Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion Chapter 159- Meeting a Stranger
The room was quiet.
Outside, a car arrived — the first of the morning staff. The sound of the front entry, the specific footstep pattern of Marguerite, who had managed this household for eleven years and who navigated its owner with the earned ease of soone who understood which silences were approachable and which were not.
This one was not.
Marguerite entered, assessed the room, placed a folder of correspondence on the table, and left without speaking.
Avriana picked up the folder.
Read.
Below the hem of her gown, the chanical leg made no sound at all.
She had learned to read people’s eyes before their faces.
The eyes moved first — the involuntary flick downward, toward where the prosthetic would be visible if the clothing didn’t cover it. Then back up, quickly, with the specific over-correction of soone managing their own reaction and hoping it went unnoticed.
It never went unnoticed.
Avriana had developed, at so point in the years since sixteen, the ability to see this specific sequence happen in real ti across the faces of people she’d just t and to file it in the appropriate category. The category was not resentnt, which was what people assud. It was information. She filed it the way she filed every piece of information about every person in every room she entered, with the calm, continuous data collection of a system that hadn’t stopped running since the morning she’d woken up in the hospital and understood clearly that running would never feel the sa.
Her father had stood at the end of that hospital bed.
He hadn’t apologized. He had explained.
You would have left, he’d said. And you would have failed. I did what was necessary.
She’d looked at him from the hospital bed, sixteen years old, understanding in the specific, clear way that pain made so things very clear, that this was not a man who would be reached by argunt or appeal or any of the ordinary chanisms people used on ordinary people.
She had looked at him and thought: then I will learn to want what you have instead of what I wanted.
Three years later he was dead. Cardiac event. Quick, private, the kind of death that has the decency to happen in the night.
She had inherited three casinos, two boutique hotels, a real estate portfolio across four states, and the specific, detailed working knowledge of every person who had operated under him and was now operating under her.
She had kept Marguerite. She had kept the estate manager and the two accountants and the general manager of the nhante casino floor. She had kept Elena, who handled VIP relations, until Elena had resigned unexpectedly last week citing personal developnt and left a note that made no actual sense, and who Avriana was still processing.
She had, over five years, made herself into the thing.
Not the thing her father had made. Sothing else — the sa domain, the sa industry, the sa rooms and tables and probability-rich environnts. But organized differently. Operated differently. With her na on the door rather than her father’s.
She’d been seventeen when she’d understood that walking with a cane telegraphed vulnerability to people who read vulnerability as opportunity.
She was eighteen when she’d had the prosthetic fitted.
She was twenty-two when she’d stopped thinking about it.
She did not think about it on the drive to the casino. The casino occupied the third floor of a building she owned in its entirety, designed in the specific way that high-end private gaming spaces were designed — no windows, controlled lighting, the careful managent of a guest’s relationship with ti. The floor beneath was restaurant. The floor above was suites, exclusively for guests of the gaming floor whose evenings had reached a sufficient financial and temporal depth that their relationship with the outside world had beco theoretical.
She arrived at eight-fifteen.
The floor was open but quiet — the morning shift, the serious players who ca before the evening crowd, the people for whom gambling was professional rather than social.
She took her usual chair.
Not at a table.
In the small reading alcove at the east corner — a deliberate architectural decision, a chair and side table positioned to offer a clear sightline to the full floor while appearing to offer privacy.
The book she was reading was Capital in the Twenty-First Century, which she’d been reading for six months not because it was slow going but because she kept stopping to check specific figures against her own holdings.
She read.
The floor moved around her.
Her probability sense — which was not sothing she had a na for, which she had simply always had, the specific, wordless awareness of where outcos were going before they arrived — ran across the room in its usual low hum.
The roulette table in the far corner had a clustering pattern forming. She noted it. Would send a note to the floor manager before noon.
Her coffee arrived.
She was on page two hundred and forty-three when she beca aware of sothing.
Not soone approaching. The casino had people approaching her all the ti — guests with questions, staff with updates, the occasional investor who’d been given access to the floor and had decided the reading alcove ant she was available.
This was different.
Not the approach itself. Sothing before the approach — a shift in the probability field. Like the room had reconfigured slightly in a direction she couldn’t quantify, the air pressure of outcos bending toward a single point the way water bent toward a drain.
Her eyes moved up from the page.
A man.
Standing — not approaching, not quite, just present near the alcove entrance — arms folded, looking down at her with the unhurried attention of soone who had arrived with ti to spare and was deciding whether to use it.
Dark clothing. The kind that occupied a room without requiring it.
The kind of face that she would normally have catalogued in the first half-second with the standard assessnt — threat level, interest level, leverage index — and had not catalogued because the process had not completed.
Sothing about the face interfered with the standard assessnt in the way that very few things ever interfered with the standard assessnt.
Purple eyes.
Which was — unusual. dically unusual. Contacts, she thought. People wore purple contacts sotis. She’d t two people in her life who wore them.
This didn’t look like contacts.
He was looking at her.
Not at her face in the way people looked at faces. At her. The specific attention of soone reading rather than looking, processing what they were taking in rather than just receiving it.
Her eyes, involuntarily, moved to his face and stayed there.
Sothing is wrong, said the part of her that had been running threat assessnts since seventeen. Sothing is very specifically not-normal about this person.
Then his eyes moved.
Down.
Not to the prosthetic — the gown covered it.
They moved to her chest, which the gown did not cover with the sa comprehensiveness, because the gown was designed for a woman who moved through boardrooms and not for a woman who had folded herself into a reading chair with one leg tucked under her and the neckline therefore sitting differently than intended.
She looked at his face.
He was looking at her chest with the expression of soone doing arithtic.
"Can I help you," she said.
Not a question.
He looked up.
The slight, brief curve of a smile.
"Just observing," he said.
His voice — she noted it, filed it, could not imdiately file it correctly — carried the quality of sothing that had been calibrated.
Like an instrunt that had been tuned very recently and precisely. "You can’t see the book from there."
"Excuse ?"
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