NOVEL Zenith of Desire: The Hollywood Incubus Chapter 212: CH : 204 Maybe It’s Magic

Zenith of Desire: The Hollywood Incubus

Chapter 212: CH : 204 Maybe It’s Magic
  • Prev Chapter
  • Background
    Font family
    Font size
    Line hieght
    Full frame
    No line breaks
    Text to Speech
  • Next Chapter

Chapter 212: CH : 204 Maybe It’s Magic

We require 51 additional Power Stone donors, 5 more reviews, and 600 more collections and newly added Discord only 61 more members to unlock the next bonus Chapters.

Get those stones going boys and tomboys, we need to get those numbers up!

Join my Patreon

GodofPleasure

(dot)com/GodofPleasure

******

The routine unfolding on those glowing plastic pads defied the ordinary, clumsy Sunday arcade experience.

For Beyoncé, stepping onto a dance pad usually brought stress. Mathew trained her to view choreography as a grueling, punishing metric of her worth. If she missed a step in rehearsal, verbal evisceration followed.

But right now? The Japanese programmers who built the machine never designed it to measure the soul of a pop queen. For the first time in years, Beyoncé moved without a clipboard-wielding manager evaluating her commercial viability.

The flashing screen provided rapid, scrolling digital prompts. She executed them with the feel of someone possessing rhythmic movement as a native language, rather than a clumsy response to visual instruction. Her body received the rhythm of the bass before the neon arrow even finished displaying on the glass. Her execution flowed seamlessly.

She wasn’t playing a game; she was reclaiming the pure, unadulterated joy of music the industry had tried to beat out of her.

The small audience quietly forming a circle did not offer the polite, casual attention of bored bystanders. Captivation held them in place.

They witnessed a star being born. 1998 flip-phones lacked the technology to capture the magic, but human eyes did not, and the eyes in the arcade paid full attention.

And Dorothy kept up with her.

The fourteen-year-old’s athletic martial arts training produced a different quality of movement on the plastic pad. Dorothy wasn’t a backup dancer trying to steal the spotlight, nor a judge. She stood as a safe, stable sister engaging in pure, healthy competition. The explosive strength and robotic precision of Dorothy’s strikes compensated for the absence of Beyoncé’s natural R&B fluency.

They genuinely played against each other for dominance. Both proved excellent, meeting the machine’s high difficulty setting without breaking a sweat.

Marvin stood at the edge of the gathering audience, his hands in his pockets, observing his ladies.

He studied Beyoncé. The fluid motion of her hips and her perfect rhythm mirrored the undeniable star power he recognized from the top of the Ferris wheel onward. She carried the undeniable mark of someone destined to be globally extraordinary.

By bringing her here, he systematically divorced her immense talent from the trauma of her father’s control.

In four short years, she would perform this exact choreography in sold-out global arenas. In ten years, the entire world would have to invent a new cultural vocabulary to define this level of pop.

But right now, in 1998? It just looked like a beautiful, sixteen-year-old girl conquering a dance arcade game in a suburban Sunday mall, completely unburdened by trauma, utterly unaware why fifty random people had stopped moving to witness the spectacle. free𝑤ebnovel.com

Lindsay, meanwhile, abandoned the noise and located the towering bank of claw machines in the back corner.

This move proved entirely predictable, yet psychologically devastating. Lindsay and rigged claw machines shared a tragic relationship. It functioned as a heartbreaking metaphor for her entire existence.

The machine mirrored her parents: it promised a reward, demanded her hard-earned coins, and then, at the last second, its weakened grip dropped the prize, leaving her empty-handed.

Yet she kept playing with the stubborn, uncomplicated hope characterizing her approach to her chaotic life—the naive, tragic belief, renewed with each expensive attempt, that *this* time, it would finally hold onto her.

It did not hold. It dropped her prize for the fifth time.

"Marvin!" Lindsay’s voice cut across the arcade floor, laced with the frantic edge of a child hitting her breaking point with unfair systems.

He turned away from the dancing platforms and walked over, his aura parting the crowd of teenagers effortlessly.

She jabbed a furious, trembling finger at the glass of the claw machine, pointing at a cheap stuffed animal trapped inside. A small, impractical, ugly pink rabbit sat wedged in an unfavorable, nearly impossible position in the deep corner of the glass box.

