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[Fortune: "Ahem, well... Host, the simplified explanation is this: Low-level contact thods such as hair-touching, shoulder-patting, or incidental physical proximity have exhausted their value-generation potential. The system requires progression to more... shall we say, diverse and substantive exploration territories."]

Fortune's tone carried the diplomatic cautiousness of soone delivering catastrophically bad news while trying to soften the blow.

["Specifically, you'll need to target alternative anatomical regions—the waist, for instance. The small of the back. The curve of the spine. Or perhaps..." Fortune paused with audible hesitation, "...other areas of considerably greater intimacy."]

Marcus felt his soul leave his body. "How perverted is this system?!" he demanded internally, his ntal voice pitching toward hysteria. "You're essentially instructing to escalate into sexual harassnt territory!"

[Fortune: "I prefer to fra it as 'strategic physical engagent with calculated risk assessnt.' But in essence, Host, you must dramatically increase three key variables: surface area of contact, duration of said contact, and degree of intimate proximity. Only through this escalation can you continue generating Positive Value at viable rates."]

Marcus dragged both hands down his face, feeling the mission difficulty spike from "morally questionable" to "actively suicidal." His fingers rubbed together unconsciously, skin still retaining the phantom sensation of Elena's silken hair.

"Is there genuinely no alternative approach?" he asked, hearing the desperation bleeding through his internal voice. "So loophole in the system architecture? A workaround that doesn't require getting stabbed or poisoned?"

[Fortune brightened perceptibly: "Ah! There is actually one alternative pathway available!"]

Marcus's attention snapped to full focus, hope flaring in his chest like a struck match. "Tell imdiately!"

[Fortune cleared its virtual throat with exaggerated solemnity, adopting the cadence of a sage imparting ancient wisdom: "Cultivate genuine positive regard within the target subject. If you successfully inspire authentic favorable feelings—affection, trust, even basic fondness—then physical contact becos unnecessary. Any positive emotional fluctuation she experiences in relation to you will automatically convert to Positive Value, regardless of tactile interaction."]

The hope guttered out as quickly as it had ignited.

Marcus's eye twitched. Make Elena Nightshade develop favorable impressions of him? The woman who viewed him as a disposable chess piece in her elaborate sches, who oscillated between icy disdain and barely restrained homicidal urges? The sa person who'd nearly murdered him multiple tis in the span of three weeks?

That Elena? Develop fondness for him?

He might as well try teaching philosophy to a mountain lion while it was actively mauling him.

Marcus waved his hand dismissively, the gesture carrying profound resignation. "Forget it. I'll focus my energy on researching more efficient 'close-proximity strategies.' That approach at least operates within the realm of physical possibility, even if it dramatically increases my mortality risk."

The system interface dissolved from his consciousness, and Marcus returned to full awareness of his surroundings—specifically, to Elena's eyes, which had achieved such depths of glacial fury that they appeared capable of generating their own weather system.

"And precisely what," she inquired with lethal precision, her voice dropping to subzero temperatures, "are you doing now?"

Her gaze executed a deliberate journey to his hand—still hovering near her personal space, not quite retracted, fingers slightly curved as though reaching for sothing. "Who exactly is this performance intended for, considering we're entirely alone? No audience. No witnesses. Just you and your inexplicable compulsion to violate my boundaries."

Marcus inhaled sharply, his tactical assessnt shifting gears. Then, with the kind of reckless commitnt that had made him both an effective operative and a frequent hospital patient in his previous life, he moved.

He bent down with fluid speed, closing the distance between them until his face filled Elena's entire field of vision—re inches separating their features, close enough that he could count individual eyelashes, close enough to see her pupils contract with shock.

His deep voice dropped to a register designed for intimidation, the words reverberating through the empty living room with calculated nace. "Elena."

Just her na. Nothing more. But the way he said it—low, dark, weighted with unspoken implications—transford it into sothing that made the air feel thinner.

Elena's body locked rigid, her nervous system flooding with adrenaline. Marcus's tall fra lood over her wheelchair-bound form, projecting aggressive dominance, invading her space with the kind of deliberate territorial violation that triggered primal defensive responses.

