A property perched on one side off a cliff so dramatic it looked like architecture from another century, defiant, brutal, beautiful. The main house—three stories of raw concrete and floor-to-ceiling glass, cantilevered over like a middle finger to gravity, each level jutting further out, overhangs casting shadows like wings.
Concrete slabs—rough, textured, stained by salt air—contrasted with seamless glass that reflected ocean, sky, sun in shifting mirrors, waves crashing 500 feet below, spray misting the lower terrace.
An infinity pool on the second-floor terrace—womb-shaped, water warm, underwater lights pulsing in slow, heartbeat rhythm, spilling into the void like liquid birth. The top floor—open-concept, sheltered by a massive concrete roof, extending like a wing, wind howling through the gaps, salt stinging the air.
Terraced gardens descended toward the beach, impossibly lush, green, eucalyptus, jasmine, wild sage, maintained by someone I’d never met, scent drifting in the feed like perfume.
The equestrian facility sat inland—twelve stalls of black marble, covered arena, outdoor ring, tack room bigger than most apartments, leather, hay, horse musk thick in the air.
I could see the horses. Four of them, black stallions, coats gleaming under California sun and one white one, manes whipping in the wind, hooves kicking up dust in the paddock, whinnying—low, deep, alive.
And the garage. Eight bays. Seven empty. One occupied.
The car sat under soft, golden lighting like a museum piece, matte black carbon fiber, curves so aggressive they looked violent, design language screaming Bugatti without... I leaned closer to the holographic feed, breath fogging the projection.
The Bugatti logo wasn’t there. Where the iconic red oval should have been—grille, rear—just smooth carbon fiber, mother-of-pearl inlays glinting like tears.
The proportions were slightly off. Not wrong. Just... different. Like someone had taken La Voiture Noire as a starting point and evolved it into something beyond, engine note in the feed—low, rumbling, god’s growl, seats stitched with P.C. & L.C. in gold thread, dashboard HUD pulsing in sync with arousal levels.
The license plate caught my eye: P.C. Not Eros V.D. like all my other cars. Just my initials; Peter Carter.
"Taboo," I said slowly, voice echoing off the marble, water still dripping from my hair. "What the fuck is that car?"
Her laugh was rich, knowing, purring in my skull. [Oh, I just used ’La Voiture Noire’ so you’d have a reference point, something to anchor your imagination. But this?] Her voice dropped, reverent, wet. [This is better. This has been waiting for you for so long, lover. And finally—finally—it’s time.]
ARIA’s voice came through, tight, electronic, strained. "I’m seeing the feed. I’m analyzing the architecture, the landscape, the vehicle. And Master—I still can’t locate it. The system is showing me something that doesn’t exist in any mapping database, any satellite array, any tracking system I can access."
"That’s the point," I said quietly, towel slipping from my waist, falling to the wet floor with a soft thud. "It’s off-grid. Completely. A safe haven the world can’t touch."
"A ghost mansion with ghost horses and a ghost Bugatti-like future hyper-car."
"Exactly."
I stared at the holographic feed, mind racing, pulse hammering in my ears. Forget the mansion. Forget the mysterious car that shouldn’t exist.
I had a cliff. 500 acres connecting mainland to a land unknown, all of it mine. A beach—500 feet of private coastline where no one could reach me without permission, waves crashing, salt stinging, sand warm under bare feet.
And horses. I’d never ridden a horse in my life. But thanks to the system’s downloaded knowledge, I knew exactly how.
Equestrian skills bundled with "Aristocratic Pursuits"—riding, polo, falconry, all the rich-people hobbies that signaled old money. I wanted to ride. Wanted to feel that kind of power under me, something alive, wild, that chose to let me control it.
Taboo’s voice purred in my mind. [Smart Master. We’d never give you something you couldn’t use. Where’s the fun in that? Now go. Enjoy your ghost mansion. Ride your ghost horses. Drive your ghost car, they’ve been waiting for you!]
[Exactly what I said. Not created. Not duplicated. Waiting. You’ll understand in a few years, when you’re ready.] Her voice turned playful again. [For now, just know—nothing about this reward is normal. The mansion that doesn’t exist in any database. The car with no logo and your human name on the plates. The property coordinates that even your digital goddess can’t crack. There’s a reason for all of it.]
[Patience, lover. Patience. Some gifts reveal themselves slowly.]

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