Chapter 30 – You Hesitate, You Lose
The dinner lingered longer than expected. Time dissolved in candlelight, banter, and silver cutlery against ceramic plates too pretty to be real.
Naomi had loosened up somewhere between the second glass of wine and the dessert.
Lux stayed exactly the same.
By the time the plates were cleared and the wine glasses emptied, the city beyond the glass looked like it had softened—like even the skyline was drunk on their presence.
Then came the moment.
The soft click of leather shoes. The staff returned—this time with a silver tray.
On it?
Two long receipts—like miniature scrolls—and a sleek, white-gloved hand holding a payment terminal.
"Apologies for the wait," the young server said, bowing slightly. "This is the total for the dinner. Yours and Miss Xianlong's."
Lux leaned forward casually.
The receipt had numbers so long they nearly wrapped onto the second line.
Four figures for the appetizers.
Five for the wine.
Custom service fees.
Magical tax. Well, this one was kinda always magical.
Mira's side added another layer of luxury madness—imported ingredients from fae territory, private wine not even listed, and a "custom ambient enchantment fee."
Total: $ 212,943.77
From the distance, Mira folded her arms, watching him now—not hostile. Not smug.
Just curious.
Lux didn't flinch.
Instead, he reached into the inner pocket of his coat and pulled out a card.
Matte black.
No logo. No bank name. Just a shimmer of arcane circuitry if the light hit it right.
The staff girl froze.
Her brows pulled in.
"…Sir?" she asked gently. "I… I'm sorry, but I don't recognize this card format."
Lux offered her a faint, patient smile. "Just try it," he said, his voice like warm smoke and aged whiskey. "Authorization's already in place. Just tap."
The girl hesitated.
Behind her, another staff member peered over her shoulder, equally confused. They looked at each other, then at Lux.
Lux said nothing else. He simply held her gaze. Calm. Silent.
Mira tilted her head.
Still no hesitation.
Still no bluff.
So she waited.
The staff placed the black card over the reader, fingers twitching slightly—
-Beep!
The machine blinked. Then glowed. Then pulsed softly with a deep amber light.
[Payment Accepted – Account Verified]
[Transaction Complete]
[Clearance Level: Executive Priority]
[Card ID: LUX-VAELTHORN-OMEGA_0001]
The machine let out a soft chime.
And the card slid back, gently, almost respectfully.
Lux took it back, slid it into his coat like it wasn't the most confusing financial artifact the staff had ever seen.
But he wasn't done.
From another pocket—inner lining, left side—he pulled out a thin, neatly folded bill.
Cash.
Real cash.
It shimmered faintly, sealed in gold trim. The kind of cash you don't use unless you're tipping for a private airship or silencing royalty.
He placed it on the tray with one hand, tapping it once.
"Tip," he said.
The staff blinked. Her hands shook slightly as she accepted it, bowed deep, and backed away like she'd just been handed an artifact.
Naomi stared.
Mira's voice broke the silence, soft but clear.
"…He passed the test."
Fiera, lounging nearby with a half-empty glass of sparkling cherrywine, let out a breath.
"Yup," she said. "I thought he might sweat. But nope. Not even a twitch."
Rava was standing near the glass wall now, arms crossed over her front, eyes still locked on Lux. Her expression was unreadable. But her tentacles—two faint blue ones—peeked from her sleeves like silk ribbons. They curled slowly, swaying with her pulse.
"I want to seduce him," Rava said.
Fiera nearly choked on her drink. "That's blunt."
Mira raised a brow. "What about that whole 'let me die a virgin, marriage is a scam' speech from earlier?"
Rava didn't even blink. "That's for broke men only."
Fiera snorted. "Wow."
Rava leaned one elbow on the glass railing, swirling her half-finished martini with slow, calculated grace. Her ocean-blue eyes didn't move from the terrace where Lux sat with Naomi, still calm, still maddeningly unreadable.
"I'm not wasting time," she muttered. "Men like him? You hesitate, you lose."
Mira sipped her wine, the faint clink of glass against her fang tapping the edge of her patience. Her tail flicked lazily behind her chair, serpentine and bored—but her gaze stayed razor-sharp.
"So what's your angle?" she asked, voice smooth.
"Physical," Rava replied instantly. "He's hot. And rich. And something about him—his posture, the way he talks—he's not prey. He's… rare. Like deep-sea gold. Like a leviathan that lets you think you're in control until you're already drowning."
Elyndra finally joined them, her expression as serene as always. But there was heat in her eyes now, just barely concealed.
"He makes the air feel expensive," she said quietly.
Fiera turned. "Did you just compliment him?"
"No," Elyndra said, her voice cool. "I acknowledged a fact."
She continued, voice even. "There's a presence. Not like nobles. Not like political men. It's quiet power. Dangerous power. I don't know what he is—but I can feel it."
Mira tilted her head. "So you're in too?"
Elyndra gave her a sidelong glance. "I'm interested. Doesn't mean I'll chase."
Rava huffed. "Then get left behind. I don't care if it's tacky—if I have to walk up to him and say, 'I'd like to ride you like a kraken tide,' I will."
Fiera laughed so hard she doubled over. "Please do. I need to see that."
Mira's smile was slow, lazy, unreadable. "He might say yes."
"I know," Rava said, completely serious. "That's the fun part."
They all turned their attention toward the terrace again.
Lux was leaning slightly in his seat, talking softly to Naomi. She laughed at something, brushing her hair behind her ear. He didn't even notice the way the light hit his cheekbone, the way his lips moved when he smiled. He was just existing—perfectly.
Mira watched them carefully.
"Not just aura. Not just the money. There's something behind it."
"You think he's lying?" Elyndra asked.
"I think," Mira said slowly, "he might be telling the truth and hiding something."
"Sounds like every man," Rava muttered.
Fiera grinned. "Not every man can pay a six-digit dinner bill with an unregistered black card and then tip enough to fund a mid-tier yacht."
"True," Rava agreed.
Mira looked down into her drink.
"Now the question is…" she murmured, "what does he want?"
The table went quiet.
Because deep down, none of them had figured that out.
He wasn't chasing power.
Wasn't climbing.
Wasn't performing.
He was already there.
And that?
That was terrifying.
And intoxicating.
Rava's eyes glinted. "Doesn't matter. I want him anyway."
Mira looked up slowly.
"You really think you can win him?"
Rava grinned. "I don't have to win."
"I just have to make him want to lose."
And from outside, as Lux leaned back in his chair, watching the skyline again…
He smiled.
He'd heard every word.