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3:The Devil's Contract

last update publish date: 2026-04-29 21:12:43

He didn't drag me. That was the terrifying part. His grip on my wrist was firm, but he walked with a calm, unhurried pace, as if we were simply taking a stroll. It was the confidence of a man who knew his prey wasn't going to run. Mostly because I couldn't. My legs were moving, but my brain was still back in the hall, screaming a high-pitched "abort mission" that nobody was listening to.

He led me down a corridor that was quieter, the the fancy gold and marble giving way to dark wood and dimmer lighting. The air here was still, heavy with his scent. He pushed open a heavy oak door and ushered me inside.

It was an office. A ridiculously masculine, stupidly expensive office. One wall was floor-to-ceiling windows, overlooking the glittering city lights below. The other walls were lined with books, their leather spines looking ancient and important. In the center of it all was a massive mahogany desk, and behind it, a leather chair that looked more like a throne.

He finally let go of my wrist, and I immediately snatched my hand back, rubbing the skin as if I could erase the feel of him. He didn't seem to notice. He just walked around the desk and sat, sinking into that throne with an air of absolute ownership. He steepled his fingers, his dark eyes fixed on me.

"Sit," he said. It wasn't a request.

I looked at the single, straight-backed chair in front of his desk. It looked like an interrogation chair. I stayed standing. It was a small, pathetic act of rebellion, but it was all I had.

A ghost of a smile touched his lips. "Fine. Have it your way." He picked up a remote from his desk and pointed it at the wall behind me. A screen flickered to life.

On it was me. Well, the other me. It was security footage from the gala. It showed me, hunched by my potted plant, looking like a depressed flamingo. Then it showed our collision. My immediate, deep bow. The entire silent, tense conversation.

He let the video play. I watched myself on the screen, a puppet whose strings I could no longer feel. The me on the screen was a picture of submission. The me in the room was having a silent meltdown.

[System Analysis: Host's performance was 78% convincing. However, protagonist's perception deviates from normative behavioral patterns. Recommendation: Maintain course of feigned weakness.]

Thanks for the hot tip, G****e.

"Interesting, isn't it?" Huo Yan said, his voice cutting through my internal screaming. "The Zhan I was briefed on is a peacock. Strutting, preening, desperate for any scrap of attention. He would have thrown a drink at me and made a scene."

He paused, letting the silence hang in the air. "But you... you bowed. You submitted. It was beautifully done. Almost too beautifully done."

My heart was trying to beat its way out of my chest. "I told you," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "I didn't want to lose my job."

"Is that all?" he leaned forward, his eyes narrowing. "Because I've been in this industry for a long time, Zhan. I've seen thousands of actors, thousands of liars. And I've never seen anyone control their fear so perfectly. Your scent was a masterpiece. It screamed 'terror,' but your body was perfectly still. That's not the reaction of a fool afraid of losing his job. That's the reaction of a trained operative."

An operative? Seriously? Did this guy's brain only run on spy movie tropes?

"I think you're hiding something," he continued, his voice dropping into that low, hypnotic register. "And I am a very, very patient man when it comes to unwrapping my presents."

This was it. This was the end of the road. My pathetic wallflower act had failed. My lie about being scared for my job had failed. I was cornered. And when an animal is cornered, it doesn't lie down and die. It gets vicious. Or, in my case, it gets desperate and stupid.

I took a breath. "You're right," I said, the words tasting like ash in my mouth. "I'm not who you think I am."

His eyes lit up with a terrifying, predatory glee. He thought he'd won.

"I'm not a peacock," I continued, forcing myself to meet his gaze. "I'm an actor. A good one. And I heard a rumor that you were casting for your new film, The Serpent's Coil. The role of the traitor, the one who betrays everyone at the end." I was pulling this out of my ass, but it was a hunch. A film god like him would always have something in the works.

Huo Yan leaned back in his chair, his expression unreadable. "Go on."

"My public persona... it's a performance. A deliberate choice to play the fool. It makes people underestimate me. It lets me observe." I was channeling every character I'd ever played, every line of dialogue I'd ever read. "I wanted you to see me. Not the peacock. The actor underneath. I was giving you an audition."

The lie was so bold, so utterly ridiculous, that it almost convinced me. It was the only card I had left. If I couldn't be pathetic, I'd be brilliant. If I couldn't be a victim, I'd be a rival.

He was silent for a long moment, just watching me. The city lights twinkled behind him, a silent audience to my impending doom.

Then, he laughed. A low, rich, genuinely amused sound. It was more terrifying than his anger.

"An audition," he repeated, shaking his head. "My god. That's the most creative thing I've heard all year." He stood up and walked around the desk, stopping in front of me. He was close, too close. "You're a liar, Zhan. But you're a magnificent one."

He reached out and tucked a stray piece of hair behind my ear, his fingers lingering against my skin. I flinched, but I didn't pull away. I couldn't.

"Here's the problem," he said, his voice soft and deadly. "I don't believe for a second that you're just an 'ambitious actor.' But I am intrigued. I'm intrigued enough to play along."

He walked back to his desk and pulled a thin, leather-bound folder from a drawer. He tossed it onto the desk in front of me. It landed with a soft thud.

"The role of the traitor in The Serpent's Coil is yours," he said. "The contract is in there. You'll read it. You'll sign it. You'll move into the production house with the rest of the main cast tomorrow."

I stared at the folder, my mind reeling. This wasn't supposed to happen. This wasn't in the plot. The original Zhan never got this role. I'd just wanted to survive the gala, not get fast-tracked to the climax.

"What's the catch?" I asked, my voice hoarse.

His smile was pure sin. "The catch is that your little 'audition' worked a little too well. You're not just an actor to me anymore. You're a mystery. And I hate mysteries."

He leaned forward, his hands flat on the desk, pinning me with his gaze. "You will take the role. Move in with me, you will work with me. And you will perform for me every single day. You will show me this 'brilliant actor' you claim to be. And while you do, I will be watching. I'll be waiting. And I will find out what you're really hiding."

He slid the folder an inch closer. "Sign it, and you get the role of a lifetime. Refuse, and I'll make sure the story of how you tried and failed to deceive me is the last thing anyone in this industry ever hears of you. Your choice."

I looked from the folder to his eyes. They were cold, hard, and utterly serious. He was giving me a choice between a gilded cage and certain death.

[System Alert: Major Plot Deviation. Host has been offered a binding contract with the protagonist. Accepting will result in a high-risk, high-reward survival path. Refusal will result in immediate termination.]

Some choice.

My hand trembled as I reached for the folder. My fingers brushed against the cool, smooth leather. This was it. The moment I became more than cannon fodder. The moment I became a player in his sick, twisted game.

I opened the folder. On top of the stack of papers was a single sheet, a rider to the main contract. It was short, only one line, typed in stark black ink.

The Omega, Zhan, agrees to be exclusively bound to the Alpha, Huo Yan, for the duration of the production, in all matters professional and private.

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E. Vale
Zhan is very smart, what?!
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