Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 139- Hotel Room
He’d let them have their categories for a while.
Veronica shifted on the seat.
A small motion. Her shoulder rolling slightly, her hand moving to find a surface and finding the seat leather. Her eyelids moved. The marks on her collarbone pulsed once, warm.
He watched her without turning his head.
She wasn’t fully back yet. An hour, maybe. The body needed time after what it had been through. He wasn’t concerned.
Elena was deeper under.
The first time had a way of doing that — not just the physical exhaustion but the internal reorganization of it, the brain processing something that had changed several of its foundational assumptions and needing the downtime to rebuild the architecture.
She’d be different when she woke up.
Not the managing face and the correct expressions and the eleven months of performance. Something underneath that, which had been pressed against the surface tonight without quite breaking through. He’d seen it in her eyes before she went under — the specific look of someone who has had something taken from them that they didn’t know they wanted taken.
He’d give her time with it.
Marga looked up from her tablet.
"’Can I ask something?’"
"’Go ahead.’"
"’The Victor thing.’" She paused, choosing the words. "’The transmigration. The other world. You said you’d seen it before.’" Another pause. Shorter. "’That’s not a normal thing for a person to have seen.’"
"’No,’" he agreed.
"’So what are you.’"
He looked at her.
She held the look. She’d decided to ask the question and she was going to see it through — he could see that in her, the specific stubbornness of a person who has accepted that they’re already in over their head and has decided that information is still worth acquiring regardless.
"’Someone who’s done this before,’" he said. "’In a different context. A different world. And came back with the memory of it.’"
Marga looked at him.
"’Came back,’" she said. "’From a different world.’"
"’Yes.’"
She processed that. He watched her do it — the rapid internal mechanism of a woman who’d spent her career assessing information for utility, now applying that mechanism to something it hadn’t been designed for.
"’And the women,’" she said carefully. "’The bloodlines. The powers. That’s — that’s what you’re doing. Collecting.’"
"’Building,’" he said. "’There’s a distinction.’"
She looked at the two bodies on the seat.
At him.
Her tongue moved briefly across her lower lip.
"’And me,’" she said.
She said it the way she said things she’d already decided — not a question, a statement with a question mark placed at the end of it for his benefit rather than hers.
"’What about you,’" he said.
"’Where do I fit.’"
"’You already know where you fit.’" He glanced at the mark at her collarbone — the one Veronica had put there, that he’d since claimed the territory of. "’You’re useful. Intelligent. Ambitious in the specific way that’s actually useful as opposed to the kind that creates friction.’" He paused. "’And you’re patient enough to do the work that matters. Most people aren’t. They want the product without the process.’"
Marga absorbed that.
It wasn’t what she’d been asking, precisely. She’d been asking about the other thing — the bloodlines, the powers, the specific physical transaction by which Veronica had become what she was. She’d been circling it for hours. Since the pool. Since she’d watched fire come from Veronica’s fingers and a bullet turn to ash and a woman she’d been employed by transform into something she hadn’t been.
She hadn’t asked directly.
She didn’t ask directly now either.
She went back to her tablet.
Smart, he thought. Still playing the long game. Still watching and gathering rather than reaching. She’d ask when she was ready and not before. That was the quality that made her different from the others.
’’’
The hotel was the kind of hotel that didn’t have a sign visible from the street.
The ones that needed signs were for people who might not already know where they were going. This one’s clientele knew. The building communicated itself through architecture alone — clean lines, quiet materials, the specific absence of anything trying to impress you, which was its own form of impression.
The limousine pulled through the private entrance.
The chauffeur came around to open the door.
Raven stepped out.
Reached back in.
Carried both women the same way he’d carried them from the cemetery — one on each shoulder, their bodies draped across him, his hands at their thighs. The chauffeur stood with the car door open and her eyes at the middle distance and did not require anything from the situation.
The entrance foyer. Marble. Low lighting. A desk attendant who looked up and then looked at the two unconscious women on the man’s shoulders and then looked back at the desk with the trained composure of someone who had been briefed on the kinds of guests this establishment received.
Marga was behind him, tablet in hand, and the elevator at the far end opened as they approached it.
He’d snapped his fingers.
She’d noticed.
The elevator, the room, the door — all of it arranged itself around him the way things arranged themselves around him, the keycard system yielding the same way locks yielded when he walked past them with intent. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺
The room was large.
A suite. Bed like a landscape, white sheets, the clinical luxury of spaces that cost enough to feel like nowhere in particular while being specifically, deliberately comfortable. Floor-to-ceiling windows with the city spread beyond them, the rain still visible on the glass.
He set Veronica on the bed.
Elena beside her.
Both of them immediately absorbed into the white sheets, the mud transferring from their skin to the fabric in a way that would horrify the housekeeping staff in the morning. Their bodies settling into the specific, total relaxation of the genuinely unconscious.
He stood and looked at them for a moment.
Veronica’s breathing was steady. Her marks were settling from red to pink. Her hair spread across the pillow in a dark rust wave. The phoenix mark at her collarbone was dim and steady, pulsing at the rate of her heart.
Elena’s face — turned sideways, her lips slightly apart, her lashes against her cheek — looked younger like this. Without the performance of it. Just her face, the real one.
He looked at them with the look of a man reviewing assets. Not cold. Just — the look of someone who has built something and is confirming its current condition.
He turned.
Marga was standing near the window with her tablet still open.
"’Strip,’" he said. "’And follow me.’"
She looked at him.
This time there was no hesitation built into the look. No rapid assessment, no recalibration, no the specific body language of a woman deciding whether the situation called for resistance.
She just looked at him.
Then her hands moved to the buttons of her blouse.
She undressed the way she did everything — efficiently, without performance.
The blouse first, laid over the chair. The skirt, stepped out of and folded.
The bra unhooked and removed, her breasts falling free, full and heavy, the nipples hardening immediately in the cooler air of the room. The panties last.
She stepped out of them and stood there, her dark hair still slightly damp from the cemetery, her body bare and present in the hotel room light.
’Why am I feeling embarrassed?...’







