Cherreads

Chapter 133 - CH : 129 You Should Expect More

About the date at McDonald's, well, she didn't even think he would know what McDonald's was considering the kind of wealthy family he comes from. She thought he would act like some sophisticated adult, which is why she asked it. It had nothing to do with the location and everything to do with the mindset.

As for her and Jay-Z meeting at 15, I'm not sure where you got that information from. From my research, they met after she turned 16, though I'm not completely certain about it. After all, I only have access to public information. What happened privately is anybody's guess the guy is full on PDF.

We require 23 additional Power Stone donors, 4 more reviews, and 900 more collections 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

******

He let her.

He didn't make a joke. Neither of them acknowledged the sudden, intense physical contact. But his long fingers firmly curled around hers, providing an unbreakable anchor of safety. She didn't let go until the ride was completely over and the lap bars released.

Between the adrenaline spikes of the rides, they walked. They moved through the park's wide, sun-baked pathways, walking past the sickly-sweet smell of funnel cake stands, the flashing lights of game stalls, and the architectural theatrics of a theme park doing its best impression of being somewhere else. The afternoon light was flooding everything with the heavy gold of a season that hasn't quite accepted that it is ending yet.

As they strolled, Marvin suddenly paused in front of a brightly colored game stall.

It was a classic ring-toss game, with glass bottles arranged in a tight pyramid configuration. The plastic rings provided to the players had been deliberately, sized to make the probability of success virtually impossible.

"This one," Marvin declared softly, stepping up to the counter.

"Marvin, stop," Beyoncé laughed, grabbing his arm lightly. "You don't have to win me everything in the state of Texas."

Though she said the words, her dark eyes were already drifting upward, looking at the prizes displayed along the top tier of the stall. They were oversized, ridiculously large stuffed animals in various neon colors—the kind of massive plush toys that occupied a significant portion of a teenager's bedroom and served primarily as a towering monument to the day they were won.

"I know I don't *have* to," Marvin purred smoothly, pulling a crisp twenty-dollar bill from his money clip and handing it to the bored teenage operator. He examined the ring-toss configuration with the exact same focused attention he had given the arcade claw machines, instantly reading the geometry and calculating the required trajectory. "That is precisely the point."

He selected his target: a massive, honey-colored stuffed bear occupying the highest difficult tier of prizes. He had made the selection after a glance at Beyoncé that lasted approximately one and a half seconds. She had looked at the bear for exactly one second. That was more than enough data for the Incubus.

He won it in exactly four throws.

The plastic rings didn't bounce. They landed with a series of dull *thuds*, settling perfectly over the necks of the required glass bottles.

The stall operator stared at the rings, then stared at the boy in the tailored blazer. The teenager handed the massive bear over with the slightly deflated, confused expression of someone who understood they had just lost the economic exchange, but couldn't identify exactly how they had been swindled.

The honey-colored bear was nearly as large as Beyoncé herself. She carried it for approximately thirty seconds down the midway before it became abundantly apparent that navigating a crowded theme park with an enormous stuffed animal was logistically exhausting.

Marvin smoothly took it from her without a single word of complaint. He carried the massive bear under one arm with the aristocratic composure of a man carrying a very large, absurd tribute through his kingdom. It was the exact kind of visual image that should have been ridiculous, and yet, because it was Marvin, it somehow looked incredibly cool.

"You're going to have to explain all of this to your parents eventually," Beyoncé noted, walking beside him, watching him carry the bear with a mixture of amusement and deep curiosity.

"Explain the bear?"

"Explain *all* of it," Beyoncé corrected, waving her hand. "The armored car. The driver. The arcade domination. The fact that you just dropped a hundred-dollar bill at a game stall. Where exactly does a twelve-year-old—"

"Almost," Marvin smoothly corrected.

"—almost boy get this kind of..." She stopped, searching for the right vocabulary word that didn't sound crass.

"Resources?" Marvin offered helpfully.

"I was going to say *everything,*" she said quietly, her eyes searching his profile. "Just... everything. You don't live like a normal kid."