Her hand moved beneath the armrest, fingers finding and gripping her ring with crushing force. Her jaw clenched so tightly the muscles jumped beneath her skin.

"If I genuinely intended to do sothing to you..." Marcus continued, his voice descending another register into genuinely dangerous territory, each word precisely enunciated, "do you honestly believe—in your current physical condition, with your limited mobility—that you could mount effective resistance?"

So he's finally revealing his true nature, Elena thought with bitter vindication. The mask slips at last.

Her finger located the concealed chanism in her gemstone ring's setting. The hidden compartnt sprang open with a barely audible click, and the poisoned silver needle erged—deadly, ready, positioned for a strike that would end this charade permanently.

"You're welco to try," she replied, her voice carrying the sa temperature as liquid nitrogen. Her eyes t his without flinching, without fear, broadcasting a simple ssage: I will take you with .

Marcus's eyes—those deceptively warm brown eyes that could project such convincing sincerity—narrowed into dangerous slits. They resembled poisonous flowers in that mont, beautiful and lethal, the kind of peach blossoms that blood in early spring before winter had fully released its grip.

He leaned closer still, the movent gradual, predatory. His breath ghosted across her face, warm and invasive.

Elena's wrist tensed, muscles coiling. The poisoned needle angled toward its target—one thrust, one tiny puncture, and Marcus Chen would be convulsing on the floor within thirty seconds, dead within five minutes. Her resolve crystallized. If he forces my hand, I won't hesitate—

At the critical instant—the precise mont before she committed to the strike—Marcus suddenly straightened with theatrical abruptness. He retreated two full steps backward, and his entire deanor underwent a transformation so complete it gave whiplash.

The intimidating predator vanished, replaced by a grinning fool. He slapped both hands against his chest with exaggerated alarm, his expression morphing into sothing between sheepish and playful.

"Whoa, whoa! I was just ssing with you!" His voice pitched higher, adopting a tone of injured innocence. "Look at your face—those eyes could strip flesh from bone! You're getting all worked up again! It was a joke, Elena. Why so serious? Can't you take a bit of harmless teasing?"

Elena's left hand moved with practiced efficiency, her fingertip applying precise pressure to retract the protruding needle back into its hidden compartnt. The chanism sealed with another soft click, returning the ring to its innocent appearance as re jewelry.

She raised her eyes—the coldness undiminished, the fury barely banked—and fixed Marcus with a stare that could have induced frostbite. "Marcus Chen. What exactly do you want from ?"

The question wasn't casual curiosity. It was a demand for explanation, a challenge to justify his existence in her proximity.

Marcus spread both hands in a gesture of theatrical helplessness, attempting to channel the original body's particular brand of roguish charm—that insufferable combination of cockiness and affected devotion that the real Marcus Chen had apparently wielded with so success.

Though personally, Marcus found the expression deeply sleazy and hated wearing it.

"Nothing sinister, I assure you," he said, forcing brightness into his tone. "I simply... like you. Genuinely. And I want to properly cultivate our relationship, develop real affection between us. I promise I won't use force. I won't be domineering or controlling. And I certainly won't engage in anything inappropriate without your consent."

Heaven witness, he thought with internal despair, when I conducted black ops missions in my previous life, I was efficient, decisive, professional. When did I beco this pathetic? This shaless? This... aggressively annoying?

He felt like a dignified wolf who'd been dosticated too long, confined to suburban life, only to discover upon release that his inner soul had sohow beco a hyperactive husky with destructive tendencies and zero dignity. The cognitive dissonance was enough to make him laugh and cry simultaneously.

Elena absorbed his declaration with the emotional investnt of soone listening to white noise. Her response erged as a single, cutting sound—a derisive snort that conveyed more contempt than a thousand-word essay could have managed.

She might as well have taken his "confession" and crushed it beneath her wheelchair's wheels while reversing repeatedly over the remains.

Without gracing him with another glance, she maneuvered her wheelchair in a tight pivot and departed with the decisiveness of a winter wind—cold, cutting, leaving nothing but emptiness in her wake.

Marcus watched her retreating form, that distant, untouchable silhouette growing smaller, and felt sothing uncomfortable twist in his chest cavity.

Three days evaporated with the speed of sand through fingers.

The first day of the new sester arrived with the inevitability of sunrise.

