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Now reading: Chapter 166- Next Morning from Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion, a Fantasy novel by Idiocrat.

Morning arrived the way mornings arrived at sea.

Not the gradual, terrestrial kind that crept in from the east with the apologetic quality of light that knows it’s interrupting. The ocean morning was imdiate — the porthole going from black to the specific, disorienting grey of open water reflecting a sky that hadn’t committed to colour yet, the ship’s ambient sounds changing register, the particular creak of a hull that had been in conversation with the sea all night and was now summarizing the exchange.

Nara ca back to consciousness the way you ca back from sowhere you hadn’t ant to go.

First: the ceiling.

She didn’t know this ceiling. The fact registered before the why of it registered, the specific, pre-panic mont of a body doing inventory before the mind caught up and provided context.

Then the context caught up.

The party. The water bottle. Seungjae’s hand on her arm, steering her toward the deck. The specific, swimming quality of the last thing she rembered before the corridor, before the man.

Before —

She sat up.

The cabin. The narrow bed. Celia on the fold-out across from her, still asleep, the jacket pulled up over her shoulder, her dark hair across the pillow.

Nara looked down.

Her top was on. Her skirt was on. The bra — she moved her hand under the fabric, found the clasp, found it done up. Done up but — wrong. Re-hooked on a different set of hooks. Not the ones she used. She knew her own bra clasp the way you knew your own hands, the automatic, unthinking daily use of it building a knowledge that had nothing to do with conscious mory.

Soone had unhooked it.

And hooked it back.

Her hand went lower. Under the skirt. The underwear — still there. The fabric damp with the specific, telling quality of sothing that was not ordinary morning moisture. She pressed two fingers to the cotton.

Drew them back.

The sar on her fingertips was the colour of the specific, unmistakable evidence of a body that had been entered for the first ti and had bled the record of it.

She sat with her fingers in front of her face.

The ceiling. The porthole. Celia’s breathing from the fold-out.

And outside: nothing. Open sea. The storm gone or moved on, the water grey and flat in the early light.

Her head hurt.

She pressed the heel of her palm to her temple and sat with that for a mont. Her body ran its inventory — the soreness between her thighs, a deep, interior kind that had never been there before, the specific ache of walls that had been introduced to sothing they had no previous experience with. Her lower abdon had a warmth to it that was already cooling but had clearly been sothing specific in the hours before this.

She thought about the man in the corridor.

Brown hair. No — his hair was dark. The eyes were—

Purple.

She sat on the edge of the bed and thought: ’who has purple eyes.’

And then thought: ’he was handso.’

And then thought: ’STOP.’

She had a plan. She’d had a plan since she’d gotten the scholarship and figured out what a scholarship ant, which was: you were in the building but you were not of the building, you were the person who’d earned your way in while everyone else had simply been born near the door, and the distance between those two positions expressed itself in a hundred small, daily ways that added up to sothing she did not intend to live with indefinitely.

The plan had been: find a senior. Not the right senior — the ’useful’ senior. The kind who ca from money and didn’t want records of certain evenings to reach certain parents. The kind you could leverage. The kind who, when presented with docuntation of an evening where he thought he was in control, would find that the docuntation changed the power structure considerably.

She’d done the math. A year of quiet inco from one stupid rich boy was worth more than three part-ti jobs and the specific humiliation of working the library desk while her classmates went to Bali for reading week.

She’d co to this party knowing what was in the water.

She’d known.

She’d had a plan for ’after’ — the phone recording she’d set running before she drank, the backup on cloud storage, the specific, calculated evidence collection of soone who had learned to treat situations as transactions. The kind of thing that had seed very clean and manageable in her dorm room at two in the afternoon and had produced the specific, obvious flaw she was currently sitting with.

Which was: the man in the corridor was not Seungjae.

The man in the corridor was not from this school at all.

She’d been — taken. Not by the person she’d planned to use. By soone else entirely. Soone who had appeared from a broken window and stopped a bullet with his arm and carried her like she weighed nothing.

She pressed her fingers to the damp cotton again.

The evidence there.

Thought: ’it doesn’t feel like I thought it would.’

She’d seen enough to know what the narrative was supposed to be. The violation, the trauma, the specific, clean story that movies had given her about what this was supposed to look like from the inside.

It didn’t look like that.

It looked like — warmth. The specific residual warmth of sothing that had been thorough and had covered her body in the kind of sensation she now had a na for. Her walls rembered it. The ache was real. But underneath the ache was sothing else — sothing that sat in the sa location and said: ’you wanted that.’

She hadn’t wanted it.

She told herself this.

Her body offered a counterpoint, which was that the wetness on her fingers was not entirely the colour of blood, and the other component was sothing that had co from inside her, and that component’s presence was information she would have preferred not to have.

"’Nara.’"

She yanked her hand out from under her skirt.

Celia, on the fold-out. Pushing herself up on one arm, the jacket sliding off her shoulder, her eyes doing the specific, blinking sequence of soone tabolizing the last remnants of a mild sedative.

"’Are you okay?’"

"’Fine,’" Nara said.

"’You look pale.’"

"’I’m always pale.’"

Celia sat up properly. Her hair was tangled from sleep, the dark strands catching in the collar of her jacket. She put both feet on the floor and sat there for a mont with her elbows on her knees, doing her own inventory.

"’My head—’"

"’Sa.’"

Celia looked at her. The specific look of soone whose threat assessnt had not fully stood down even in sleep. "’What were you checking.’"

"’What?’"

"’Just now. Under your skirt.’"

"’I wasn’t—’"

"’Nara.’"

A beat.

"’Periods,’" Nara said. The word imdiate, the excuse already built and waiting. She looked at her fingertips. Showed the sar. "’I thought I’d started.’"

Celia looked at the blood.

"’Oh,’" she said. The specific, sympathetic exhale of a woman who understood the specific, inconvenient reality of the situation. "’Do you need—’"

"’I’m fine,’" Nara said. "’I’m fine. I just — let’s figure out where we are.’"

They stood.

The standing process took longer than it should. Both of them finding their balance, the cabin steady now, the ship’s motion reduced to a gentle, continuous roll that would have been fine under normal circumstances and under current circumstances communicated that they were at sea and not near anything in particular.

Nara looked around the cabin.

The fold-out Celia had slept on. The narrow bed she’d slept on. The porthole with grey water. The door.

She looked at the specific indentation on the far side of the narrow bed. The side that wasn’t hers. The compressed area in the thin mattress that a body had occupied and recently vacated.

She looked at this.

Then at the door.

"’Where—’" she started.

She turned.

He was there.

Leaning against the corridor wall through the half-open door. Arms folded. The sa dark clothing. The purple eyes finding her with the unhurried attention of soone who had been waiting and had not been impatient about it.

She felt her face do sothing.

"’YOU—’"

She moved toward him. The fury was real — she found it imdiately, the clean, available outrage of soone who has been acted upon without permission and has that to work with. She reached out, grabbed the front of his shirt, not thinking about the physics of it.

He let her grab it.

He caught both her wrists in one hand.

Not forcefully. Just — there. His hand around both of hers, holding them against his chest, the ease of it absolute.

"’Let go—’"

"’You approached ,’" he said.

She stopped.

"’What.’"

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