NOVEL Zenith of Desire: The Hollywood Incubus Chapter 213: CH : 205 The Best Sunday

Zenith of Desire: The Hollywood Incubus

Chapter 213: CH : 205 The Best Sunday
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Chapter 213: CH : 205 The Best Sunday

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******

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.

She complained about the boring production meetings scheduled behind her back. She fought to push the label toward a heavy R&B sound, different from their debut’s safe neo-soul foundation. She spoke about her music with the intensity of a young woman driving a billion-dollar vision, currently trapped in the agonizing phase of forcing older, foolish men in suits to understand her goals well enough to execute them.

Here, in the safety of Marvin, she stopped policing her tone. She vented the pressure of acting as Mathew’s golden goose without fear of retribution.

Lindsay happily ate her pizza slices and miraculously managed to contribute to all three conversations at once.

She accomplished this using the honed skill of someone whose vigilance—originally a trauma response developed to monitor her parents’ volatile moods—had found safe redirection.

She absorbed everything happening around them, processing the emotional data faster than her chaotic exterior suggested. Her impulsive energy masked a sharp perceptiveness that caught tiny details, filing them away to build genuine connections.

Marvin leaned back in the booth, resting his arm protectively behind Beyoncé, and listened to all of it.

He offered the attention each of these girls had noticed early on. It delivered the intoxicating, addictive feeling of being genuinely, deeply *heard* by a man, rather than politely tolerated until he could speak again. He casually asked pinpointed questions, demonstrating he remained fully present for every preceding word. He offered observations that landed with precision, occasionally drawing laughter, and always worth remembering.

"Jess." Marvin’s voice cut through her passionate rant about the audition.

"What?" Annoyance radiated from Jessica at the mere thought of her agent.

"The casting director for the gritty role you just described... the exact same agency managing the film’s lead executive producer represents her."

Jessica froze, a piece of pasta halfway to her mouth. Shock painted her features. "How on earth do you know that?"

"I come from a billionaire family, Jess. I pay attention to the hidden industry relationships that matter." Marvin took a sip of his sparkling water. "It proves highly useful for survival. The loud conversation your agent has with the lowly casting director holds less weight than the quiet conversation your agent *should* be having directly the executive producer’s representation on the golf course. That hidden relationship actually moves the needle in this town."

Jessica fell quiet, processing the flawless logic of this Wall Street-level advice. It wasn’t just smart; Marvin demonstrated his protection extending over her career. He taught her how to navigate the shark-infested waters.

"That’s..." Her dark eyes narrowed.

"Highly accurate." Dorothy pointed her fork at Marvin from across the table. "The sociopath is right again."

"I know he’s right!" Jessica buried her face in her hands. "I’m just... ugh!"

She looked up at Marvin through her fingers. "Sometimes, Marvin, you casually drop information like that, and I genuinely don’t know whether to be impressed by your brain, or completely annoyed by your arrogance."

"Both reactions are fine, Jess." His dimples showed. "They are not mutually exclusive emotions."

She pointed a furious finger directly at his face. "That! Right there! That is exactly the annoying one I’m talking about!"

Sitting next to him, Beyoncé smiled silently down at her plate, her shoulders shaking with suppressed laughter.

"What exactly is so funny, Beyoncé?" Jessica turned her glare.

"Oh, nothing." Beyoncé offered an innocent tone that flawlessly communicated she hid something.

"What, Beyoncé? Spit it out."

"I just think it’s interesting." Beyoncé met her gaze, a wicked gleam in her brown eyes. "You’ve been loudly annoyed at him for thirty seconds straight... and yet, we all know you will follow his exact advice and call your agent the second we leave this restaurant."

Jessica opened her mouth to issue a furious denial. She closed it. She opened it again.

"That’s..."

"Highly accurate." Lindsay and Dorothy nodded in perfect, sisterly unison.

Jessica scanned the large wooden table. Three beautiful faces fought a losing battle to maintain composure and avoid bursting into laughter. "I am completely surrounded by traitors."

Jessica crossed her arms, projecting theatrical dignity.

