The next morning arrived without fanfare.
Sunlight filtered through the villa’s floor-to-ceiling windows, spilling across polished floors and quiet hallways. Luca had woken earlier than usual; not out of urgency, but because his sleep had been unusually uninterrupted.
For once, there were no late-night calls, no business crises, no lingering calculations pulling him back into work. Just silence; clean and complete.
It had been a long ti since he had felt this peaceful.
The events of the previous day still lingered at the edges of his thoughts, but they carried none of their forr weight.
By midday, the villa had already lost so of its usual liveliness.
Naomi had left earlier that morning, returning to her apartnt complex for a packed schedule of sponsorship etings, brand negotiations, and streaming-related commitnts.
Her rising popularity ca with an increasingly demanding workload, and lately her stays at the villa had beco shorter and more fragnted.
Without her, the house felt noticeably quieter. Luca didn’t mind, he rarely did.
The system side of his life remained unpredictable, but for the first ti in a while, everything else had settled into a comfortable rhythm. That balance lasted until mid-afternoon.
A secured vehicle entered the estate after passing multiple layers of verification. Guards confird clearance, the gates opened, and a courier stepped out with practiced efficiency.
He wore the expression of a man accustod to handling valuable deliveries without asking questions.
In his hands was a reinforced package bearing private insignias and layered authentication seals.
The sender’s na was enough to draw Luca’s attention.
Benjamin Caldwell. Inside were two bronze lion statues.
They were not flashy pieces. There was no excessive shine, no attempt to impress through extravagance. Instead, they possessed a restrained elegance, their bronze surfaces aged into a rich golden-brown patina that spoke of craftsmanship and history rather than modern polish.
Every detail had been executed with care—the flowing manes, the tension in the muscles, the calm authority in the lions’ expressions.
It gave old central european vibes. Just looking at it one can see that it’s very expensive. Luca studied the statues for several monts before letting out a faint chuckle.
"As expected," he murmured. "An apex corporate predator."
There was neither admiration nor criticism in his voice. Only recognition.
The ssage behind the gift was obvious. Benjamin wasn’t trying to buy goodwill. He was establishing a position.
A gesture like this reduced uncertainty. It signaled respect without submission, goodwill without obligation, and familiarity without presumption. It was the sort of move made by soone who preferred to shape the board long before anyone realized a ga had begun.
Soone who treated relationships the sa way others managed investnt portfolios.
Patiently and strategically.
Sighing, Luca closed the box and set it aside.
’Interesting, perhaps. But ultimately insignificant.’ he sighed
To him, nothing had changed.
...
A week passed without incident.
Life settled back into sothing resembling routine, though Luca’s version of routine had never been particularly ordinary.
etings ca and went. Business matters progressed steadily. The system occasionally surfaced in the background with new developnts, but nothing urgent enough to disrupt his pace. For once, there were no crises demanding imdiate attention, no unexpected complications forcing him to change course.
The days blended together with a rare sense of stability.
During that ti, Austin Silva’s ssages began to accumulate.
The second-generation heir Luca had t only briefly proved surprisingly persistent. What started as a single invitation gradually beca a steady stream of ssages, each more casual than the last.
A private lounge gathering. A few drinks. An opportunity to et people.
The nas ntioned along the way were not insignificant either. Several belonged to circles that occupied the upper layers of San Fierro’s social hierarchy—heirs, entrepreneurs, investors, and public figures whose networks often overlapped long before their businesses did.
Luca never rejected the invitations. He simply didn’t respond.
There was no compelling reason to refuse, but neither was there any urgency to accept. Still, after days filled with contracts, negotiations, and system-related matters, the idea of spending an evening sowhere completely detached from responsibility carried a certain appeal.
A change of scenery. Sothing uncomplicated. Eventually, curiosity won.
That sa evening, Naomi was occupied with a major sponsorship event tied to her rapidly growing streaming career. She had ntioned it briefly before leaving that morning, already half absorbed in preparations and schedules.
Luca didn’t interrupt. There was no need.
Instead, he changed into sothing comfortable, left the villa, and headed for the garage.
Monts later, the Koenigsegg One:1 eased out of the estate.
The engine ca alive with a deep, controlled note that resonated through the chassis. It wasn’t loud in the crude way many supercars tried to be. The sound was refined—precise, deliberate, and unmistakably powerful.
The drive into the city was smooth.
Dark roads gradually gave way to illuminated streets. Towers of glass and steel rose against the evening skyline while neon lights painted shifting reflections across the Koenigsegg’s carbon-fiber bodywork.
San Fierro’s nightlife district slowly erged ahead, vibrant and alive.
Luca rested one hand lightly on the wheel as the city unfolded before him.
For a while, he simply drove. No etings. No negotiations. No system notifications.
Just the road, the city lights, and a machine worth more than most people’s hos responding effortlessly to every touch.
A faint smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.
"Man..."
He glanced at the reflection of the city sliding across the windshield.
"It really is good to be rich."
There was no arrogance behind the statent. No need to boast. It was simply an observation. An honest one. It felt good indeed.
...
Crimson Velvet Lounge occupied the heart of San Fierro’s nightlife district.
It wasn’t the kind of place that advertised. It didn’t need to. It was extrely popular. Its reputation traveled through different channels—through reservation lists that remained permanently full, through private invitations, and through the vehicles parked outside each night.
Even the valet area looked less like a parking lot and more like an exhibition.
Supercars sat in orderly rows beneath the glow of streetlights. Limited-production Ferraris. McLarens. Lamborghinis. Rare imports that most people would only ever see online.
Every vehicle represented a statent. A declaration of status made without words. Inside, the atmosphere was heavy.
The music remained low enough for conversation yet heavy enough to be felt through the floor.
Warm lighting softened sharp edges and blurred the distinction between strangers and acquaintances. Conversations overlapped into a constant murmur where business, influence, and entertainnt mixed freely.
Near the entrance, Austin Silva stood with several friends.
Outwardly, he looked relaxed. In reality, his attention kept drifting toward the road. One of the group noticed.
A ginger-haired young man took a drag from his cigarette before shaking his head.
"I still don’t get it," he said. "You’ve been talking about this Luca guy for a week. There’s no way he’s actually that impressive."
Austin exhaled slowly. "It’s not about being impressive."
"Then what?"
"It’s about understanding who you’re dealing with."
The ginger-haired man rolled his eyes. "That sounds dramatic."
Austin ignored the comnt. "I’ve seen enough to know one thing."
His gaze remained fixed on the street as he added; "Roman Pierce doesn’t show respect to rumors."
The group fell noticeably quieter.
That na carried weight. Even among wealthy heirs, influence existed in layers. Roman Pierce occupied a level that most of them would spend their entire lives trying to reach.
A quieter mber of the group finally spoke.
"If Roman genuinely respects him..." He paused. "...then we’re talking about soone operating in a completely different league."
Austin didn’t answer. Because he agreed.
Then the sound arrived. Not loud or aggressive. Just unmistakable and easily recognizable.
A deep chanical note rolled through the street, refined enough to avoid drawing attention intentionally yet powerful enough that attention followed it anyway.
Several conversations nearby faltered. Valet attendants glanced toward the road. Heads began turning one after another. The source erged monts later.
First ca the reflection of carbon fiber beneath shifting neon lights.
Then the silhouette. Then the car itself. A Koenigsegg One:1.
For a mont, nobody spoke.
But then One of Austin’s friends broke the silence still in shock; "No way..."
His eyes widened. "That’s a One:1."
The words spread through the surrounding crowd almost imdiately.
Recognition traveled fast among people who knew cars.
The One:1 wasn’t rely expensive.
It was one of those machines that existed beyond normal categories—a vehicle so rare that most enthusiasts would never encounter one in person.
The black carbon bodywork seed to absorb the surrounding lights, giving the car an oddly understated presence despite the fact that it imdiately dominated the street.
Austin felt his jaw tighten slightly. "...He actually ca."
The driver’s door rose upward with smooth precision. Luca stepped out. He looked calm and natural in that casual yet expensive outfit.
He was acting as though arriving in one of the rarest hypercars in existence required no more thought than stepping out of an ordinary sedan.
He adjusted his jacket, closed the door, and started toward the entrance. No hesitation and no performance. No attempt to acknowledge the attention gathering around him.
Which sohow made people look even harder.
The group unconsciously straightened as he approached.
Luca stopped in front of Austin. A faint smile appeared on his face: "Mr. Silva."
Austin blinked.
The smile on Luca face widened slightly as he added upon seeing how stunned Austin was: "Are you planning to stand here all night?"
His gaze shifted toward the others. "Or are you going to introduce your friends?"
The casual tone caught them off guard. There was no arrogance in it. No effort to establish dominance.
Just a normal question delivered by soone whose version of normal seed fundantally different from everyone else’s.
Austin blinked once. Then again. Behind him, one of the friends finally found his voice.
"Austin..."
He glanced from Luca to the Koenigsegg parked behind him. "...don’t tell this is really him."
Every eye turned toward Austin. Waiting for confirmation.
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