Genius Manager: I Can Make All Girls Talented!

Chapter 165 - Voting



The morning after the vote was wrapped in a peculiar silence, not the kind bred by peace or satisfaction, but rather the thick, waiting quiet that comes just before a storm.

The villa, usually alive with lazy laughter and clinking dishes by breakfast time, felt suspended in air—as if everyone was holding their breath, wondering what would happen next.

Darius sat alone on the garden terrace, a mug of black coffee cooling in his hand as his gaze stretched over the pool, the sky beyond it smeared with watercolor shades of gold and pink. Birds chirped faintly in the distance, and the ocean breeze that slid past his skin held a salt-sweetness to it, but none of it reached the inner coil of tension in his gut.

He could feel their stares through the villa walls.

After all, the vote hadn't been random. It had been orchestrated—not by the contestants, but by the producers. A "twist" for ratings, they said, but what they had really done was turn the girls against each other in a way that even he hadn't expected.

They were all safe, for now, but each of them had cast a vote. Each of them had seen who chose who. And there was no going back from that.

Yuna appeared first, wrapped in his black hoodie, her bare legs long and smooth as she padded over to him barefoot. She didn't say anything, just slipped onto the bench beside him, resting her head on his shoulder like it belonged there. It did. But even her quiet presence couldn't quell the tension.

"They're not going to let this go," she murmured eventually, her voice a whisper against the rim of his coffee cup.

"I know."

"Emma looked like she wanted to kill me last night. Avery didn't even look at you. And Alicia—she was crying in the shower. I heard her."

He nodded slowly, fingers tightening around the handle of the cup.

"They think I chose you," he said.

Yuna blinked at him. "Didn't you?"

His expression didn't waver. "I never stopped choosing any of you. That was never the problem. The producers chose this narrative. Now they want me to live in it."

A rustle behind them signaled someone else's arrival. Emma emerged, dressed sharply in a crop top and running shorts, her posture a little too rigid for someone on vacation. Her eyes flicked from Yuna to Darius, then away again, jaw clenched.

"Morning," he offered, neutral.

"Barely," she replied, grabbing a glass of orange juice from the nearby table. "Did you enjoy your little cliffhanger last night?"

Yuna sat up, spine straightening subtly. Darius remained still.

"It wasn't my call," he said.

Emma gave a hollow laugh. "That's the thing, Darius. Nothing is your call anymore. You're just a puppet with a perfect jawline."

He flinched, just slightly. Not enough for Yuna to see. But Emma caught it.

"You know what they said to me last night after the cameras cut? That I needed to be more...marketable. That if I wanted screen time, I should either pick a fight or cry."

Darius looked at her now, fully. Emma never cried. Never.

She downed her juice, wiped her mouth, and walked away.

"They're breaking us from the inside," Yuna whispered, once Emma disappeared into the villa. "You know that, right?"

He did. And it burned.

Later that afternoon, a "special event" was announced.

Everyone was summoned to the firepit. The chairs were arranged deliberately, and the stage was set. A producer with too-white teeth and a clipboard delivered the bombshell.

"From now on, every three days, you will vote for the person you think is the least authentic. The least genuine."

A murmur rippled through the group.

"And the one with the most votes? Will be removed from the villa."

Shock. Then, suspicion. Eyes darted from one face to another, masks cracking just slightly.

Matt was the first to speak. "You mean we're playing survivor now?"

The producer just smiled. "It's still a love show. We just want to see who really deserves it."

They all knew what it meant.

It wasn't just about love anymore.

It was war.

And the battlefield was trust.

***

The villa was quiet—but it was not peaceful.

Silence lingered like smoke after a fire, curling between the furniture and settling heavy in the corners of the great room. The morning sun filtered through gauzy curtains, spilling golden light over the hardwood floors, but even that seemed muted, as though the house itself held its breath.

