Urban Plundering: I Corrupted The System!

Chapter 483: What could go wrong



The Ashford estate's main ballroom hummed with the kind of conversation that happened when very powerful people gathered to gossip about even more powerful people.

Crystal chandeliers cast warm light over designer gowns and perfectly tailored suits, while servers moved between clusters of guests carrying champagne that cost more per bottle than most people's cars—which, considering the guest list, was saying something.

Aleric Ashford adjusted his tie for the third time in ten minutes, though not from nerves. At nineteen, he carried himself with the particular confidence that came from knowing the cosmic dice were loaded in his favor. Tonight, everything was falling into place exactly as his very mysterious, very effective benefactor had promised.

"You look like the cat who ate the canary," his father said, appearing beside him with two glasses of Dom Pérignon that sparkled like liquid diamonds.

"More like the cat who ate the canary, the goldfish, and somehow convinced the dog to do the dishes," Aleric replied with a grin that would've made sharks proud. "The Wilder situation is... let's call it 'divinely resolved.'"

Dominic Ashford, fifty-eight and sharp as the media empire he'd built from ruthless ambition and questionable ethics, raised an eyebrow. "Divinely?"

"Figure of speech, Dad. Though honestly, our new friend's methods are so effective they might as well be miraculous." Aleric's voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. "Tessa's resistance is melting away like ice cream in July."

"I hope you understand that accepting help from... unconventional sources can come with unconventional prices."

Aleric's laugh was light but carried an edge. "Father, please. We've been dealing with unconventional sources since before I was born. Remember the thing with the Supreme Court justices? Or that delightful business with the oil spill cover-up?"

"Those were human problems with human solutions."

"And this is a human problem with a godly solution," Aleric shrugged. "I'm not complaining about the upgrade in service quality. What could go wrong."

Across the ballroom, Isabella Harrington found herself in a conversation with Senator Williams that had started about wine futures and somehow derailed into existential terror.

"...the thing is, Kenny," she was saying, using the senator's first name with the casual intimacy of someone who'd helped finance his last three campaigns, "my security people are acting like they've seen a ghost. And these are people who usually ARE the ghosts, if you catch my meaning."

Williams nodded nervously. He'd caught her meaning perfectly, having personally benefited from Isabella's 'security team' removing certain investigative journalists from circulation.

"They're spooked?" he asked.

"Spooked is putting it mildly," Isabella laughed, swirling her champagne. "Last week, Mark—you remember Mark, the one who made that unfortunate senator from Oregon disappear?—he pulls me aside and asks if I believe in God."

"God?"

"That's what I said! I mean, we go to church for the photo ops, but Vincent asking about actual divine intervention? That's like your accountant asking if you believe in Santa Claus." Isabella's expression grew thoughtful. "Then he tells me about this family—the Nyxliths—who apparently wrote a casual hundred trillion dollar check to fix Manhattan."

Williams nearly choked on his champagne. "Hundred trillion?"

"With a 'T,' Kenny. And here's the thing that's making everyone lose their minds—our supernatural consultants are saying this family rules over the Origin Families."

The color drained from Williams' face. Everyone in their circle knew about the Origin Families—the ancient bloodlines that controlled millions of supernaturals, beings with power that could level countries faster and more thoroughly than nuclear weapons. For generations, the Five Families had coexisted with this shadow hierarchy, paying for protection from creatures that could tear apart armies.

"The same Origin Families that have been guarding Earth since... forever?" Williams whispered.

"The very same," Isabella confirmed grimly. "You know, the families we thought were the apex of supernatural power? The ones whose protection costs us more than some countries' entire GDP? Turns out they're middle management."

Williams stared at her. "Middle management?"

"According to Vincent, every Origin Family—every single one of those ancient bloodlines that make our supernatural security look like mall cops—they all answer to the Nyxliths." Isabella's laugh had no humor in it. "We thought we knew how the world worked, Kenny. Turns out we've been buying protection from the supernatural equivalent of regional managers while the actual CEOs were... I don't even know what they were doing."