Marvin considered this for a moment as they walked. The massive bear remained tucked under his arm, the afternoon gold feeling incredibly warm and intimate around them.

"I work, Beyoncé," Marvin said, his voice dropping the playful purr, adopting a tone of serious, adult candor. "I have always worked. And I am simply fortunate enough to be extraordinarily good at things that people will pay significant, astronomical amounts of money for."

He glanced at her sideways, his blue eyes locking onto hers.

"Your father manages you," Marvin continued, speaking the language of her world. "Your family has invested years of their lives, and thousands of dollars, into building the foundation of what you are currently becoming. You understand that business model. You understand the grind."

​She was quiet for a long moment, the noise of the theme park fading into the background.

"Yeah," she said softly. "I do."

​"Then you must also understand that in this industry, biological age is vastly less relevant than raw output," Marvin stated, his voice carrying the cold, undeniable truth of the Hollywood machinery. "The industry does not care how old you are. It does not care if you are twelve, sixteen, or sixty. It only cares what you can produce, and what you can sell. A hit record is a hit record."

​A pause hung between them. "You know that reality better than most adults."

​Beyoncé nodded slowly. There was something profound shifting in her face—an expression he recognized instantly. It was the beautiful expression of someone encountering a structural thought they had been circling for years without quite landing on, and suddenly feeling the landing gear touch down.

​"Yeah," she said again, her voice much quieter, filled with sudden, intense emotions. "I really do."

​They walked in comfortable silence for a few minutes. It was its own kind of relationship milestone—the rare silence that arrives between two people when the exhausting performance of conversation has been permanently replaced by something infinitely easier and far more intimate.

​"Marvin," she said softly, her footsteps slowing to a halt on the sun-dappled path.

He paused, turning to meet her gaze. "Yes?"

"Thank you. For today." She offered the words without the usual polished veneer. There was no calculated PR smile, no rehearsed grace—just a raw, quiet honesty stripped of all its social armor.

"I just... I wasn't expecting any of this," Beyoncé admitted, her eyes dropping to the pavement for a fleeting second before lifting back to his.

Marvin studied her in the fading glow of the afternoon. Bathed in that rich Texas twilight, she looked like a portrait painted for this exact lingering hour. The golden sunlight caught the warm tones of her skin and the full, expressive curves of her face, illuminating the breathtaking beauty of a girl who had finally allowed herself to be completely, unhesitatingly happy.

"You should expect more," Marvin murmured, his voice laced with the quiet gravity of a prophecy. "Of everything."

He closed the distance between them. His aura—that thrumming Incubus energy—unfurled around her, not as a weapon, but as a velvet cloak. It enveloped her in a thick, protective warmth, entirely alien to the rigid, demanding world she inhabited.

"You have a heartbreaking habit of being grateful for things that are simply your birthright," Marvin told her, holding her gaze with a magnetic, unwavering pull. "Hear me well: you are worthy of love without any conditions. You do not have to purchase affection with flawless high notes or perfect choreography. Your soul is not a commodity waiting to be traded for a fleeting nod of approval."

He was looking straight through the iron-clad defenses she had worn since childhood. In her world, a parent's warmth was a trophy won on a stage. If she ran the track and hit every pitch, she earned a smile; if her voice cracked, she earned silence. That endless pursuit of perfection had built a beautiful, gilded cage, trapping her in a cycle of endlessly proving she deserved to be cherished.

"You carry too much weight for someone so young," Marvin continued, his tone a steady, grounding anchor. "You are a queen. You should expect the world to lay the crown at your feet, rather than thanking them for the privilege of looking at it. Remember that."

Beyoncé blinked, the air catching sharply in her chest.

For someone whose entire foundation rested on pleasing handlers and bending to the breaking point to maintain an illusion, the mere concept of unconditional value was earth-shattering. No one had ever told her she was enough simply for existing. The profound realization that she could step off the treadmill—that she didn't have to bleed for love—struck her young heart like a sudden tidal wave. It fractured the flawless mask she wore, laying bare the exhausted child beneath who yearned to simply rest.