Darius stood alone by the kitchen island, a steaming mug in his hands. He wasn't drinking it. Just holding it. The ceramic radiated heat that didn't quite reach the chill in his chest.

It had been less than twelve hours since the vote—less than twelve hours since Jasmine had been eliminated.

And yet the echo of her departure still reverberated in the walls.

The remaining girls had scattered like shaken glass. Emma had retreated to the garden, headphones on, eyes hidden behind mirrored sunglasses. Alicia was by the pool, stretching like she could outrun her emotions. Yuna was nowhere to be found. And Avery… Avery had locked herself in the confessional room, ignoring every knock.

Darius wasn't used to this kind of quiet. Not in a house full of cameras.

He heard the soft pad of bare feet behind him. Turning slightly, he saw Aria—one of the newer additions, the so-called "wild card" brought in mid-season to stir things up. She was wrapped in a thin robe, her expression unreadable, her gaze sharp.

"Couldn't sleep?" she asked, her voice low.

He nodded, sipping finally from the mug. "Not really."

Aria stepped closer, stopping just a breath outside his space. "You made the right call last night. Even if no one wants to admit it."

Darius didn't answer immediately. He remembered the vote—the tight expressions, the bitter stares. Jasmine had been the first to storm away when the results were revealed, lips trembling with rage but dignity still barely intact.

"I didn't enjoy it," he said finally.

"That's why it matters," Aria replied, her fingers brushing lightly against his arm. "You care too much. They all do. That's why this house is going to explode."

He looked at her then, really looked. There was something in her eyes—not cruelty, but clarity. She wasn't just playing a game. She was studying the board.

Before he could respond, the front door slammed open.

Emma entered, sunglasses gone, face flushed with heat—not just from the sun. "We need to talk."

Darius set the mug down slowly. "Here or in private?"

"Here," she snapped. "Let the whole damn house hear it."

Footsteps thundered down the stairs. Alicia. Then Yuna appeared in the hallway, towel draped over her shoulders, hair wet. Avery, remarkably, came from the back room, eyes red but alert. The room filled quickly, and the air turned taut with pressure.

"I'm tired of pretending this is just a show," Emma said, planting herself in front of him. "You say we're all important. That we all matter to you. But last night, you chose who stayed—and who was disposable."

"I didn't vote alone," Darius said evenly.

"No, but your voice carries weight. You knew that. And Jasmine wasn't the only one who saw it."

Alicia crossed her arms. "What are you saying, Emma? That any one of us could be next?"

Yuna stepped forward, her expression unreadable. "Maybe we should talk about what we're really afraid of."

Everyone looked at her.

"We're not afraid of being sent home," she said quietly. "We're afraid of being forgotten. Replaced. We came into this thinking we'd share Darius. But sharing only works when it feels fair."

Aria, still by the island, raised an eyebrow. "And who gets to decide what's fair?"

Silence.

Darius exhaled slowly. "You all deserve more than this. More than games and drama and manufactured tension. But I can't change the rules alone."

"Then maybe," Avery said, voice like cracked ice, "you shouldn't be the only one choosing who stays."

The room fell into stunned quiet.

Darius stared at her. "What are you suggesting?"

"A new vote," Avery said. "But this time—we all vote. On each other."

Alicia flinched. Emma's mouth opened, then closed. Even Aria blinked, thrown.

Yuna's expression, however, remained the same. Still. Controlled. "Fine," she said. "Let's do it."

"But let's make it interesting," Aria added. "No immunity. No protected status. Even Darius is fair game."

Gasps echoed. Even the cameras, fixed in silent watch from their high perches, seemed to hold their mechanical breath.

"You want to gamble with everything?" Darius asked, his voice low.

"No," Aria said. "I want to see who's brave enough to keep playing."

The tension exploded into whispered arguments, glances exchanged like daggers, and an energy that refused to settle. The vote would happen tonight.

And no one—not even the producers—knew how it would end.


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