"But the Origin Families never interfered with human affairs," Williams protested weakly. "They stayed in the shadows, guarded the planet from whatever cosmic threats exist out there, but they never—"

"Exactly!" Isabella interrupted. "For centuries, they've maintained the balance. Protected Earth, managed the supernatural community, never got involved in mundane politics. And now suddenly their bosses are casually preventing buildings from collapsing with waves of their hands and making mythology champions look like amateur hour."

Williams was quiet for a moment, processing the implications. "The Manhattan incident... those weren't just rich people with good crisis management."

"Those were gods, Kenny. Or people who make gods nervous, depending on which report you believe." Isabella's voice dropped to a whisper. "And apparently, even the actual gods—the ones our supernatural contacts swear are real and terrifying—even they're scared of this family."

"Scared of them?"

"Vincent showed me footage from Seoul. Divine beings—and I mean the kind that our supernatural assets usually whisper about in hushed tones—running away from someone." Isabella shook her head. "We've always known more than we probably should about what really runs this world, but when it comes to this? We know absolutely nothing."

Meanwhile, in what was supposedly a quieter corner but had somehow become gossip central, Thomas Wilder stood with his wife Elena, watching their son Ethan approach with the expression of someone who'd just discovered the family goldfish was actually a shark.

But before Ethan could share whatever earth-shattering revelation he'd uncovered, they were interrupted by Diana Beaumont making her entrance into their conversation. At thirty-one, Diana had the unique distinction of being the person everyone else was secretly terrified of, though she wore it with the casual grace of someone discussing the weather.

"Tommy! Elena!" she said warmly, air-kissing Elena like they were old sorority sisters instead of women who could probably end small countries with their contact lists. "Fabulous party. Though I have to say, the entertainment value has really increased lately."

"Entertainment value?" Thomas asked, automatically straightening his posture. Even among people who could buy senators like penny candy, Diana commanded a different level of respect.

"Oh, you know," Diana laughed, accepting champagne from a server who moved like he'd been personally trained by ninjas. "All this delicious chaos with mysterious godly families throwing around money like confetti at a billionaire's wedding."

Elena nearly snorted champagne. "Godly families?"

"Well, what else would you call people who can rebuild Manhattan like it's a weekend DIY project?" Diana's eyes sparkled with amusement. "I mean, my family has serious resources, but 'casually fix a major metropolitan area' isn't exactly in our wheelhouse."

Ethan finally reached them, looking like he was carrying the weight of several cosmic revelations. "Ms. Beaumont," he said carefully, his tone carrying the respect due to someone who could probably end his family's influence with a phone call.

"Ethan, darling!" Diana turned her attention to him with the focused interest of someone who collected information like other people collected vintage wines.

"You look like someone who's been digging into things they probably shouldn't have been digging into."

"Just trying to understand some... patterns, ma'am," Ethan replied diplomatically.

"Patterns are fascinating," Diana agreed. "Especially when they involve families who apparently have the kind of money that makes our money look like lunch money. I mean, we thought we were playing in the big leagues, and then someone shows up with 'I could buy several solar systems' money."

Thomas felt that familiar chill of realization. "You're talking about the Nyxlith family."

"Among others," Diana said, her smile carrying the particular sharpness that came from being professionally dangerous. "Though I have to admit, discovering that we've been small fish in a much, much larger pond is... humbling."

"How much larger?" Elena asked, though her voice suggested she wasn't sure she wanted to know.

Diana was quiet for a moment, clearly choosing her words like she was defusing a bomb. "Large enough that all our traditional advantages might be about as useful as a chocolate teapot. Large enough that we might want to seriously reconsider our assumptions about who actually runs this world."

"You think they're behind recent... developments?" Thomas asked carefully.

"Tommy, sweetheart," Diana's laugh was light but carried steel underneath, "when patterns this obvious start appearing, they're usually not cosmic coincidence. Someone's been moving pieces on a board we didn't even know existed."

Ethan leaned forward respectfully. "Ms. Beaumont, what are your supernatural contacts saying about all this?"


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