Voren understood the consequences before Seraphine even finished forming her proposal in her mind, because investing in her business would not simply be a financial decision but a declaration of alignment, and aligning himself with her would fracture the already fragile line that held his friendship with Ravyn together, a risk he had no intention of taking lightly no matter how intrigued he was by her audacity.
Yet Seraphine stood there with that faint, knowing smile curving her lips, as though she had already calculated his hesitation and found it unimpressive.
"You should be honored that I’m reaching out to you to invest," she said smoothly, her voice calm but layered with confidence that bordered on arrogance. "Trust me, once the slots are closed, you’ll be the one begging me. And you know exactly what I’m capable of."
She swirled the wine in her glass slowly, watching the deep red liquid circle the crystal like a storm contained in something fragile, yet she did not lift it to her lips, as though she needed a clear head for what she was about to ignite.
Leon cleared his throat, the sound thin and nervous in the charged space between them. "Mr. Ashkael, please pardon her choice of words," he said quickly, attempting damage control before the tension snapped. "She’s politely asking you to invest. Sera, Mr. Ashkael holds more money and power than any of us here. You shouldn’t threaten him."
Seraphine turned her head toward Leon, and the smile she gave him was gentle, almost reassuring, yet it did nothing to soften the steel beneath it.
"I’m not threatening him," she replied evenly. "What I’m saying is the truth."
Then her attention shifted back to Voren, her gaze steady, unflinching. "You have until the end of this party to decide. But do I get the chance to sell my product?"
For a moment, Voren felt something close to paralysis, not because he doubted her ability but because he didn’t. After the stunt she had pulled with his server, the calculated precision and quiet brilliance of it, he knew better than to underestimate her. The problem was not her competence. The problem was Ravyn.
What would happen to his friendship if he publicly supported her?
He pushed the thought aside for now, deciding that information came before allegiance.
"I’ll give you the chance," he said at last, his tone controlled, though something darker lingered underneath. "But I hope your boyfriend will be able to protect you. These men are more than what they seem."
Seraphine’s lips curved slightly, and for a fleeting second, Corvine’s warning echoed in her mind, that low, serious tone cautioning her about old men who disguised greed as mentorship and demanded favors in exchange for funding.
"Well," she said calmly, "I would have preferred to be taking care of patients instead of standing here if I wasn’t ready to sell my product."
Voren smiled in response, though the smile never reached his eyes. It was the kind of expression that carried an unspoken message, a silent warning wrapped in politeness, something that said you have been cautioned, and what happens next will be on you.
He reached for a glass of wine from a passing waiter and lightly tapped it against the metal tray, the crisp sound slicing through the hum of conversations and lazy laughter.
"Everyone, take your positions," he announced, his voice commanding without needing to rise. "I have something important to say."
The couches filled quickly, expensive suits and heavy watches shifting into place, the air thick with cigar smoke and ego. One couch remained subtly reserved for him, a silent acknowledgment of hierarchy.
Seraphine and Leon settled onto one of the couches together, and Voren released a slow breath before speaking again.
"I would like to invite a very willful woman to make a presentation."
A few glasses lifted lazily in the air, some of the billionaires already slightly intoxicated, their words slurring just enough to reveal carelessness.



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