"That one." Pleading green eyes looked up at him. "I need it."

She wasn’t just asking for a toy. Her broken psychology tested.

Marvin stood silently in front of the machine. He studied the rigged metal claw, calculated the impossible angle of the pink rabbit, and looked down at Lindsay’s pleading face.

He inserted three coins into the slot. He gripped the plastic joystick and maneuvered the metal claw with the exact quiet precision he had used to win the giant bear on Beyoncé’s birthday.

It was a display of calculation. The fractional, millimeter adjustment of probability.

The barely perceptible nudge of the rigged internal mechanism. The clean drop, the impossible hold, and the smooth retrieval.

The ugly pink rabbit emerged triumphantly from the metal retrieval slot at the bottom.

Lindsay snatched it up. The glowing joy on her face proved that receiving a cheap, two-dollar gift from a rigged claw machine ranked as a monumental triumph in her human experience.

It meant someone had finally fought a rigged system for her, and won.

"How on earth do you always do that?" She hugged the cheap rabbit tightly to her chest, her face tilted up in awe.

"Simple geometry and strategy, Linds." Marvin delivered the lie with a straight face.

"That is not a strategy, Marvin." Her green eyes narrowed cutting through his practiced nonsense. "Strategy is just the boring, corporate word you use to cover up the fact that the real answer is something magical and you refuse to tell me how you do it."

He looked down at her. She held his gaze.

The garish, pulsing neon lights washed over them in frantic waves. The obnoxiously ugly pink stuffed rabbit remained pressed like a protective shield between them.

"You’re right." An impossibly charming smile played on his lips. Fully healing the cynicism her parents had installed required introducing genuine wonder back into her reality.

He raised his hand, holding a single, dull brass arcade token between his fingers. "It’s really just a matter of misdirection."

He flicked the coin. It didn’t just spin. It caught the reflection of a nearby cabinet and held the light. Reaching the apex of its arc, the token froze in mid-air for a fraction of a second too long—a quiet, blatant defiance of gravity. The brass surface flared with a deep, pulsing violet luminescence, a brief surge of his magic bleeding into the mortal realm. With a casual wave of his hand, the coin dissolved. A faint wisp of sweet-smelling purple smoke evaporated into the stale air.

She gasped, her eyes widening into huge saucers as her mind scrambled to rationalize the physics-breaking reality unfolding before her.

Before she formed a coherent question, Marvin stepped smoothly into her space. He moved with fluid, unnatural grace. He reached out, brushing his cool fingertips against the skin behind her ear, sending a grounding shiver down her spine.

When he pulled his hand back, he wasn’t holding the vanished brass coin. A freshly bloomed pink rose twirled effortlessly between his elegant fingers, its delicate petals glowing and perfectly matching the dye of her stuffed toy.

"Maybe it’s magic, or maybe basic sleight of hand." His hypnotic, velvety voice wrapped around her as he tucked the stem behind her ear. "It’s all about palming the object and catching the neon reflections at the right angle or maybe matter manipulation."

She stared at him, her heart hammering wildly against her ribs. His explanation amounted to utter nonsense, yet she lacked the means to prove it. She took a quick, steadying breath, a delighted blush rushing to her cheeks under his gaze. The crushing weight of her parentification vanished, replaced by the sheer, unadulterated awe of childhood.

"I know it is." She fought to keep her voice from wavering. Hugging the pink rabbit firmly to her chest to ground herself, she turned on her heel and marched happily toward the Whack-A-Mole machines.

---

The late lunch restaurant Marvin had booked sat deep in West Hollywood.

The expensive, atmospheric venue implicitly understood that a sprawling Sunday lunch for famous people seeking actual enjoyment required two things: objectively incredible food, and a curated environment allowing loud enjoyment without self-consciousness. It wasn’t stiff or formal. But it wasn’t "casual" in the cheap, plastic-menu sense either.

It occupied the perfect, expensive middle register that genuinely great restaurants achieve only when owners think carefully about the dining room’s function.

They claimed the curved corner booth in the back. Five people awkwardly, happily squeezed around a table designed for four. The addition of the fifth chair produced the mild, intimate chaos of warm bodies sitting closer together than the furniture originally anticipated. Knees brushed under the table.

