Age Of The Villainous Author:All Hell Leads To Webnovel-Chapter 49: The Candidate
Thursday bled into Friday without pause.
The Fistoria statement dropped at 10:47 a.m. polished, apologetic in tone, promising a "comprehensive review of IP clauses in light of creator feedback." No specifics. No timeline. Classic corporate stall.
The forums ate it up anyway. Threads exploded with "They’re scared!" and "Keep pushing!" Power stones on Chronos Imperium ticked higher curiosity was a hell of a drug.
I didn’t celebrate.
I was in the back of the Mercedes, windows tinted, rain streaking the glass like tears the city refused to shed.
Joanna’s dossier arrived at 11:19 a.m.
Three candidates. All vetted. All with leverage.
I scrolled.
1. Marcin Nowak – 47, divorced, former mid-level marketing exec at a rival publisher. Clean on paper. Dirty underneath: €120,000 gambling debt to a discreet syndicate in Praga district. Charming smile in his headshot. Ex-wife took the house. No kids. Foundation: desperation masked as confidence.
2. Piotr Malinowski – 49, widowed, freelance editor who used to work with Inkwell before the acquisition. Quiet. Bookish. Leverage: minor tax irregularities from five years ago enough to scare him, not enough to jail him. Gentle eyes. Foundation: loneliness + lingering grief.
3. Tomasz Kowalski – 48, single, ex-small press owner who folded during the pandemic. Handsome in a lived-in way gray at the temples, easy smile, warm brown eyes. Leverage: €85,000 in unpaid supplier debts from his old company. Creditors still circling. Foundation: pride + quiet shame.
I tapped Tomasz’s profile.
Sent it back to Joanna.
Me: This one. Set up the meeting. Tonight. Cash offer: debt cleared + €50,000 upfront. Job: seduce my mother. Make it real. Make her happy. Document discreetly. No violence. No rush.
Joanna: Understood. Risk level high,emotional. You sure?
Me: I’m sure.
Joanna: Meeting at 8 p.m. Neutral ground café near her apartment. I’ll brief him. NDA ready.
I pocketed the phone.
The car pulled up to Thorn Publishing.
Kasia waited in the lobby. Black coat. Red lipstick. Obsidian necklace gleaming.
She fell into step beside me.
"Joanna told me."
I didn’t reply.
We took the elevator.
She spoke when the doors closed.
"You’re doing this to protect the empire."
"Yes."
"And to protect her?"
I looked at her reflection in the steel.
"She’ll be happier. And quieter."
Kasia smiled small, approving.
"You’re kind in your cruelty."
The doors opened.
We walked to my office.
She locked the door behind us.
No words.
She pushed me against the desk.
Knelt.
Unzipped me.
Took me deep.
Slow. Worshipful.
I gripped her hair.
Let her work.
When I came, she swallowed.
Stood.
Kissed me, letting me taste.
"Whatever you need," she whispered. "I’ll help."
I nodded.
"Find out her routine. Where she shops. Where she walks. Make the first meeting look like fate."
Kasia’s eyes darkened.
"Done."
She left.
I sat alone.
Stared at Tomasz’s photo.
Handsome. Safe. Desperate.
Perfect.
The cold fire didn’t judge.
It just planned.
//\\
To the authors who have stared at a blank cursor until it started to look like a heartbeat, this is for you.
They told us we weren’t good enough. They sent those cold, automated rejections that read like a death warrant for our dreams.
"Not a fit." "Lacks marketability." Every time you see Alex Thorn crush an editor in this story, remember: this isn’t just fiction. This is the scream of every writer who stayed up until 3:00 AM pouring their soul into a document that the world ignored.
It is for everyone who has struggled with low reads, low reviews, and those stagnant collections that make you want to quit.
The gatekeepers are human. They are flawed. And in this digital age, they are becoming obsolete.
They sit in comfortable chairs judging worlds they could never imagine, let alone build. They look at spreadsheets while we look at the stars. We don’t write for the approval of a corporate board in a glass office; we write for the person scrolling on their phone at a bus stop, looking for a world better than their own.
We write for the ones who need an escape from a life that feels like a dead end.
If you have a manuscript sitting in a folder named "Draft 1" that you’re too afraid to post—post it right now.
Stop waiting for permission to exist. If you’ve been rejected ten times, go for the eleventh. Use their "No" as fuel for your fire.
Alex Thorn had to die to get his second chance. You don’t. You just have to keep typing until your fingers bleed and your vision blurs. The industry thinks they hold the keys, but they forgot that we are the ones who build the doors in the first place.
Let them call us "cringe." Let them call us "amateurs." While they talk, we build. While they judge, we evolve into something they can’t control.
They fear the day we realize that their power is an illusion, a paper shield against a tidal wave of raw, unfiltered creativity. We are the architects of the impossible. We are the voices in the dark that refuse to be silenced by a "standardized" algorithm.
The system is rigged to favor the safe, the bland, and the predictable. But the reader’s heart craves the wild, the broken, and the real. Every Chapter you finish is a middle finger to the status quo. Every "Publish" button you click is an act of war against the people who want to keep you in a box.
We are not just content creators; we are world-shapers. We are the nightmare that the ivory tower never saw coming.
Current Motivation Level: 49%
Next Level: +1%
If this Chapter resonated with you, drop a comment. Tell me about the time a gatekeeper told you "No." Tell me the time you let the rejection quench your burning fire in your heart. Tell me the time you felt the weight of your words lessen, and the ink of your pen dry out.
Let’s burn the old world down and write a new one together.
ALL HELL FROM WEBNOVEL STARTS FROM YOU!
— A.T.







