Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 138- Returning from Hotel
The cemetery gate. The path toward the estate’s secondary exit. His bare feet on the wet grass and then the gravel, silent, unhurried.
Marga fell in behind him.
She was watching the two women’s bodies on his shoulders — the way Veronica’s breasts moved slightly with each of his steps, the jiggle of the flesh at her hip and thigh, Elena’s hair hanging down his back in a wet dark curtain. She was watching and she was thinking and the thinking was doing the thing it always did when it was in proximity to something that rewrote available categories.
She nearly walked into his shoulder when he stopped.
Victor’s body.
In the mud where it had fallen. Still and open-eyed, the blood dried at his nose, the ruined expensive suit absorbing the rain.
Marga looked at it.
Then looked at Raven, who was also looking at it, with the expression of a man reviewing something he’d set down and deciding whether it needs tidying.
He didn’t do anything.
The ground did.
It happened without dramatics, without sound effects, without the visual language of something supernatural announcing itself. Victor’s body simply began to sink. Not falling — not dropped into a hole that appeared. The earth beneath him softened the way earth doesn’t, the mud becoming something with no structural integrity, and Victor’s kneeling form descended into it as if returning to something it had been borrowed from. The soil closed around him progressively. His knees first. His lap. His chest. His open, exposed eyes.
Gone.
The mud smoothed.
The rain hit the cleared patch of ground and ran the same way it ran everywhere else. No mark. No disturbance. The scattered contents of his suitcase remained — the vibrators in the wet grass, the restraints, the cracked lubricant still leaking — but the man who’d packed them was simply no longer there.
Marga stared at the empty ground.
For five full seconds she just stared at it, her tablet held against her chest, her lips slightly parted.
"’Come on,’" Raven said. Already walking. "’Follow me.’"
The limousine was where it had been left.
Black, long, idling at the estate’s secondary gate with the patient certainty of expensive things that have been told to wait and are accustomed to doing so. The chauffeur was a woman — mid-forties, silver at her temples, the immaculate composure of someone whose professional training covered all anticipated situations.
She stepped out to open the door.
Saw her mistress — unconscious, bite-marked, covered in cemetery mud, being carried on the shoulder of a man she didn’t know.
Saw Elena in equivalent condition on his other shoulder.
Saw Marga behind him, tablet in hand, expression of someone who has accepted a great deal of new information in a short period and is still actively filing it.
The chauffeur stood with the door open and her eyes down and did not ask.
Raven loaded both women into the limousine.
Not roughly. He arranged them on the long rear seat with something that was close to care — Veronica against the side, her head on the armrest, her hair cleared from her face with one brief pass of his hand. Elena beside her, the torn dress pulled down to maintain some technical level of covering. Both of them still breathing, both still somewhere between unconscious and the surface.
He took the seat facing them.
The partition was up. The chauffeur knew better than to need directions.
Raven held his hand out toward Marga.
She sat across from him and opened her tablet.
"’Someone specific,’" he said.
"’Go ahead.’"
"’Avriana Menhante. Las Vegas.’"
Marga’s fingers stopped moving.
She looked up.
"’What?’"
"’Avriana Menhante,’" he said again. The exact same delivery. Patient, not irritated.
Marga blinked. "’You mean the casino queen?’"
He looked at her the way he looked at information he found interesting. Not surprise — he didn’t surprise easily — but the specific attention of confirming a variable.
"’You know her.’"
"’Everyone who’s worked adjacent to large-money circles for the last four years knows who she is.’" Marga’s fingers moved across her tablet, pulling records. "’She runs the Menhante properties — three casinos in the Vegas corridor, two boutique hotels attached. Not the biggest names on the strip. Not the Wynn, not the Bellagio. But they’re hers — she ’owns’ them, not just manages them, inherited from her father but turned a sixty percent profit increase in three years, which is not something the inheritance crowd usually manages.’"
She pulled a profile photo. Turned the tablet briefly.
He looked.
’Thirty. Dark hair. The face of a woman who has learned that her face is a tool and has decided to use it deliberately rather than apologetically. Dark eyes. The posture of someone who has walked into rooms that didn’t expect to be walked into by her and has gotten comfortable with the reaction.’
He looked for about two seconds and looked away.
"’Continue,’"
"’She’s — let me pull the current data—’" Marga’s fingers moved. "’Currently thirty. Inherited the properties at twenty-six when her father had a cardiac event — clean inheritance, no legal disputes, no siblings in the picture. She’s since restructured the management, brought in her own team, pushed the boutique angle over volume.’" She scrolled. "’Publicly: she attends the circuit. Wine events, charity galas, the social calendar that comes with money of that scale. Privately: our data on her is thinner. She keeps herself behind PR properly. A few engagements that went nowhere. No current partner of record.’"
She looked up.
"’She’s not an obvious target, if that’s your goal. She’s insulated. Good legal infrastructure, loyal staff, and she’s not naive — she’s not the type who walks into rooms that haven’t been checked first.’"
Raven said nothing.
"’I’m not saying it’s impossible,’" Marga continued, because his silence had the quality of someone waiting for the rest of the sentence, "’just that she’s built her life specifically to not be accessible to people she hasn’t vetted. Unlike most of the — the women in your current—’" she glanced at the seat across, at the two sleeping bodies of Veronica and Elena, mud-streaked and marked and thoroughly present — "’’situation’, she won’t simply be in a room you can walk into.’"
"’She’ll be in a room I can walk into,’" he said.
The certainty in it was not arrogance.
It was the same quality everything he said had — the statement of a man describing the future the way you’d describe a place you’ve already been. Not threat. Not posturing. Just fact, wearing the clothing of a sentence.
Marga looked at him for a moment.
Then looked back at her tablet and pulled deeper on Avriana Menhante’s profile, because that was the appropriate response.
"’I’ll get you a full dossier. Her current location, her schedule, the casino calendars, her personal staff structure. It’ll take a few hours for the deep pull but the surface data I can have in twenty minutes.’"
"’Good.’"
He looked out the window.
The city moved past in the dark and the rain. The same city that had Alexander Dalton’s face on every screen last night now had ’Lustre’ in every headline.
He could feel the shape of it — the way information traveled, the way panic settled into systems and made people reach for categories that didn’t fit.
They were calling it terrorism.
They were calling it a supernatural event, which was the more honest word, which was the word they’d resist using until they couldn’t.
They were calling him everything except what he was.







