©Novel Buddy
Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 157- The Meeting with Her
Not figuratively. With the Sensory Expansion running at twelve times resolution, the visual acuity of a body that was currently operating at four times normal human max, he could see the Pacific coastline as a distinct line of grey-blue on the horizon to the west.
He could hear — everything.
The radio traffic of three airports. The conversations in the casinos below, which were still full at 6:47 AM because that’s what Las Vegas casinos were. The specific, low-frequency vibration of the Hoover Dam’s generators sixty miles east, steady as a heartbeat.
He turned his empathic sense on.
Yuna’s Seraph Trace inheritance, running through his bloodline now, filtered the city’s emotional broadcast. Not individual thoughts. Emotional topography — the map of human states distributed across the geography below. The specific heat signature of want and loss and the particular frequency of three in the morning decisions that were still being processed at seven AM.
He turned it off.
Too much data for the purpose of the morning.
He hung in the air at thirty thousand feet and looked at the city and thought about the question he’d asked the previous night.
’Will I be... Hm?’
He ran the calculation.
The succubus had operated at a level that had killed him in the previous life. Not through combat — through the specific, overwhelming biological event of contact with something that existed at a scale his previous body hadn’t been built for.
His current body.
He looked at his hands. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
The combined bloodline stack. The nine women and their nine inherited architectures sitting inside him, integrated, running simultaneously the way nine instruments run simultaneously in an orchestra. The fire. The blood-sense. The dimensional access. The pheromone synthesis. The tectonic awareness. The water architecture. The voice weight. The camouflage. The heat-mapping.
All of it at twenty-three percent of cross-world potential.
Because the current world’s physical laws couldn’t accommodate the rest.
When he transmigrated — twenty-three days from now, the system had said — the other world’s physics would remove that cap. The other world, where mana was the medium everything operated in and the physical laws were built differently, where the ceiling of what a body could do was substantially higher.
He ran the math.
Nine bloodlines at four times current expression.
He looked at his hand.
Closed it.
Opened it.
Phoenix fire bloomed, hotter than the previous iteration. He pushed it. Fed the intention into it. The flame went from red-white to something else — a blue-white that had no business existing in the morning desert air, a color that said ’this is what fire looks like when it stops being fire and becomes something without a category.’
The sand below, sixty meters down, turned to glass in a three-foot circle.
He stopped.
The fire died.
He exhaled.
"’In this world,’" he said, to the open air at thirty thousand feet, "’I can use one quarter of what I actually have.’"
His own voice. The weight it carried at altitude, the specific resonance of it.
He thought about twenty-three days.
About the other transmigrated heroes — the ones the system had been tracking, the ones who’d been pulled from this world into that one by other systems. In his previous life he’d encountered them years in, when they’d already accumulated seasons of other-world experience, when they’d built their power through that world’s mechanics and were formidable specifically because of the time they’d had.
In this regression: a week had passed.
They were at day nine.
The heroes who’d transmigrated on schedule — who’d been pulled through in the standard windows, the way the system shuffled people — were at day nine in that other world. They’d had nine days of accumulation. Nine days of their bloodlines awakening in an environment that facilitated it.
He thought about what he could do in nine days of ’that’ world with what he was carrying right now.
He thought about the phrase ’group of all the transmigrated heroes.’
And he laughed.
Not the brief, internal variety. Actually laughed. At thirty thousand feet, to the open desert air, the sound of genuine amusement from a man doing math that had come out funny.
’Enough,’ was the answer.
More than enough.
He was carrying nine bloodlines, twenty-three days of compound accumulation, and the specific advantage of a man who had already seen the board once and was playing the second game with full memory of the first.
They were at day nine with single-bloodline awakening.
He would arrive at transmigration having eaten nine bloodlines in this world alone.
’Crush,’ was the answer to whether he had enough.
’And then some.’
He let the laughter settle into the open air.
Turned west.
The Strip below. The city in its morning configuration. Somewhere in the grid of it — a specific hotel, a specific casino that wasn’t the largest on the strip but was specifically the woman’s, inherited and grown — the casino queen was presumably doing what casino queens did at seven in the morning.
He thought about the dossier.
