Urban System in America -
Chapter 214 - 213: Exploring The Mansion
Chapter 214: Chapter 213: Exploring The Mansion
Rex instinctively scanned his surroundings, his eyes darting from elegant face to elegant face, but there was nothing unusual—no suspicious activity, no odd expressions, no one aiming a camera or plotting anything obvious. Everyone looked... normal.
Too normal.
He frowned ever so slightly, swirling the wine in his glass like it might suddenly whisper a secret. I could’ve sworn I felt something... It wasn’t just a glance—it was the kind of stare that made you instinctively clench, like someone was mentally undressing you with thermal vision.
But now? Just the orchestra playing. Laughter. A waiter offering truffle canapés. No obvious culprits.
Still, his rear cheeks felt spiritually threatened.
What he didn’t know—what most people never realized—was that nearly everyone here was an actor in some way or another. Whether they had a Hollywood resume or not was irrelevant. These people, the upper echelon of wealth and influence, had spent their lives perfecting the art of the mask.
They were thespians of life.
Chameleons in designer clothing.
When cameras weren’t flashing, they were performing for each other. In front of the media, they’d cry about social justice and frugality, then fly home in a helicopter to a private jet for a three-day escape on a $400 million yacht—one they might use only twice a year but keep for image’s sake. They’d make documentaries about saving the planet while consuming enough electricity to power a small town. Preach simplicity while wearing $10,000 watches and sipping wine older than their marriages.
That’s why Rex couldn’t catch anyone staring at him directly—they had already mastered the art of watching without being seen. The glance over the shoulder while pretending to admire a painting. The double-take masked as a sip of champagne. The hushed whisper under the guise of a casual toast.
These are the same billionaires who "accidentally" get caught on social media eating instant noodles or shopping in thrift stores. As if the world forgets they own entire islands.
"Billionaire CEO Seen Wearing $30 Hoodie—Internet Applauds Humility!"
"Hollywood Mogul Eats Street Tacos in Downtown LA—Is He Just Like Us?"
Their one dinner party could probably fund a public school for a year. Their fridges had more imported cheese and caviar than a Michelin-star kitchen. Their toilets had LED mood lighting, heating, and voice-activated music systems. Some had bidets so smart they probably held PhDs.
But that? That was the real show.
The Great Relatability Act™.
Convincing everyone they were "just regular folks" while simultaneously sipping unicorn-tear cocktails on yachts longer than most highways.
In this room of dazzling actors, Hollywood bigwigs, and shadowy financiers, there was one truth above all: the most convincing performance wasn’t on-screen. It was right here, in this ballroom, a 24/7 improv theatre where the costume was humility and the script was, "Look, I’m just like you—only ten million times richer."
So not finding the reason behind those phantom stares, Rex downed the rest of his wine in one quick gulp, handed the glass off to a passing waiter like a suave movie spy, and slipped away from the crowd.
Part of him wanted to escape the velvet-gloved jungle of social sharks before someone tried to corner him with a fake smile faker than supermarket sushi and business cards that smelled of a supposedly better future. But if he was being honest, he was also itching to explore. The mansion—this temple of decadence wrapped in designer stucco—was unlike anything he’d ever laid eyes on outside of a luxury magazine he once flipped through while waiting for a $1 haircut.
Sure, he might not be "regular" anymore in the wealth department. But spiritually? Oh, spiritually he was still the broke dreamer who’d zoom into Zillow listings of $40 million estates, mentally furnish them with IKEA furniture, and cry softly into discount ramen packets while telling himself he was just "manifesting."
And now that he was actually inside one? Oh, he was going full tourist mode—with stealth, of course. One part James Bond, two parts broke college kid on a self-guided museum tour.
Rex wanted answers. What actually made a mansion luxurious? Was it the imported marble from a quarry older than history? Was it the ceilings painted by some forgotten descendant of Michelangelo’s apprentice’s neighbor? Or was it simply the vibe—the subtle whisper that said, "Peasants, be gone"?
Either way, he was going to find out. Because if he didn’t poke around now, he’d go home wondering forever what kind of magical mystery ingredients made a house qualify as "opulent."
...Well, besides the bidets smarter than most college valedictorians. And possibly with better job prospects.
As Rex made his way out of the main ballroom and into the vast halls beyond, it quickly became clear that this wasn’t just a party—it was an entire ecosystem of extravagance. The mansion itself wasn’t merely a backdrop, it was the second star of the show. And every hallway, garden path, or glimmering staircase was another spotlight.
As he ventured farther, the sheer scale of the mansion began to unravel before him like a high-budget fantasy map. With over 50,000 square feet of curated luxury, this wasn’t just a house—it was an empire with walls. There were 18 bedrooms and 25 bathrooms.
As for how Rex knew all these obscure-yet-absurdly-specific details? Well, of course, he’d done the only logical thing: he asked one of the many waiters zipping around the estate like black-and-white-clad hummingbirds. And the waiter, perhaps charmed by Rex’s unintentional charisma or simply bored out of his mind, had gleefully spilled the beans like a tour guide with too much caffeine.
According to the overly enthusiastic server, the mansion boasted more than 50,000 square feet of opulence—because apparently 49,000 just wasn’t enough to feel truly empty inside. With 18 bedrooms and 25 bathrooms, Rex couldn’t help but wonder aloud if the owner was either an avid collector of porcelain thrones or simply terrified of having to share a toilet.
"Maybe they just hate walking more than fifteen feet to pee," he muttered as he walked on.
(End of Chapter)
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