Demonic Pornstar System - Chapter 692: Malice

Chapter 692: Malice
The bottom row of monitors showed the basin. The bombardment. Luna’s bait run. Alice’s halo blazing across the sky. And Kaiden, standing on the ridge with his arms folded, watching it all unfold with the cold precision of a young man who had outplayed his enemies and served them their own medicine.
Vespera watched every screen at once and her face did not move.
The artifact on the desk beside her crackled to life.
“Your son is a great man.” Eleanora’s voice came through warm and genuine, carrying the particular fondness of a woman who had just spent an hour with someone who’d exceeded her expectations. “I enjoyed my talk with him throughout.”
Vespera said nothing.
Her eyes didn’t move from the screens. She sat in her chair in her underground lab and received the compliment about her firstborn son with the responsiveness of carved marble.
Eleanora chuckled on the other end of the line, and there was a note in the sound that suggested she’d expected exactly this response. “I really don’t envy you, Vespera. What a dramatic family.” A pause. “But if you ever need my help again, you know where to find me.”
Silence.
Then Eleanora felt it.
A pressure that had nothing to do with sound and everything to do with the woman on the other end of the line. The air in Eleanora’s lungs tightened. A bead of sweat traced down her temple, then another, and she wiped it away with an unsteady hand.
The malice was enormous and aimed at someone who wasn’t her, which made it so much worse. What Eleanora was feeling through the artifact was runoff. Spillover. The ambient bleed of a fury so vast that even its edges were enough to make the air in her lungs feel borrowed. It simply radiated outward from a woman sitting perfectly still in a chair, and even filtered through an artifact across hundreds of kilometers, it made Eleanora Voss’s survival instincts scream.
“Well then.” Eleanora’s voice was lighter now, forcibly so, the tone of a woman who knew when to leave. “Goodbye, Vespera. Take care of yourself.”
The line went dead.
Vespera hadn’t said a word.
In the lab, the monitors continued playing. Dozens of angles. Dozens of moments. Her son’s face on six different screens, calm and clinical and brilliant and so much like her that it made her chest tighten.
Her gaze settled on one screen.
Magnus Ashborn stood on the ridge, his mana flaring, his fury radiating outward, confronting their son with the impotent rage of a man whose plan had been dismantled in front of a million witnesses.
Vespera looked at her husband’s face.
The temperature in the lab dropped.
It started beneath her, a darkness that spread outward from the base of her chair like ink soaking through fabric, eating the sterile white floor tile by tile until there was no floor, just depth, a black so complete it looked like the chair was floating over a wound in the earth.
The shadows behind the monitors bled from their corners and ran down the walls in slow rivulets, pooling toward her, drawn to her body the way iron filings are drawn to a magnet. The air thickened. The lights in the monitor array flickered, dimmed, and the room got darker and darker until it was pitch black, even though nothing had turned off.
Through it all, Vespera hadn’t moved a single inch.
Her eyes were black. The irises had bled outward and swallowed the whites whole, two voids set in a face so still it could have been carved from marble and mounted on a wall. Her skin had lost its color entirely, the pale giving way to darkness, as if the shadow pooling beneath her chair was seeping upward through her body and claiming it from the inside.
The edges of her silhouette had begun to blur against the room, the boundary between Vespera Ashborn and the shadows around her thinning until it was difficult to tell where the woman ended and the dark began.
Through all of it, she hadn’t once blinked, breathed, or changed her expression by a single millimeter.
And yet the malice pouring off her body was so dense that the air around her had started to distort.
The Shadow Monarch wearing a human’s clothes looked at Magnus’s face on the screen, and every alarm in the Ashborn estate activated simultaneously.
The wards flared crimson. Security barriers slammed into place across every door and window with the heavy mechanical finality of a facility entering lockdown.
Armed response teams scrambled from their stations, weapons drawn, mana signatures hot, moving toward the source of what every sensor in the building was reporting as a hostile intrusion.
The estate’s defensive grid had been calibrated to Vespera’s power signature years ago, tuned to recognize her shadow affinity as friendly and exempt it from threat detection.
It was triggering anyway.
The readings pouring through the security network were beyond the calibrated thresholds, beyond what the estate’s architects had believed a single occupant could produce. The signature was Vespera’s and the system knew it was Vespera’s, yet it was sounding the alarm because the power output had exceeded every ceiling they’d programmed.
In the lab, after an hour of complete stillness, Vespera stood.
The monitors behind her cracked. Every screen in the curved array cracked simultaneously as the shadow pressure expanded outward from her body, hairline fractures spiderwebbing across glass that had been rated to withstand concussive force. The feeds died one by one, Magnus’s face breaking apart into dead pixels and darkness
She walked toward the door.
The reinforced steel bulkhead that had sealed the lab during lockdown bent inward as she approached, the metal warping around her presence, and she stepped through the gap without breaking stride. The corridor beyond was dark and filled with the sound of alarms.
Vespera Ashborn walked through her own home until she emerged from the estate’s front entrance.
She did not look back as she left.


