The St. Regis Miami conference room wasn’t just luxury—it was the kind of wealth porn Architectural Digest drools over. Floor-to-ceiling windows spilled sunlight across Biscayne Bay like God’s own spotlight, an Italian marble table sat in the middle looking smug about costing more than the average suburban cul-de-sac, and the chairs? Oh, those chairs were silent weapons.
Ergonomic diplomacy.
Cushioned manipulation. Whoever designed them understood that comfort wins wars before words do.
Across from us sat four committee members, all wrapped in suits so tailored they practically had Ivy League diplomas stitched into the lining. From Harvard: Dr. Patricia Whitmore, Vice Provost, the type who could probably kill you with passive-aggressive praise, and Professor James Manning, CS Chair, carrying all the charisma of a human printer. Stanford brought Dean Micha, looking every bit the polished administrator, and Dr. Suzzie Kimberly, Associate Provost, with that smile professors practice before rejecting your grant proposal.
Behind them, two massive screens displayed another dozen administrators dialing in, remote faces arranged in Brady Bunch squares of boredom. They thought they were here for a routine donor circle-jerk.
Cute.
Charlotte sat to my left in her boardroom-killer fit, radiating $4B boss energy. Madison to my right, her presence corporate-sexy enough to validate the charade. Alice Kirkman and Rebecca Chen flanked us, quiet, unnoticed—like background characters the writers hadn’t given dialogue yet.
"Ms. Thompson," Dr. Whitmore began with that well-oiled charm Harvard probably injects during orientation, "on behalf of Harvard University, I want to express our deep gratitude for this extraordinary commitment."
Dean Micha nodded like a bobblehead on Red Bull. "Five hundred million dollars will transform our research capabilities..." Blah blah legacy, blah blah impact. Same script, different donation.
Charlotte? Flawless. She slid through allocation strategies and naming rights like she’d been born holding a trust fund. Every word reminded them she wasn’t just playing rich-girl cosplay—she was the main character of this show.
Then came the signing. Flashbulbs popped, pens scratched marble, history allegedly happened. Charlotte committed $1 billion, split clean down the middle: Harvard and Stanford. The suits practically sagged with relief. Dr. Kim looked like she’d just unlocked the cure for tenure anxiety.
"This partnership will enable groundbreaking resear—"
I stood up.
"My apologies," I said, voice slicing through their champagne mood like silk meeting steel, "but before we conclude today’s meeting, we need to move to the second agenda item."
The temperature in the room dropped faster than Facebook stock during a congressional hearing.
Dr. Whitmore blinked, confusion etched across her Botox. "I’m sorry... second agenda?"
"There sure was." I smiled, just enough edge to make their overpriced ergonomic chairs squeak under shifting weight.
Professor Manning adjusted his glasses, brows knitting like bad code. "This meeting was arranged exclusively for Ms. Thompson’s philanthropic commitments—"
"And that’s the thing about agendas," I cut in, pacing the marble like it was my runway. "They evolve. They adapt. They change... when I say so."
Dean Micha cleared his throat, clinging to what scraps of authority he thought he still had. "And you are... Mr...?"
I let the silence stretch, the weight of my grin daring him to regret asking.


VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Dark Lord Seduction System: Taming Wives, Daughters, Aunts, and CEOs