Sophia—the household manager who'd been attending to family matters—returned to resu her duties, and Elena's daily routines shifted back to professional managent. Everything operated with renewed efficiency, like clockwork chanisms clicking smoothly into place.

For Marcus, this developnt represented unmitigated disaster.

Sophia's presence eliminated countless "legitimate" opportunities for contact with Elena. His Positive Value accumulation slowed to the pace of continental drift—geological tiscales, essentially motionless. Worse, Fortune had issued dire warnings: extended periods without "effective intimate contact" would trigger point deductions.

He could actually lose ground. Go backward. Watch his hard-earned progress evaporate.

The prospect filled him with existential dread.

But the school sester's comncent offered salvation—a new environnt, new scenarios, new opportunities for strategic physical proximity masked as husbandly devotion.

Early autumn had painted the world in golden-hour lighting. Sunlight cascaded through crystal-blue skies, and the ginkgo trees lining the road to Qingchuan Academy had begun their seasonal transformation, leaves shifting to delicate amber hues.

The black rcedes G-Class glided smoothly along the tree-lined avenue, its tires producing pleasant crunching sounds as they compressed fallen leaves into the pavent.

Marcus and Elena occupied the rear seats in careful separation—sufficient distance to avoid accidental contact, close enough to maintain the appearance of marital unity for their driver's benefit.

Marcus maintained uncharacteristic silence throughout the journey, his attention claid by the scenery flowing past the tinted windows. The city revealed itself in fragnts—glass towers reflecting clouds, street vendors arranging morning displays, cyclists weaving through traffic with practiced audacity.

"The weather really is magnificent," he murmured, half to himself. Since his violent displacent into this novel's reality, he'd existed in perpetual states of anxiety and hypervigilance, his survival instincts on constant alert. This represented his first genuine opportunity to simply observe the world he now inhabited.

Despite knowing intellectually that this was a fictional construct—a narrative universe governed by plot chanics and character arcs—everything appeared devastatingly real. The sunlight felt authentic on his skin. The air carried genuine weight and texture. The city possessed depth and detail that extended beyond his imdiate perception.

Occasionally, the disconnect produced vertigo.

Approximately thirty minutes later, the rcedes turned through Qingchuan Academy's ornate entrance gates. Students scattered across the manicured grounds turned to track the vehicle's passage with varying expressions—envy, curiosity, calculation. The car navigated to the dedicated parking area fronting the Comprehensive Teaching Building.

The engine died with a refined purr. Their driver imdiately exited and retrieved Elena's custom wheelchair from the trunk—a piece of equipnt worth more than most people's annual salaries. He unfolded it with practiced efficiency and positioned it adjacent to the rear passenger door.

Marcus erged first, his door closing with the solid thunk of German engineering. He circled the vehicle's rear to where the wheelchair waited, reaching for Elena's door handle.

As he pulled it open, revealing Elena's seated form to the campus population, the ambient noise shifted. Conversations didn't cease entirely, but they modulated—voices dropping to whispers, heads turning, attention focusing with the intensity of spotlight beams.

Elena sat motionless in the car's leather interior, her legs still, her posture perfect, her features arranged in an expression of aristocratic composure. She resembled a porcelain doll displayed behind museum glass—beautiful, untouchable, sohow tragic.

And then the whispers reached Marcus's ears, each one a poisoned dart:

"See? Proves God has a sense of irony, doesn't it?"

"All that money, all that beauty... and completely crippled. Nature's hilarious sotis..."

"Such a waste of a pretty face. Those useless legs ruin the whole picture. It's almost poetic—"

The cruelty embedded in those casual observations struck Marcus like physical blows. His chest constricted, sothing sharp and hot clawing behind his ribs. His head snapped toward the retreating figures responsible for the comnts—a cluster of well-dressed students lting into the crowd, already dismissing Elena from their consciousness.

The realization crashed over him with nauseating force: Elena endured this psychological assault daily. Every public appearance subjected her to this particular brand of malice—the pitying stares, the mocking whispers, the casual dehumanization disguised as observation.

This was her normal. Her constant reality.

And sothing in Marcus's chest twisted tighter, transforming into sothing dangerously close to genuine rage.

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