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Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 228- Vikram’s Racing car and Thoughts
She sat.
The careful settling of a woman who had just done something she could not undo and was now re-entering the architecture of the world as if the architecture were still the same as it had been twenty minutes ago.
It wasn’t.
Her hands found her lap. Her belly, warm under her palm — the circular motion beginning, the thumb tracing the automatic arc. Her other hand came up and she looked at it for a moment. Then at his coat, folded on the seat beside her.
She reached over.
Took the coat.
Pressed the inner lining against her mouth.
The careful dabbing — her eyes lowered, not looking at him, performing the task of cleaning her face with the private focus of someone doing something they would prefer to be invisible. The mascara. The residue. The honest evidence of the last twenty minutes.
She pressed the fabric to her upper lip. Her chin.
Kept her eyes down.
He watched her do it.
The purple eyes in the dark car — the moving city outside, the ambient warmth of the limousine interior, the low light catching the side of her face as she cleaned it with his coat.
He said nothing.
On the seat between them, his hand moved two inches.
She didn’t see it.
The small, dark gesture — his fingers finding the shape of her phone through her bag’s fabric without touching the bag, the surgical precision of someone applying a targeted force to something internal. The screen inside the bag went dark. Not dead — ’dead.’ The permanent kind. Every signal, every connection, every wire to the outside world from that device, quietly severed.
It took approximately three seconds. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
She dabbed at the corner of her mouth with his coat and did not notice.
He looked out the window.
The hospital lights were appearing ahead.
The car stopped at the staff entrance.
The private entrance — not the main doors, not the walk-in queue. The particular, unmarked door that existed for people who didn’t use the main doors.
The guards moved first. Both doors opening simultaneously, the efficient motion of training executing itself.
He stepped out.
Turned.
And held out his hand to her.
She looked at it.
For a half-second — the hesitation of someone who was assessing whether accepting was a decision or just a motion. Then she placed her hand in his and he helped her out of the car, and he did not let go once she was standing.
He kept her hand.
Not tightly. Not forcefully. The calm grip of someone who had taken a thing and was not offering it back. Her hand sat inside his — the geometry of her smaller hand inside his larger one, his thumb resting across her knuckles.
He walked toward the entrance.
She walked with him.
The door opened.
Inside — the institutional brightness of a private hospital’s staff corridor. White walls. Clean floors. The ambient antiseptic smell underneath something warmer, something the money in this particular building’s budget had tried to soften.
A receptionist.
Young. Efficient. Her eyes moved to Raven — to the bandaging around his chest that was just visible at his collar, to the controlled way he was moving, to the guards behind him — and then to Meera.
"Are you his wife?"
The question arrived.
Meera opened her mouth.
She shook her head.
The receptionist looked at her. A brief moment — the professional beat of someone who was waiting for a complete answer to a form.
Meera looked over her shoulder.
The guards were speaking to someone. A medical staff member was already moving toward Raven, professional and efficient, the organized quality of a department that had received a call ahead and was prepared. They were walking him forward. A door ahead.
He looked back at her.
Once.
The purple eyes over his shoulder — the calm look of someone who was being taken somewhere and was looking back at the place they were leaving. No pressure. No instruction. Just the look.
He went through the door.
It swung shut.
She stood at the reception desk.
The receptionist waited with her pen.
Meera looked at the form.
She picked up the pen.
She wrote her name.
In the space marked: ’Relationship.’
She wrote: ’Wife.’
Her handwriting was the careful handwriting of someone who had written things precisely all their life and was still writing precisely now even when the thing they were writing was not true.
She slid the form back.
The receptionist took it without comment.
And Meera followed the direction they’d taken him, one hand on her belly, her other hand empty now — the particular empty of a hand that had been holding something and was not anymore.
In the corridor behind the inner door, for exactly the length of time between the door swinging shut and the next turning, Raven looked down at his phone.
He opened the encrypted application.
Tapped.
The video — short, fifty-three seconds — attached itself to a message that had no text. Just a recipient.
He sent it.
Put his phone away.
A medical staff member took his other arm. He went with them.
The last look he gave over his shoulder before the corner — at the door, at the thick silhouette visible through the glass panel, the five-months-pregnant woman in a floral dress whose makeup was ruined and who had just written ’wife’ in a box next to his name.
He smiled.
Small.
Then turned the corner.
On the highway outside Mumbai at nine fifty-seven in the evening, a phone screen lit up inside a car.
The car had been stopped on the shoulder for eleven minutes.
Vikram was sitting with his forehead against the steering wheel.
His hands on his thighs. The position of a man who had driven halfway home and had stopped because he couldn’t finish the driving. The chest-full feeling of a man who had made an accusation in a parking lot and driven away and was now sitting with the full weight of the thing he had left behind him.
’She was outside the toilet.’
The sentence had arrived somewhere around the bypass and had not left. The plain sentence of someone who had said a precise, factual thing. ’I was outside. I heard you.’
His jaw worked.
’I heard YOU saying I was never—’