Beyoncé pressed tightly against Marvin’s left side. Jessica squeezed against his right. Dorothy and Lindsay sat across from them, happily kicking his shins.

The leather-bound menus arrived. The chaotic negotiations of five people deciding what to eat produced the overlapping, loud, joyous conversation a group lunch generates only when everyone engages deeply, utterly safe from judgment.

"I’m getting the pasta." Jessica snapped her menu shut. She carried the sharp decisiveness of someone unbothered by overthinking, knowing exactly what she wanted the moment she opened the cover.

"Jessica, you always order the pasta." Dorothy spoke.

"Because the pasta is the correct answer, Dorothy." Jessica bristled, defending the choice like religious doctrine. "There is always a pasta dish on the menu, and it is always the correct, safest answer. I don’t understand why people complicate this."

"Sometimes, a giant, greasy cheeseburger is the correct answer." Lindsay hugged her pink rabbit across the table.

For Lindsay, a greasy burger wasn’t just food. Her mother constantly criticized her weight and appearance to keep her marketable for child-star roles. Demanding a greasy burger served as a safe, tiny rebellion against the toxic control of her diet.

"Lindsay, there is no universe in the entire multiverse where a greasy burger is more correct than authentic Italian pasta." Jessica waved her hand dismissively.

"What about a burger... in a *good* burger place?" Lindsay leaned across the table, relishing the freedom to argue without being screamed at. "Where the pasta is just some cheap, frozen thing they stick on the back of the menu because they feel legally obligated to offer a vegetarian option?"

Jessica paused, mulling over the logic and respecting Lindsay’s intellect. "Alright. That is a valid edge case."

"Thank you."

"However, the edge case does not apply here." Jessica tapped the menu. "This is clearly an expensive pasta place."

"It’s not a pasta place." Dorothy read the fine print on the back of the cover. "It is clearly branded as an ’Italian-American Fusion’ place."

"Which is just a fancy, overpriced phrase for a pasta place." Jessica crossed her arms.

Marvin sat quietly in the center of the chaos, completely ignoring the argument. He looking the menu.

He deduced what the day’s fresh produce suggested for the best dishes, and calculated the optimal order by combining five distinct preferences with the restaurant’s actual quality.

He removed the exhausting burden of decision-making from girls who spent their entire lives making high-stakes choices.

"The pan-seared King salmon." Marvin addressed the server arriving at the table, ordering without a single second of hesitation. "Bring the wild mushroom risotto for the entire table to share. The arugula salad with extra lemon. And—" he paused, his gaze landing on Lindsay’s pouty face "—the wood-fired Margherita pizza."

Lindsay blinked, shock registering on her face.

"You were obviously going to panic and order the pizza." Marvin handed his menu back to the waiter. He provided the comfort of junk food, elevating it slightly so she felt respected rather than patronized.

"I was definitively going to order the pizza." Her jaw dropped..

"I know you were."

"Marvin, you really need to stop knowing things about my brain." Lindsay pointed a breadstick at him.

"I’ll add your complaint to my extensive list," he offered, his tone bone-dry.

A snorting laugh burst from Lindsay, breaking through the defenses she hadn’t prepared.

The table settled into the humming rhythm of a great lunch. Steaming, excellent food arrived in the perfect sequence. The conversation flowed through the easy, intimate register of people who knew each other well enough to be comfortable in their own skin, possessing enough ambition to fill the hours naturally.

Jessica talked passionately, gesturing with her hands, about the prestige film she fought to secure. She outlined next week’s Burbank audition—a gritty emotional role perfect for her transitioning career—and complained about the frustrating way her incompetent agent handled salary conversations with the studio’s casting director.

She spoke about the business with the professional seriousness of someone navigating the industry since childhood. Unlike Lindsay, she possessed a clear-eyed, cynical understanding of the mechanics, balancing bitterness and naivety.

Dorothy detailed her martial arts training schedule. She mapped out the exhausting program developed with her sensei, the painful adjustments her coach made to build explosive muscle mass, and the upcoming state competition she built her life toward.

Beyoncé outlined her plans for the musical group. She detailed the exhausting, tense conversations with her father, Mathew, regarding the sonic direction for their next album.

*****

(Discord dot gg slash Exqae8Gh)

Join my Patreon

GodofPleasure

(dot)com/GodofPleasure

Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter