Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 161 - Final: Found the Damsel in Distress

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Chapter 161: Chapter 161 - Final: Found the Damsel in Distress

One of the three young men — the one with the watch, who appeared in rooms the way men appeared in rooms when their fathers dealt with prosecutors — said something to the one beside him.

Leaned in. The lean of two people sharing a calculation.

The third pointed.

At a girl near the window.

Brown hair. Nineteen, maybe.

Still holding her glass but not drinking from it, which had been noticed. She’d been careful — some instinct, or a warning from a friend, or just the animal knowledge that something in this room had shifted from what it had been presented as.

She was looking for Celia.

Celia, who she’d met at orientation, who had invited her onto a yacht with a confidence that she’d trusted because Celia moved through the world with the specific ease of someone who’d grown up with the kind of safety net that makes ease possible.

Celia was at the bar.

The one with the watch moved toward the brown-haired girl.

"You’re not drinking," he said. Friendly. The face of friendly arranged over something that wasn’t.

"I’m fine," she said. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝐰𝚎𝕓𝐧𝚘𝘃𝗲𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝕞

"Come on, it’s your first week—"

His hand was already on her cup. Refilling from the bottle. The motion fast and practiced. The bottle not the one the others were using.

She didn’t see it.

"Thanks," she said.

She drank.

Twenty minutes later, the brown-haired girl was on the floor near the back cabin, her body doing the slow, heavy-limbed collapse of someone whose neurological processing had been externally interrupted. Her head was on the seat cushion. Her breathing was regular. Her eyes were closed.

Two of the young men lifted her.

Not roughly. The gentleness of people who understood that the value of what they were doing required not leaving obvious marks. They carried her through the back cabin door, through the short corridor, into the bathroom, which was small and private and had a lock.

They set her over the toilet lid.

The one with the watch pushed her hair back from her face.

"She’s new," he said.

The other one laughed. The specific, ugly laugh of someone finding entertainment in the specific thing they’re doing.

"So is mine," he said.

The one with the watch had already started unzipping.

"Hold her," he said.

The other man moved to brace her.

"I’m going to—"

The window shattered.

Not loudly. It should have been loud — the specific, violent report of safety glass breaking under impact. But the sound came out muted, compressed, as if the air in the room had decided not to carry it all the way to the saloon.

The glass didn’t fall as glass.

It moved.

Inward. The shards drawing together in the air with the immediate, decisive physics of something that had been given direction, converging from the edges of the broken frame toward a central point, and at that central point—

A hand.

A man’s hand, palm out, the shards of glass gathering against it and then — dissolving. The glass becoming liquid, the liquid cooling, the liquid cooling further until it had resolved into the shape of a person stepping through the window frame that no longer had a window in it.

He looked like a man climbing through a window.

He looked exactly nothing like a man climbing through a window.

He stood in the narrow bathroom space and looked at the two men and the unconscious girl and said, with the specific, level tone of someone who has seen this situation before and finds it tedious:

"Sigh."

The one with the watch stared.

"Who—"

"You have approximately—" Raven looked at the unconscious girl, at the specific quality of her breathing, at the neurological indicators available to a body that was running sensory expansion at twelve-times resolution. "Four minutes before someone in the saloon comes looking."

He picked her up.

One hand. One arm. The motion of lifting her the motion of picking up something that weighed nothing, the ease of it communicating something about the lifter that the lifter was not choosing to hide.

He adjusted her clothing — three seconds, efficient, the jacket that had slipped down her shoulder pulled back up, the hem of her skirt re-settled — with the specific, clinical attention of someone performing a task rather than participating in a situation.

He looked at the two men on the floor.

They were on the floor.

He wasn’t sure when that had happened — he hadn’t consciously decided to put them there, the Hemokine had done it, the specific, reflex application of blood-pressure redirection that had put both of them against the wall and down before the glass had finished dissolving. They were breathing. They would be functional in approximately forty minutes.

He looked at the girl in his arms.

"Honestly," he said, to the room, "these rich kids are genuinely idiotic."

He opened the bathroom door.

Stepped into the corridor.

And walked directly into Celia Menhante.

She was running.

She skidded when she saw him — the specific, foot-scraping stop of someone whose momentum and their destination have suddenly arrived at a conflict. She stared at the unconscious girl in his arms. At him. At the bathroom door behind him.

At the two legs visible on the bathroom floor through the half-open door.

"THAT’S HIM—"

Her voice, loud. Carrying back down the corridor.

From the saloon, movement. The sound of chairs. The specific rapid footsteps of young men who have been organized toward a purpose and have heard the signal to act on it.

Celia pointed.

Three men came through the saloon door into the corridor.

One of them had a gun.

Not a licensed gun. The kind that appeared in pockets in the specific way of a person who had grown up in rooms where pocket guns were part of the inventory.

Raven looked at the gun.

"She’s unconscious because—"

"HANDS UP—"

"I was saving—"

"PUT HER DOWN AND PUT YOUR HANDS—"

He put the girl down. Gently. Against the corridor wall, her back supported, her head resting on his folded jacket. He stood.

Three men. One gun. Celia behind them, eyes wide, doing the math on the bathroom floor legs and the broken window and the man standing in front of her who had not been on the yacht when they’d departed.

Two of them grabbed his wrists.

Or tried to.

Their hands closed on his wrists and their bodies leaned back with the full force of two men trying to drag a third man forward, and Raven stood still in the way that mountains were still, his wrists in their grips like handholds in granite, neither man moving him by the single millimeter their combined weight and momentum had been directed to move him.

The one with the gun was staring.

Celia was staring.

Everyone in the corridor was doing the specific, recalculating look of people whose physical reality had just been interrupted by a piece of information that didn’t belong in it.

Raven looked at Celia over the shoulders of the two men attached to his wrists.

She was her sister’s face.

The same bones, the same jaw.

Younger — the version of those features before they’d been organized by the specific weight of everything Avriana had organized them under.

The dark hair.

The eyes that were doing the threat assessment that she didn’t know she was doing, that was running in her automatically, the bloodline trace in her system producing the same probability-intuition her sister ran and producing from it the same result: this is not what it appears to be.

"Is your name," Raven said, very calmly, "Celia?"