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Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 156- Testing the Waters
He read it.
All of it. The way you read something you already knew but needed to see arranged in front of you in the specific geometry of organized information before it became fully real.
His eyes stopped at the line about 1,000 vehicles.
He looked at his hand.
Turned it over. The same hand. The knuckles, the tendons under the skin. Nothing visible had changed. He looked like a twenty-year-old man in a hotel bathroom in Las Vegas. The kind of man who would be carded at a bar. The kind of man who would not be selected from a crowd as the variable.
He closed the system.
Looked at his reflection.
"’Hm,’" he said.
Then he went to the window.
The Las Vegas morning was clear.
Not the wet grey of London or the layered haze of Shanghai. Desert clear, the kind that hurt slightly at the edges, the blue of the sky above the strip so consistent it looked manufactured.
He opened the window.
The air came in. Warm already, the desert heat that didn’t wait for afternoon. The sound of the city below — the specific soundtrack of a place that had been running all night and had not stopped to acknowledge the transition to morning.
He looked down. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
Thirty-one floors.
He stepped off the ledge.
The fall lasted approximately one second before he stopped it — not dramatically, not with arms out or the visual vocabulary of flight that movies had established. Just — stopped. His body finding the air the way a hand finds a railing in the dark. The specific, immediate awareness of the medium changing from floor to atmosphere and his body filing the update without incident.
He hovered.
Three feet from the building’s exterior wall. Thirty-one floors up. The Las Vegas strip below him, the morning traffic moving in the small organized lines of cars that from here looked like slow-moving cells in a system.
He breathed.
He’d flown before — small, careful tests in the previous life, the kind you did when you were establishing what was possible and what the limits were. This was different. The body he was flying in now was different. The flight felt — effortless in the way that things feel effortless when your capability is so far past the requirement that the task becomes purely aesthetic.
He went up.
Not fast. He was being careful about fast — the Marga-bloodline camouflage still partial, the signal redirection active enough to handle casual observation, but full speed would generate a sonic signature that would be harder to redirect. He rose at the speed of something that could be explained as an optical illusion. A large bird. Reflective glass.
Mach .3.
Then .5.
He let it go to Mach 1 over the empty desert east of the city.
The air changed.
He could hear it differently now — the Sensory Expansion from Elena’s bloodline running across the atmosphere and returning data with the specific density of a system operating at twelve times normal human resolution. Individual conversations in the hotels below. The heartbeat of a coyote in the scrub desert six miles north. The geological vibration of Sophia’s Tectonic Sense pulsing in his chest like a second heartbeat made of stone.
He looked at his hand.
Opened his palm.
The flame appeared.
Phoenix fire. Not the orange of combustion — the specific hue of it, the red-white that Veronica’s bloodline had carried before it transferred to him, the color of something that burned at a temperature combustion didn’t reach. It sat in his palm with the absolute ease of something that lived there. The desert air moved through it. Didn’t extinguish it. Nothing was going to extinguish it.
He looked at the scrub below.
Extended his awareness outward — the Hydrokinesis first, reaching down, finding the water table eighty meters below the desert surface. The moisture in the early morning air. He pulled it, not to the surface, just — organized it, shaped it in the invisible space between the ground and his position. A sphere of collected atmospheric water the size of a conference room, suspended in the air at three hundred feet, invisible, organized.
Then let it drop.
It hit the desert floor and expanded outward in a flat, instant wave, soaking the scrub in a fifty-foot radius, the sand darkening with moisture that had no source, that had arrived from nowhere. A coyote three hundred meters away lifted its head, scented the moisture, filed it under ’inexplicable’ and went back to its morning.
He watched the moisture settle.
Then: tectonic.
He pressed his awareness down. Through the desert floor, through the sediment, through the layered geological record of the Mojave basin. He found the load. The specific architectural stress of rock against rock, the pressure diagrams that Sophia’s Stage 1 sense was giving him in the form of color — stress mapped in reds and yellows, stable zones in cool blue.
He pushed.
Not a lot.
One unit of pressure. Applied to a single stress point sixty meters down.
The desert vibrated.
Not an earthquake. The specific register of a 1.2 on the Richter scale — the kind of microseismic event that happens three hundred times a day in the Nevada basin and gets logged in geological databases as background noise. The kind that makes no headlines and leaves no marks.
His phone, in his pocket, buzzed.
He checked it.
A USGS automated notification. Microseismic event, 1.1 magnitude, Mojave basin, 6:47 AM local time.
He put the phone away.
The camouflage was working.
He let the tectonic sense go. It folded back into his body the way a hand folds back into a fist — present, available, not expressing itself until called.
Fire in one hand.
He looked at the desert below.
Extended the fire.
Not throwing it — extending it, the way you extend a sense. The flame in his palm grew a thread, a filament of Phoenix fire that ran outward from him across the air in a direction he chose. Two hundred meters. Three hundred. He touched a dead creosote bush on the far side of the scrub with the end of it.
The bush ignited.
He put it out.
One thought. The fire went. Not smothered — simply stopped being. The absolute authority of the Phoenix bloodline over flame meaning that fire in his presence existed at his permission, not at the permission of fuel and oxygen.
The bush was ash.
No smoke remained.
He looked at his hands again.
Both of them now. The hydrokinetic awareness in the left — the water in the air, the moisture in the desert soil, the water content of his own body legible to him the way a person is legible to themselves. The pyrokinetic authority in the right. The two of them in adjacent palms, the specific coexistence of fire and water at a level where the contradiction resolved into complementarity.
He rose higher.
Mach 1.1 now. The sound barrier pressed against his body and went around him, not breaking against him the way it would break against anything that wasn’t what he was. Thermal immunity from Veronica’s bloodline handling the friction. No sonic boom. The Marga camouflage redirecting any radar signature as background weather interference.
He went to thirty thousand feet.
The city below was a grid. Perfect from here. The Strip a bright thread even in morning light, the desert spreading out in every direction in the specific, total flatness of something that had decided the mountains were other people’s problem.
He could see California.