A wave of emotion washed across her features: a jolt of shock, a quiet trembling of thought, and finally, a deep, breathless relief. He wasn't just offering her an afternoon of fun; he was granting her the one sanctuary her father never provided—the permission to just breathe.

She looked up into his bottomless blue eyes, feeling a rushing tide of awe and deep affection swell within her. Under the shelter of his gaze, the crushing weight of her perfectionism began to dissolve very slowly, leaving her beautifully, completely speechless.

"Okay," Beyoncé whispered, the single word carrying the solemn weight of a vow.

"Okay," Marvin echoed softly, a devastatingly beautiful, dimpled smile warming his flawless features.

---

The colossal Ferris wheel was situated at the furthest edge of the park, positioned with the accidental but genius of theme park architects who inherently understood that the most breathtaking views should require a deliberate journey to reach them.

They arrived at the loading platform just as the afternoon was making its final, dramatic commitment to the evening. The harsh, baking heat of the day was finally breaking, and the light was rapidly dropping from a blinding, harsh gold down to the deeper, richer amber that precedes the pink and orange of a Southern sunset. The sky above them was beginning to perform the kind of staggering, chromatic display that only ever happens in places with enough flat, uninterrupted horizon to truly let the colors bleed.

Marvin offered his hand, guiding Beyoncé into the gently swaying metal gondola with the practiced grace of a Victorian gentleman helping a lady into a carriage. He effortlessly hoisted the honey-colored stuffed bear inside after her, wedging it securely into the far corner of the bench.

The metal safety bar locked into place with a *clank*.

The car rocked gently as it began to rise. It was just the two of them, isolated in a small, suspended bubble of metal and fiberglass, with the plush bear sitting opposite them like a silent chaperone.

Beyoncé sat with her knees pressed neatly together, her small purse resting in her lap. For the first few moments of the ascent, she didn't speak. She simply watched the bustling, neon-lit park physically fall away beneath them.

The chaotic sounds of the world below rose with them for a moment, and then slowly, beautifully receded as the wheel climbed higher into the atmosphere. The mechanical churn of the roller coasters, the distant, pulsing noise of the arcade music, the screaming crowds—it all faded into a dull, insignificant hum.

And then, as their gondola reached the very top of the massive wheel's arc, the rotation temporarily paused to load passengers at the bottom.

At the apex, there was a strange, suspended, and entirely quiet. It was the kind of silence that only exists at extreme heights, born of momentary stillness and the sheer vastness of the atmosphere.

Houston spread out endlessly beyond the park's borders. The flat, sprawling grid of the city, its endless streets and rooftops, were all turning a brilliant, glowing amber in the dropping light. The sky was enormous above it all, vast in the way that only Texas skies are enormous, entirely without the interruption of mountains or topography to break the majestic view.

The sun was sitting low and serious on the horizon, doing the magical thing it does over flat land when it truly means it—painting the scattered clouds in thick, brilliant layers of color that transitioned seamlessly from burning orange at the horizon, up through shades of bruised rose and violet, and finally fading into the first, tentative, dark blue of the coming night directly above them.

Beyoncé was completely quiet, looking out through the open sides of the gondola. Her hands had slowly relaxed in her lap, the nervous tension of Marvin words before, completely bleeding out of her muscles.

Marvin did not look at the sunset. He looked entirely at her.

Her profile in the dying amber light was nothing short of extraordinary. The golden hour caught the rich tones of her skin, highlighting the elegant slope of her jaw and the dark, sweeping curve of her eyelashes. She looked beautiful, entirely stripped of the armor she had worn at the home.

"This is my favorite part of today," Beyoncé said softly, her voice barely above a whisper, afraid to break the fragile silence of the sky.

"I know," Marvin replied, his velvety baritone resonating warmly in the small space between them.

She turned her head to look at him, her dark eyes catching the reflection of the setting sun. "How do you know?"

*****

I can't reply to your comments but don't let that stop keep commenting. My Discord link is in my profile and also here.

Join my Patreon

GodofPleasure

(dot)com/GodofPleasure

More Chapters