Urban Plundering: I Corrupted The System!-Chapter 497: Annabelle Beats Ashford
Chapter 497: Annabelle Beats Ashford
The ballroom’s atmosphere shifted like tectonic plates rearranging themselves as hundreds of pairs of eyes focused on the silver-haired patriarch descending the grand staircase. This wasn’t just any old man—this was the last of the old guard, the final remnant of a generation that had built these empires from blood, ambition, and sheer fucking will.
Diana Beaumont straightened unconsciously, her thirty-one-year-old frame carrying itself with the kind of respect she rarely showed anyone. The old man had been her father’s contemporary, one of the few people who remembered when the Beaumont name meant more than just military contracts and political manipulation.
He’d been there when her father ruled the empire she now controlled. When the rules were simpler and the stakes were just global instead of universal.
Isabella Harrington felt something twist in her chest as she watched him move with Bishop’s steady support. At thirty-four, she was young enough to remember sitting in boardrooms as a child, watching this man negotiate with her parents like they were equals. Among all the leaders of the Five Families, he was the only one from the old generation still standing so firm.
Still sharp. Still dangerous. Still worthy of the respect her parents had shown him.
The current generation had inherited their power—she’d taken hers through carefully orchestrated "accidents," Diana had claimed hers through military precision, but Grandfather Wilder had earned his through decades of building something from nothing when her family had been nearly destroyed with him back in New York as the rumors had it.
Some of his generation had been killed by their own children in power grabs that made Shakespearean tragedies look like family sitcoms.
Only three of the old guard remained: Grandfather Wilder, the Morello patriarch who ruled from shadows so deep even shadows were afraid of him, and the Ashford grand matriarch who supposedly controlled more information than most governments.
But this man was different. This man was beloved.
Alessandro Morello emerged from whatever conversation he’d been having about Supreme Court justices and moved closer, his forty-five-year-old face showing the kind of respect he rarely displayed. The old man commanded attention not through fear or manipulation, but through the simple fact that he’d survived longer than anyone had a right to in their world.
Respect where respect was due.
Dominic Ashford started forward, his fifty-eight-year-old frame carrying decades of media empire authority, but his expression held something that looked almost like filial deference. The current leaders all respected Grandfather Wilder because he was as old as their parents had been—a living link to the generation that had built the foundations they now stood on.
This was a man who remembered when their parents were young and stupid and full of dreams.
Aleric, meanwhile, was trying to fade into the background like a shadow with trust fund issues. His engagement party had just become a family reunion he definitely didn’t want to be part of, especially not when—
"Going somewhere so soon?"
The voice stopped him cold. Aleric spun around to find himself face-to-face with a woman who looked like she’d been carved from moonlight and dangerous intentions. Annabelle Blackwood stood before him with Ere perched regally on her shoulder, and Aleric felt his brain temporarily short-circuit.
Holy shit. This woman was absolutely devastating.
She was beautiful in a way that made his previous understanding of beauty seem quaint—the kind of ethereal perfection that the Voidhowl bloodline was famous for producing. But Annabelle was more than normal Voidhowl standards. She looked like someone had taken the concept of beauty and refined it until it became a weapon.
And she was looking at him like he was something particularly unpleasant she’d found on her shoe.
"I... what?" Aleric managed, his usual confidence crumbling under her dismissive gaze.
"You heard me," Annabelle said with the kind of casual authority that came from being raised by cosmic forces. "Running away from your own engagement party? That’s either really smart or really pathetic."
"I’m not running," Aleric protested, though his body language suggested otherwise. "I was just—"
"Just what? Checking to see if the back exit was properly secured?" Annabelle’s smile was sharp enough to cut glass. "How thoughtful."
Ere’s golden eyes fixed on Aleric with the kind of assessment that made him feel like prey being evaluated by a particularly intelligent predator.
"Look, I don’t know who you think you are, but—" Aleric started.
"Oops."
Annabelle’s foot connected with his chest in what looked like an accident but felt like being hit by a freight train made of concentrated dismissal. Aleric flew backward through the air, crashed into the center of the ballroom, and landed in a heap that would have been undignified even if he hadn’t been wearing a tuxedo.
The sound echoed through the ballroom like a gunshot.
Everyone in Parker’s group collectively sighed and facepalmed with the kind of resigned exhaustion that came from dealing with family members who solved problems through applied violence.
This was their life now. Cosmic beings with the emotional regulation skills of caffeinated toddlers.
Five hundred guests turned to stare at the young man groaning on the marble floor, then at the impossibly beautiful woman who was examining her fingernails like nothing had happened.
"WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU’RE DOING?" Dominic Ashford’s voice cracked across the ballroom like a whip, his media empire authority fully engaged and absolutely furious.
Annabelle shrugged with the kind of casual indifference that made nuclear weapons seem polite. "The culprit was trying to run away. Couldn’t help myself."
"Run?" Dominic’s face was progressing through several interesting shades of purple. "Run from what exactly?"
Before Annabelle could respond with what would probably be another devastatingly dismissive comment, Thomas Wilder stepped forward with the kind of righteous anger that had been building pressure for weeks.
"Don’t play innocent and dumb about what’s going on here," he said, his voice carrying enough fury to power small cities. "Everyone in this room knows what you’ve done. You colluded with some being to force a Wilder into marriage, using my father’s life as a threat against my daughter. You turned my family into pawns in whatever sick game—"
"Thomas."
Grandfather Wilder’s voice cut through the tension like a blade through silk, carrying the kind of quiet authority that made everyone in the ballroom remember why this man had survived when others hadn’t.
The old man’s presence filled the space like gravity made of accumulated wisdom.
He looked at Annabelle with eyes that had seen decades of corporate warfare and family politics, then at Parker’s group, taking in the collection of beings who radiated power like heat from forge fires.
Tessa guided him toward Parker with the kind of gentle care that spoke of decades of love between grandfather and granddaughter.
"Tessa, my dear," the old man said, his voice warm with affection that could have melted glaciers, "who is this young man?"
The source of this c𝐨ntent is freewe(b)nov𝒆l