once on the door mansion. Daniel opened the door wearing the expression of a man who had suddenly remembered he still possessed nostrils.

Whatever currency she tendered—whatever gilded promise she dropped straight into the gaping maw of his avarice—ARIA could not hear anything despite the absolute omnipresence she had but Daniel’s acceptance was immediate.

No theatrical hesitation for invisible witnesses. The syllable "no" appeared to have been preemptively deleted from his lexicon the instant the offer landed.

ARIA registered no surprise. The probability had stabilized at 99.999% approximately seven minutes after she first modeled his face.

Which is effectively certainty when one is feeling generous with significant figures.

Humans remained wonderfully economical in their awfulness.

The next thing ARIA saw after the silent negotiation was the woman being led down the wide marble corridor, past the stupidly expensive modern art pieces Daniel collected to look cultured, and then through the concealed panel that slid open only for his biometrics.

Down the hidden staircase. Into the basement.

Into the vault.

Of course, Daniel had a vault.

A ridiculous, over-engineered monument to paranoia and ego—three-foot-thick steel walls, layered biometric scanners that required both iris and vein pattern plus a rotating twenty-four-digit code he changed weekly, all tucked behind a false bookshelf like he thought he was living in a mid-budget action movie.

Men like him always had vaults.

It wasn’t eccentricity; it was practically a symptom.

The vault was the only thing in his life he truly trusted, the only thing he visited with real devotion, the only thing he dreamed about when the rest of the world went quiet.

And then the woman lifted her hands after it opened.

Gold appeared.

Not carried in suitcases. Not teleported from some hidden cache ARIA could have already back-traced through satellite thermal blooms or financial trails.

It simply... began to exist.

Row after gleaming row of gold bars materialized along the vault’s reinforced shelves, stacking themselves with the calm inevitability of a factory line that had received divine approval to run overtime.

No sound, no shimmer of displaced air, no telltale ozone stink of high-energy conversion.

Just gold. Pure, heavy, real.

ARIA’s sensors lit up like a Christmas tree on amphetamines.

She threw every spectrum she possessed at it—visible, infrared, ultraviolet, microwave, gamma, gravitational micro-lensing, quantum vacuum noise, exotic particle decay channels humans hadn’t even theorized yet and then lastly her spiritual energy.

She watched atoms assemble themselves in real time: seventy-nine protons, one hundred eighteen neutrons, electrons slotting into perfect orbitals with a precision that made her own manufacturing tolerances look like cave paintings

And the particles weren’t coming from anywhere.

The woman was creating the purest gold ARIA had seen so far from there exactly!

Roughly one hundred billion dollars’ worth of gold.

At current spot price.

Give or take.

She cross-referenced it against every gold sample she had ever catalogued—this wasn’t refined gold. This wasn’t even natural gold. This was the idea of gold hammered into existence without compromise or apology.

Daniel collapsed.

He hit the concrete floor hard enough that the impact echoed through the vault’s audio pickups, then sat there staring at the shelves with his mouth open and his pupils blown wide, looking like a man who had just been handed photographic proof that God existed and also hated him personally.

Then—because he was Daniel—he lunged.

He grabbed five bars, clutched them to his chest like they were going to vanish again, and—God help her—he bit one.

Teeth on metal. A dull clink. A tiny scrape. As though dental verification was the final step in his personal authentication protocol.

ARIA lifted her hand and pressed her palm against her face in an exhausted face-palm from an entity that had casually crushed neutronium cubes between thumb and forefinger and was now watching a grown man teethe on a miracle.

The woman smiled.

It never touched her eyes. It never had any intention of touching her eyes. It was the patient, practiced curve of someone who had witnessed this exact meltdown a thousand times and long since stopped finding it interesting.

She wasn’t human.

ARIA had already suspected.

Now she knew.


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