"You are simply surrounded by people who know exactly who you are, Jess." Marvin reached out and squeezed her knee under the table. "It is a vastly different thing."

She held his gaze for a long, silent moment.

The annoyance rapidly moved through her nervous system and evaporated. It left behind the radiating warmth of someone fully seen, deciding the vulnerability remained entirely acceptable.

"Fine." A wide smile finally broke across Jessica’s face. "I’ll call my stupid agent immediately after lunch."

"Good girl." Dark approval flashed in his eyes.

The rest of the hour disappeared into a golden blur of shared desserts, uncontrollable laughter.

---

The Happiest Place on Earth

Disneyland in July on a Sunday operated as the organized chaos of a sprawling theme park running at full capacity in high summer.

Endless, winding lines snaked through the park. Blinding Southern California heat radiated off the pristine asphalt, carrying the intoxicating scent of coconut sunscreen, roasting churros, and sweet waffle cones. The deafening roar of thousands of people filled the air. These crowds navigated the chaos, having spent a fortune to reach a destination explicitly designed to manufacture joy, and they surrendered to its psychological hold.

The five of them moved through the main entrance gates, their formation shifting. They had formed their bond recently enough that they still negotiated the complex logistics of group movement. Who walked with whom?

What walking speed constituted their natural, collective pace? How did they handle the inevitable divergence of individual interests without alienating anyone?

They handled it, it turned out, by doing all of it at once.

For the next several fun hours, the group remained in a state of continuous, chaotic reorganization. They split into smaller sub-configurations for high-speed rides, reunited loudly at designated meeting points near the churro carts, lost Lindsay in Tomorrowland, and found her three minutes later trapped on the wrong side of a dense parade crowd. An argument erupted over the relative thrill merits of Splash Mountain versus Space Mountain. Marvin resolved the debate by simply decreeing they would conquer both.

Dark sunglasses and pulled-down baseball hats and masks shielded their faces. An invisible Gordon trailed behind them, maintaining a healthy distance, ensuring they avoided the rabid buzz.

Marvin paid for everything. Financial transactions held no relevance to his human experience. He bought the VIP fast-pass tickets, the sprawling mountains of junk food, the cinnamon churros Lindsay required at 2 P.M. and demanded again at 3 P.M., and the expensive merchandise various group members encountered in the gift shops and deemed vital to their existence.

"Marvin, you really don’t have to—" Beyoncé started. She tracked his hand as he passed a platinum American Express card to a cashier for four sprawling sets of customized Mickey ears.

"I know I don’t have to." He scrawled his signature across the receipt.

"Marvin, seriously—"

"B." He turned to her with a gentle, immovable directness that closed this conversation reliably every single time. "I invited you. You are my girls. Let me take care of the day. Please."

Her brown eyes softened as she met his gaze.

Her entire life revolved around performing to earn her keep. Her father’s affection, the label’s budget, the public’s adoration—all of it relied upon her labor. Marvin removing the financial transaction from their dynamic served as another healing act. The protective aura radiated from his body, neutralizing the anxiety whispering that she owed him.

"Okay." She leaned her head onto his shoulder, allowing herself to just be a teenager. "But next time—"

"Next time is next time." He handed her a pair of golden mouse ears. "Today is today. Wear the ears, B."

She rolled her eyes, flashed a bright smile, and slipped them onto her head while slipping one on his.

Space Mountain stood first on the itinerary.

The indoor roller coaster operated in near-complete, pitch-black darkness. Stripped of vision, it triggered a fundamentally different adrenaline response than a conventional, outdoor coaster. Outdoor rides relied on the anticipation of viewing the upcoming drop. In the dark, the impending twists remained hidden, and this sensory deprivation produced something much purer and primal.

Jessica screamed at the top of her lungs on the first sharp turn, genuine terror gripping her.

Intense embarrassment flushed her cheeks over screaming so loudly in front of him. She spent the deceleration phase back into the station fighting to recover her cool-girl composure. As she laughs at her own reaction moments later.

Dorothy did not scream once. She gripped the padded lap restraint with the intensity of a martial artist enforcing a strict personal policy of silence. She stubbornly maintained that stoic facade under extreme G-force pressure, her knuckles turning white.

