Harem Startup : The Demon Billionaire is on Vacation-Chapter 409: What Exactly are You Trying to Prove?

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Chapter 409: What Exactly are You Trying to Prove?

Chapter 409 – What Exactly are You Trying to Prove?

The word cracked like a whip. The man stepped back, swallowing hard.

And Ariel? She shrank again. Shrinking, shrinking, until her shoulders curled, until her eyes dropped to the polished marble floor that suddenly looked like the inside of her cage.

Her lungs burned. Her palms sweated. Her heartbeat was a war drum she couldn’t control.

Mariell’s heels clicked once more as she closed the space. "Tell me, Ariel. Did you cry for him too? Did you give him your little pathetic pearls? Or does he just like your body? Answer me."

Ariel couldn’t move. Couldn’t breathe.

Her lips parted. Nothing came.

Her vision blurred, shame boiling hot behind her eyes, rage buried under years of training that told her. "Don’t talk back. Don’t resist. It’ll only make it worse."

And that’s when the air shifted.

Slow. Heavy.

Like gravity remembered who owned the room.

The door to the lounge opened again—softly. Almost casually.

But it didn’t matter.

Because the moment Lux Vaelthorn stepped through, it was like the boutique itself exhaled.

Every eye snapped to him. Every spine stiffened. The perfume-sweet air thickened, charged with something not mortal. Something magnetic.

Ariel’s breath hitched.

Lux.

Her anchor. Her—her impossible calm in this storm.

He wasn’t rushing. Wasn’t storming in with fists.

He didn’t need to.

That was the worst part.

The man moved like velvet draped over steel. Every step slow, deliberate, shoulders rolling with a predator’s ease. His black shirt caught the low gold lighting, highlighting the sharp line of his chest. His cufflinks gleamed. His gaze—dark, bottomless, playful—swept over the scene, and people moved.

Stylists stepped aside without realizing they had. The air itself bent toward him.

And Mariell—Mariell Delmar, who had made Ariel’s life a living cage—actually faltered. Just a fraction. A blink. But it was there.

Lux smiled.

Not wide. Not friendly.

A razor hidden in silk.

"Well," he said, voice smooth enough to make the glass mirrors hum. "What do we have here?"

Mariell straightened instantly, masking her slip. "And who are you?" she demanded, tone sharp.

Lux ignored her question entirely. His eyes slid to Ariel, lingering just long enough to make her knees weak. "You’re taking a while," he said softly, like they were the only two in the room. "Everything alright, Ariel?"

Her name. On his lips.

It steadied her.

Ariel’s chest loosened, though her lips trembled as she whispered, "I... I’m fine." 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞

"She’s not," Mariell snapped, stepping between them like she could block his view. "She doesn’t belong here. She’s—"

Lux tilted his head, finally letting his gaze drop to Mariell.

It wasn’t cruel.

But it wasn’t kind either.

It was the kind of look that stripped away armor. That made you wonder what sins you’d forgotten to confess.

"And you are?" he asked, smooth as poison-laced wine.

"M-Mariell Delmar," she said quickly, as if her family name alone should silence him.

"Ah," Lux murmured, eyes glinting. "So you’re the one who thought it clever to dispose of pearls before polishing them."

Mariell blinked. "What?"

He stepped closer. Not fast. Not loud. Just closer.

Close enough that Mariell actually leaned back half a step, her chin lifting to hold her pride.

"You see," Lux continued, his voice like silk sliding across skin, "I don’t particularly care about mortal pedigrees. Bloodlines. Family wealth. All of that bores me." His gaze flicked back to Ariel, softer for only a moment. "But loyalty? Value? Potential? That," he said, turning his smile back on Mariell, sharp and dangerous, "is what matters."

Mariell’s lips parted, but no words came out.

The stylists were silent too. Watching. Waiting.

Lux slipped one hand into his pocket, posture casual as if this entire confrontation were just another day at his office desk. "So tell me, Miss Delmar," he drawled. "What exactly are you trying to prove? That you can still bully someone you no longer own? That’s not power. That’s desperation."

Mariell flushed, fury twisting her expression. "You don’t know anything about her! She’s a—"

"Careful," Lux cut in. One word. Low. Soft.

But the way it rolled off his tongue made the room cold.

Mariell’s throat worked.

She took a half-step back.

Lux smiled again, all warmth and wicked charm returning like nothing had happened. "Now then. If you’ll excuse us, Ariel and I have a wardrobe to build. And you..." His gaze flicked over Mariell dismissively, like she was dust on glass. "...have already taken up too much oxygen."

The silence that followed was brutal.

Mariell’s fists clenched, nails digging into her palms. But no retort came. No witty cruelty. She just turned sharply, her heels snapping against the floor as she stormed out.

The stylists exhaled collectively.

Ariel—

Ariel swayed.

Her heart was still hammering, her body trembling from the aftershocks of Mariell’s words. Her past clawed up her throat like bile.

But then Lux turned back to her.

And she wasn’t alone.

He walked to her slowly, softer now. His hand brushed her arm, grounding. "Hey," he murmured, just for her. "Look at me."

She did.

His eyes caught hers. Dark. Endless. But steady.

"You’re not what she says," he whispered. "You never were."

Her lip trembled. "But I—"

"No." He cut her off gently, thumb brushing over her wrist. "She doesn’t decide your worth. Not then. Not now. Not ever."

Something broke in her chest. Not the ugly kind. Not the way Mariell had always broken her.

Something else.

Like the first crack in a cage.

Her breath hitched, tears stinging, but this time she didn’t hide them.

Because Lux didn’t flinch.

He just smiled faintly, like every tear she had was a pearl worth more than any crown.

The stylists didn’t comment, though Ariel could see how their eyes softened around the edges. The older woman briskly clapped her hands together, shattering the tension. "Right then. Let’s finish properly. The lady still has fittings."

Ariel swallowed, nodding quickly, even though her chest was a storm. Her hands trembled as they pulled her into a different dress—silk the color of moonlight, with threads of silver that shimmered when she moved. She could barely focus on the fabric, the way it hugged her waist, the gentle rustle against her legs. All she could think about was how Lux had stood there. How he’d looked at Mariell like he could unmake her with a single thought.

And how, terrifyingly, she wished he had.