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Chapter 16 - 16-The Ride — Death, RH Problems & Luxury Hotels

The Ride — Death, RH Problems & Luxury Hotels

The soft purr of the Bugatti La Voiture Noire filled the Malibu night as I cruised down the Pacific Coast Highway, city lights reflecting off the polished black curves of the car. The dashboard gleamed with cosmic tech, displays only I could read — timelines, soul counts, divine memos popping like emails.

I pressed the earpiece. "Gabriel, you there?"

A moment of static, then the voice of the most annoyingly punctual celestial being cut through.

"Loud and clear, Daniel. Status update?"

I chuckled, shifting gears, the car responding like silk. "Status? Chaos partially averted. Stark's still breathing. But we got a problem."

"Define 'problem,' Death 2.0." Gabriel's tone was pure military — probably polishing his wings as we spoke.

I adjusted my sunglasses — even at night, gotta keep the style. "Manual says Tony Stark dies soon. But last I checked, his official death's after he pulls the Thanos snap. You know, Avengers, Infinity Stones, all that jazz."

"Cross-referencing…" I could practically hear Gabriel typing on some divine tablet. "Confirmed. Anthony Stark's death is scheduled post-Infinity War Events, Earth-199999 timeline. You intercepted early protocol?"

I laughed. "It popped up while I was sipping cosmic espresso, Gabriel. Your department's slipping."

"Impossible," he shot back, but his voice wavered. "Wait… cross-dimensional HR flagged a clerical override. Timeline corruption suspected. Possible multiversal bleed."

I groaned, taking the highway exit into the heart of the city. "Bleed? Gabriel, you letting interns mess with sacred files again?"

"We've been… short-staffed," he admitted, sheepish.

I shook my head, accelerating. Skyscrapers loomed ahead, neon signs promising luxury, sin, and overpriced cocktails. The city pulsed with life — perfect for laying low… or living high.

"You know what?" I smirked. "Forget stressing tonight. Let's enjoy this world before the next cosmic screw-up."

"You proposing downtime?"

"Damn right I am." I tapped the console — the Bugatti's AI pulled hotel listings. "Five-star suite. Rooftop bar. Maybe a few mortal distractions. You and me, partner."

Gabriel hesitated. "Angels don't—"

"Gabriel, I'm Death 2.0 driving a 20-million-dollar car with infinite cosmic authority. You're my RH handler stuck cleaning Heaven's paperwork while I make executive decisions. Tonight? You're clocking out."

Silence… then a reluctant sigh. "One night. No unauthorized soul collection. And I'm still reporting this conversation."

"Of course you are," I grinned, pulling up to the Eclipse Hotel — the tallest, shiniest, most absurdly opulent building in the city.

Valets scrambled as I parked the Bugatti at the entrance. My door lifted like the gates of destiny. I stepped out, tailored black suit fitting like it was woven from shadows, eyes glowing faint cosmic blue.

Gabriel materialized beside me — trench coat, suit, wing tips polished like mirrors. He looked half-exasperated, half-curious.

"Let's party," I declared.

As we entered, the lobby shimmered with marble floors, crystal chandeliers, fountains pouring champagne. Guests whispered, eyes drawn to us — death incarnate and HR's poster boy strolling in like gods slumming it.

Reception barely blinked when I flashed an American Express Black Card, the name: D. Mortis 2.0.

"Presidential suite," I ordered. "Rooftop view. Private bar."

Keys handed over in seconds — perks of omnipotent charisma.

In the elevator, Gabriel adjusted his tie, side-eyeing me. "Enjoy it while you can. You've got thirty days before the next mandatory target."

I leaned back, watching the floors tick by. "Let's hope the next 'clerical error' doesn't have me reaping Spider-Man early."

Gabriel paled. "Don't joke. That triggered four multiversal wars last time."

I snorted. "Relax. Tonight's for whiskey, skyline views, and pretending we're not babysitting a fragile reality."

The elevator dinged — penthouse level. We stepped into opulence: floor-to-ceiling windows, velvet furniture, stars reflecting off glass walls, the city sprawling below like a map of mortal playgrounds.

I poured two drinks, tossing one to Gabriel.

"To Death 2.0," I toasted. "And to fixing your HR messes."

Gabriel clinked glasses, resigned but smirking. "And to you not vaporizing the timeline by accident."

I laughed, cosmic energy crackling under my skin, eyes glinting with power barely contained.

"The night's young," I said. "And the universe? Ours to mess with."

We drank, the stars watching — destiny delayed, chaos brewing, but for now?

We lived.

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