Rebate King: Every Beauty I Spoil Makes Me a Billionaire
Chapter 116: Six Men, Fifteen Seconds
Stan sidestepped. The first fist sailed past his ear. His counter landed, a short, brutal hook to the ribs, and the guard folded like a chair, dropping to one knee with a choked gasp.
The second came from behind, a bear-hug attempt, arms wide, trying to pin Stan’s arms to his sides. Stan ducked under the grab, drove his elbow backward into the man’s solar plexus, and followed with a turning punch that caught him flush on the temple.
The guard’s eyes rolled. He went down.
The remaining four rushed him simultaneously.
What followed lasted approximately fifteen seconds, and every person on the dance floor watched it with the frozen, open-mouthed disbelief of people witnessing something that shouldn’t have been physically possible.
Stan moved through them like water through a broken dam. He didn’t fight the way trained fighters fought, with measured footwork and calculated exchanges. He fought the way a storm fights a coastline, relentlessly, overwhelmingly, with a force that seemed to multiply with each passing second.
A knee to one guard’s midsection. An elbow to another’s jaw. A throw that sent a two-hundred-pound man crashing into a table hard enough to split the wood. A final, devastating straight right that dropped the last standing guard like a felled tree.
Six men. Fifteen seconds. All of them on the floor.
Stan stood in the center of the wreckage, breathing evenly, his leather jacket slightly askew, one knuckle split and bleeding, the only visible evidence that the fight had cost him anything at all.
The club had gone completely silent. The DJ had stopped the music. Every person in the room was staring.
Sophie was pressed against the far wall of the dance floor, both hands covering her mouth, tears streaming down her cheeks. Her wrist, where Damien had grabbed her, was red and already beginning to bruise. She was trembling.
But she wasn’t looking at the guards.
She was looking at Stan.
At the man who had heard her scream from across the room, crossed the distance in seconds, and dismantled six professional fighters with his bare hands to get to her.
Damien hauled himself upright, blood streaming from his shattered mouth, and stared at the carnage around him with the wide, uncomprehending eyes of a man whose understanding of the world had just been violently revised.
’What IS he?’
Stan turned away from the groaning pile of bodyguards and walked directly to Sophie.
He stopped in front of her. His expression softened, the cold, combat-ready focus dissolving instantly into something warmer, something concerned, something human. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂
"Are you okay?"
Sophie couldn’t answer. Her throat had closed. The tears were coming faster now, not from pain, not from fear, but from the sheer, overwhelming relief of being safe, of being reached, of being protected by someone who hadn’t hesitated for even a fraction of a second.
She threw her arms around him and buried her face in his chest.
Stan held her. Tightly, firmly, one hand cradling the back of her head, the other wrapped around her waist. He could feel her shaking. He could feel the dampness of her tears soaking through his shirt.
"You’re safe," he said quietly, his voice low enough that only she could hear it. "I’m here. You’re safe."
Sophie pressed closer and said nothing.
She didn’t need to.
The silence that followed the fight was the particular kind that happens when a room full of people collectively forgets how to breathe.
The music was gone. The ambient conversation was gone. Even the ambient noise of glasses and movement had been swallowed by the shock that had spread outward from the dance floor in a single, rippling wave the moment the first guard had gone down.
Two hundred people stood or sat exactly where they’d been, frozen mid-gesture, mid-sentence, mid-drink, staring at the center of the room where six professional bodyguards were scattered across the floor like furniture after an earthquake, and a young man in a leather jacket stood quietly at the center of it all, holding a trembling woman against his chest.
Damien was propped against an overturned table, one hand pressed to his ruined mouth, blood seeping through his fingers in steady rivulets. His remaining coherence was flickering, alcohol and pain and wounded pride all fighting for control of his system at once.
His eyes moved from his incapacitated guards to Stan with an expression that was trying to reassemble itself into fury but kept slipping sideways into something closer to incomprehension.
’What just happened.’
’What just happened.’
Sophie hadn’t moved. Her face was buried in Stan’s chest, both arms wrapped around him, fingers gripping the back of his jacket with an intensity that left white marks on her fingertips.
Her shoulders were still trembling, not from the impact, but from the delayed surge of adrenaline that comes when fear finally gets permission to arrive. Her wrist throbbed where Damien’s grip had dug in.
Stan held her without speaking. His hand moved in slow, steady circles against her back. He could feel her breathing gradually deepen and slow as the shock began to metabolize.
"You’re safe," he said quietly, for the second time. "It’s over."
Sophie nodded into his chest. She didn’t trust her voice yet.
The manager arrived within ninety seconds, a lean, composed man in his mid-forties named Donald.
He came flanked by four members of the venue’s internal security team, all of them significantly calmer than the situation they were walking into warranted.
Donald’s eyes swept the floor in a single, methodical arc, Damien, the guards, the cracked table, the cleared dance floor, the DJ frozen behind his decks, the crowd arranged in a loose, uncertain perimeter.
He issued three commands in quick succession, his voice pitched low enough that it didn’t carry to the audience but landed with absolute clarity on his staff. The dance floor was cleared. Security formed a containment line. A junior manager began redirecting guests away from the area with quiet, practiced efficiency.
Order began to reassert itself in stages, the crowd pulling back, conversations restarting in hushed clusters, the paralysis of shock gradually thawing into something more manageable.