Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 121- Arrival for a Cuck Fest

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Chapter 121: Chapter 121- Arrival for a Cuck Fest

He reached over without particular ceremony and put his hand on Marga’s ass.

Not subtle. Not the way you’d touch someone privately. The full, open, proprietary grip of a man demonstrating ownership to an audience, his fingers pressing into the flesh of her through the wet bikini bottom, his thumb pressing against the curve of her hip.

Marga didn’t flinch. She’d been here before. She smiled at the clients with her professional smile and let him.

The executives laughed.

Not unkindly — the male laughter of a shared joke, of a world in which this was simply what happened, a confirmation that Alexander was their kind of man after all.

"She’s available?" one of them — the younger one, Hendrikson’s son, barely thirty — said.

He was smiling. Half-joking. Testing.

Alexander’s hand stayed on Marga’s ass. His smile shifted slightly — not angry, but precise. Defining territory without drama.

"Not to rent," he said. "She’s mine." A beat, the pause of a man enjoying his next line. "Now, my wife is another matter. ’She’ could use some variety." He chuckled. "Though I suspect even you gentlemen would find her a difficult occasion."

More laughter. The client with the pen finally picked it up again.

The deal was done in the way deals like this are actually done — not when the numbers aligned, but when the men at the table had looked each other over and decided they were the same species.

The three executives stood. Handshakes. The senior one gave Marga a long, last look that she absorbed without expression. Then they turned, filing back toward the house in the unhurried way of people who had somewhere better to be.

Alexander watched them go.

His hand was still on Marga’s ass.

He patted it once. Fond. Satisfied. The hand of a man reviewing an investment that had performed.

"Did you see?" he said, not looking at her, still watching the retreating backs of the executives. "Your face alone signed that contract."

Marga turned. Her wet hair fell over one shoulder. Her dark eyes were on his profile — calculating, quiet, the private face behind the professional one.

"By the way," she said. Her voice was light. Conversational. A woman bringing up logistics, nothing more. "Why not just get rid of your wife?"

Alexander’s eyes came back to her.

The question sat between them for a moment. Just a moment.

He knew what she was asking. Had known for a while she was asking it, in the way she held eye contact a second too long when Veronica’s name came up, in the way she’d rearranged his schedule to make certain calls happen in empty rooms.

He wasn’t angry.

He was — interested. In the neatness of it.

In the fact that she wanted this, and that her wanting it aligned so precisely with what he’d been turning over privately for months.

"Indeed," he said.

He reached for his phone.

"I should kill that bitch." His thumb moved to his contacts — a number with no name, stored in a format that didn’t survive discovery. "I don’t even like her face anymore."

The phone heated.

Not warmly. Not gradually. It went from room temperature to ’burning’ in the space of half a second — the kind of heat that fused things, that made the phone feel suddenly welded to his palm — and he cried out before he’d registered what was happening.

"’WHAT—’"

He dropped it. The phone hit the marble tile and left a small scorch mark. His hand was red, the skin across his palm already beginning to blister.

"’AAGHH—MARGA—WHAT IS—’"

He looked at her.

She was looking at her hand.

Or rather — she was looking at something that had hit her chest without his seeing it. A pulse of force, invisible, that had knocked her back one step. She stumbled, caught a lounger, stared at the pool with wide eyes and an expression that was no longer professional.

"’Something hit me—’"

"’What are you doing?’" Alexander’s voice pitched high as he clutched his burnt hand. "’Help me — call someone — get—’"

"’What a hassle.’"

The voice came from the water.

Or from the air above it. Or from nowhere with the specific resonance of something that had decided where to appear and was simply doing so.

Alexander spun.

The woman stood at the pool’s edge. She hadn’t come from the house — he would have seen. She hadn’t risen from the water. She simply ’was’, the way lightning is simply present after the fact, having arrived between one moment and the next.

Red hair. His wife’s red hair, hanging loose and slightly wild. Her body — and she was not dressed, or was wearing something so minimal it barely registered — was ’there’, present in the specific way of a woman who has stopped managing how she appears and is simply occupying space. Her breasts moved slightly with her breathing. Her hips, wider than fashion approved of, wider than Alexander had ever appreciated, stood steady on the poolside marble like she’d been standing there for hours.

She looked — different.

Alexander had spent twelve years looking at Veronica and seeing furniture. He’d been consistent about it, had refined the perception until it was automatic. She was useful and dull and slightly irritating and present.

This was not that.

Something behind her eyes had caught fire. Literally — there was a faint crimson glow at the iris line, barely visible in the afternoon light but present. Her jaw was set. Her posture was — easy, in the way of something that no longer needed to pretend at anything.

She ruffled her hair once with one hand.

Like she’d just arrived home.

Marga stumbled back. Her heel caught the edge of a lounger and she caught herself against the pool railing, her wet hair whipping around, eyes enormous.

"’What—’" She looked between the woman and Alexander. "’What is she—’"

"’VERONICA.’" Alexander’s voice climbed. His burnt hand curled against his chest. "’What the fuck are you doing here? How did you—’"

"’It’s your penis that is small.’"

The words were delivered in Veronica’s exact boardroom voice. Flat. Factual. With the specific contempt of someone recalling a detail they’d tried to forget for a long time.

Alexander’s face moved through several expressions quickly. Shock. Then — because he was Alexander — rage. Because rage was familiar and contempt from his wife was not something he had frameworks for.

"’You loose-pussied bitch—’" He took a step toward her. "’You think you can walk onto my property and—’"

She snapped her fingers.

The fire appeared at his hand. Not the phone this time — his flesh. The skin across his knuckles ignited with a controlled, surgical precision, flame that didn’t spread but existed at a specific intensity that the nerve endings in his hand translated directly into agony.

He dropped to one knee.

The scream came out of him before he could stop it — raw, high, the sound of a man discovering that his body can override everything else he’s built on top of it.

"’AAAAGHHHH—STOP—STOP IT—’"

He was on both knees now. His expensive trousers on the marble. His eyes streaming. The fire held at his hand — contained, precise, ’educational’.

Marga was flat against the pool railing.

Her professional composure was simply gone, replaced with the twenty-four-year-old underneath it who had not signed up for this specific situation.

Her hands gripped the railing with the white-knuckle certainty of someone deciding they would not fall in the pool.

"L-Lady Veronica... ’I’m sorry—’" she started. "’I didn’t know — I didn’t think she could — please — I’m just—’"