Avriana Menhante. Thirty. Dark hair. The face of someone who’d learned to use what she had deliberately. Three casinos. Two boutique hotels. A wine acquisition event in five days that Marga had confirmed would put her in a specific room at a specific time with specific people who were known to her.
And a bloodline trace the system had highlighted in an annotation he hadn’t told anyone about yet.
’[ MENHANTE — BLOODLINE: FORTUNE SOVEREIGN — PROBABILITY CLASS ]’
’Probability architecture. Can identify and marginally influence the distribution of outcomes in proximate events. Gambling environments trigger passive expression. Full activation requires seeding.’
’[ HOST BENEFIT: Probability Intuition — passive. Statistical advantage in any outcome-based engagement. Cross-world application: near-precognitive accuracy in short-range tactical prediction. ]’
He read it again.
Then he’d closed it and added her to the list.
Precognitive probability.
He thought about what that would feel like running alongside everything else he already carried. The combination of it — tectonic sense and probability intuition, fire authority and blood-sense, camouflage and dimensional access and empathic resonance and voice weight.
He thought about the specific shape of the entity he was becoming.
And he flew.
Not Mach 1.1 this time. He let it go — Mach 2, climbing briefly to Mach 3 over the empty desert before he pulled back, the camouflage handling the visible signature, the sonic path managed so the boom fell across empty scrubland rather than population centers.
The desert below was a blur.
The city came back fast.
He slowed to something that looked, from below, like a hawk in a thermal. His body dropping back toward the Strip with the easy, unhurried descent of something that had decided on its destination.
The Menhante casino.
He could read the logo from altitude — the specific, lower-key signage of a property that was confident enough not to shout. Below the neon of the larger names, the Menhante properties sat with the specific self-assurance of something that didn’t need to compete.
He landed on the rooftop.
A single step from the air to the concrete. Barefoot — he was barefoot, he realized. Had left the hotel in the equivalent of what he’d worn to bed. This was not how a person walked into a casino.
He looked at his hand.
Snapped his fingers.
The clothes arranged themselves. Not magic, technically — the dimensional aperture Minjung’s bloodline had seeded in him, Canvas Creation running at minimal scale, a brief fold in spatial presentation that swapped what he was wearing for what he’d been wearing the previous evening. Dark clothing. The specific, nondescript quality of something that would allow a person to exist in a room without the room requiring them to justify being there.
He looked at the rooftop door.
Walked to it.
Opened it.
The casino below was already running.
Of course it was.
He descended into the sound of it — the specific audio of machines and conversation and the particular frequency of a space where probability was the medium everyone was operating in. The air-conditioning. The low, confident lighting.
He found the main floor.
Stood at the edge of it.
His probability sense — Sophia’s Tectonic architecture giving him a framework he hadn’t expected — was already running across the room. Not the slot machines. Something else. The pattern of outcomes in the space, the specific mathematical density of a room where fortune was being managed.
He could feel her before he saw her.
Not the pheromone signature. Not the bloodline trace, though that was there too, faint and warm and specific. Something else — the probability field. The room had a slight, imperceptible lean in it, like a table that’s off by a millimeter but affects every ball rolled across it. A concentration of probability distortion centered on one specific location.
He turned.
The far end of the floor. Past the main tables, past the bar, through a short corridor to the private gaming area that the public map didn’t show in detail.
A woman was there.
He didn’t see her face yet.
He saw the field first.
The mathematical signature of a woman who had been sitting in proximity to high-stakes probability events her entire adult life without knowing why she kept winning — or rather, why things in her vicinity kept resolving toward specific outcomes that served her, the way outcomes served people who had something the universe was bending slightly toward.
The Fortune Sovereign bloodline, unawakened, running on instinct.
He walked toward her.
The casino floor organized itself around him the way it always organized itself — the camouflage not making him invisible but making him ’uninteresting,’ the specific cognitive filter that caused eyes to slide past him the way eyes slide past things that don’t require attention.
He stopped ten feet away.
She was reading something. A tablet, the screen angled away from him. Her coffee on the edge of the table. Dark hair, the profile of the face he’d studied in the dossier, the posture of a woman in a room that belongs to her and has always belonged to her and has never been in question.
He stood there.
The probability field around her shimmered at the edge of his perception.
He smiled.
"’Avriana.’"