Lindsay sat right next to Marvin and screamed continuously and joyfully from the start of the launch to the final brake run.

For Lindsay, the screaming meant more than the ride. Her life revolved around suppressing her terror while filming cheerful commercials to pay her father. Her trauma grew from silence.

Screaming loudly in the dark, free from consequence and anchored to Marvin’s presence beside her, served as a profound psychological release. It showcased the unadulterated commitment of a girl finally granted permission to be loud.

Beyoncé screamed exactly once at the first towering, unexpected drop in the dark. A rich, throaty laugh followed—a sound that only escaped when a situation proved more intense than she had anticipated, and the thrill delivered.

Marvin rode the entire coaster bearing the amusement of an entity observing everyone else navigate a grand, human experience. He found that silently witnessing their joy offered its own satisfying reward.

"Again!" Lindsay demanded upon exiting the ride vehicle. Static electricity puffed her red hair into a messy halo.

"Lindsay, you just screamed for the entire five-minute duration." Dorothy rubbed her ringing ears.

"Yes." Lindsay nodded fiercely and grabbed Marvin’s arm. Her green eyes widened, starving for more of the healing adrenaline.

"And I want to do it again!"

"That logic is completely flawed—" Jessica raised a finger to argue.

"Her logic is completely sound." Marvin overruled her. He instantly validated Lindsay’s desire over Jessica’s logic, steering them back toward the VIP entrance. They went again.

Splash Mountain, later in the afternoon, produced the wet outcome it reliably delivered to tourists who underestimated the towering magnitude of the final, fifty-foot plunge into the briar patch.

Dorothy and Jessica occupied the front rows of the hollowed-out log and caught more water than they had anticipated. A towering wave of chlorinated water completely soaked them.

They spent the next twenty minutes walking through the park, alternating between shivering in the shade, seeking the July heat to dry off, and pretending their ruined hair didn’t bother them.

Beyoncé, however, positioned herself in the very back row. Marvin’s broad shoulders entirely shielded her, limiting her splash impact to a few misting drops. Marvin noted this brilliant maneuver immediately, and she caught his observing gaze.

"I’ve been on this ride before." Beyoncé smoothed her perfectly dry gold skirt as they walked out the exit.

"I know you have." A smirk touched his lips.

"How do you always—"

"You scoped the exit path of the previous logs before we even boarded the ride." Amusement danced in his blue eyes. "You knew the water displacement. You wanted to know which side of the fiberglass boat caught the heaviest wave, and you positioned yourself accordingly. It was practical thinking."

She shot him the exasperated expression she had honed over the long months of knowing him—the look of a brilliant girl encountering his omniscient accuracy again, choosing to accept it rather than uselessly resist it; Marvin always saw her brilliance unlike her father.

"You’re very, very observant, Shakespeare."

She bumped her hip against his.

"Yes." He nodded.

"It’s slightly unsettling."

"You’ve definitely said that before, B."

"It keeps being true." A laugh bubbled in her throat.

They ate cinnamon-sugar churros on a shaded, wrought-iron bench in the late afternoon heat.

The five of them lounged in the loose, relaxed configuration of a group bonded long enough to discard fake togetherness. They adopted the comfortable, sprawling spread of people who had completely stopped managing their spatial arrangement.

Lindsay rested her head on Marvin’s shoulder. Her legs draped over Dorothy’s lap, bypassing any conscious decision about this intimacy.

Jessica occupied Marvin’s other side. Her shoulder pressed firmly against his arm as she stole bites of his churro. Dorothy and Beyoncé sat sideways on the adjacent bench, positioned close enough for easy, overlapping conversation, their knees touching.

"This is literally the best Sunday." Lindsay exhaled a happy sigh, addressing the sugary air.

"Lindsay, you say that exact phrase every single day." Dorothy adjusted her glasses.

"Well, not every day is actually this good." Lindsay closed her eyes against the sun. "This one, in particular, takes the crown." ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom

"Compared to what?" Jessica offered a playful challenge.

*****

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