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My Milf Conqueror System-Chapter 7: Survival
I stayed in her office longer than I should have. The silence stretched, heavy and oppressive, as she evaluated me.
I wasn’t used to this kind of attention—intense, calculating, silent. Normally, people looked right through me. Now, her eyes were dissecting every line of my face, every tremor in my hands.
I reminded myself to breathe. Keep calm. Stay steady.
"You have a bold way of showing up," she said finally. Her tone wasn’t hostile, but it wasn’t warm either. It was the tone of a woman deciding whether to sign a contract or shred it.
"I didn’t see the point in waiting for an invitation that would never come," I replied.
Her eyes narrowed slightly. "Most people come in here pretending. Flattering. Trying to win me over with charm. You... just laid it out."
"Charm didn’t work," I said honestly. "So I tried facts."
She circled the table slowly, her heels clicking against the marble floor. "You found a discrepancy in the Singapore deal. Why should I believe a college student understands international mergers? Why should I listen to a... nobody?"
I met her gaze steadily. "Because I noticed what your entire analyst team ignored. I’m top of my class in macroeconomics, Sofia. I don’t just look at numbers; I look at patterns. Your competitor isn’t just hiring lawyers; they’re buying silence. That’s why you missed it."
Her lips twitched—almost a smirk. "You checked my team’s work?"
"I checked everyone’s work."
She tilted her head, testing my nerve. This was the real test. Not the System, not the Charisma stats. This was raw human judgment.
"You’re reckless," she said finally. "And reckless people usually get burned."
"And cautious people usually get blindsided," I countered.
She studied me for a long moment, glancing at the clock on the wall, then back to me.
"You’re intriguing, Jake. But intrigue doesn’t close deals. And it doesn’t save companies."
I nodded slowly. I understood. Attraction alone wouldn’t win this. She needed to know I was an asset, not a liability.
"I’m not asking you to trust me yet," I said, keeping my voice even. "I’m asking you to use me. If I’m wrong, you lose nothing but five minutes of your time. If I’m right, I just saved you millions."
She leaned back against the heavy oak table, crossing her arms. The air between us crackled with unspoken tension.
"Fine," she said softly. "You want to prove you belong here? You have twenty-four hours."
My heart skipped a beat. "To do what?"
"To fix it," she said, her voice sharpening. "If my competitor is moving on Singapore, they have a weak point. Find it. Bring me a counter-strategy by tomorrow night."
She pushed off the table and walked to the door, holding it open.
"If you deliver, we talk. If you don’t... I never want to see you again."
The words weren’t an invitation. They were a gauntlet thrown across the floor.
I swallowed hard. The System buzzed faintly in my mind—no skill unlocks, no boosts, just the quiet, crushing pressure of the countdown.
[Mission Update] Objective: Prove Your Value. Time Remaining: 24 Hours.
I walked past her, smelling her perfume, feeling the heat radiating from her.
"I’ll see you tomorrow," I said.
She didn’t smile. "Don’t be late."
As the door clicked shut behind me, I realized that for the first time, this wasn’t about seduction anymore.
It was about survival.







