Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 174- Island’s first Day

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 174: Chapter 174- Island’s first Day

The smirk was audible even from the sandbar.

Raven, at the treeline, had still not looked back.

The food disappeared at nine forty-three.

This was a time that nobody on the ship would have been able to specify afterward, because afterward there was no afterward for the people on the ship. But at nine forty-three, the watch man opened the galley storage door and found the specific, total absence of everything that had been in it — not the specific absence of some things, not the confused absence of misplaced items, but the clean, total, impossible absence of two hundred pounds of food stores that had been present the previous evening and were now demonstrably not present.

The freezer: empty.

The dry storage: empty.

The refrigerated unit: empty, and still cold from the absence of what it had been cooling until very recently.

The watch man stared.

Then turned to the galley window.

Outside: the sandbar. The shallow water. The treeline. Six women, last visible, disappearing between the palms.

He made a sound.

The specific, private sound of a man whose calculation has just encountered information it hadn’t factored.

Behind him, someone asked about the coconuts. Because on the sandbar there were coconuts, inexplicably — a pile of them, more than the surrounding palms could have produced, more than any normal accumulation would produce, simply ’there’ on the sand where the tide should have cleared them.

The watch man looked at the coconuts.

He didn’t understand the coconuts.

He turned back to the empty galley.

He did not understand much of what happened next, because what happened next took approximately four seconds and his capacity to process the information was limited by the fact that it was happening to him.

The hull.

The metal groaned.

Not the gradual, weather-related groan of a vessel under stress. The specific, immediate, total groan of something structural making a decision. The deck tilted. The watch man’s hand caught the galley counter. His feet left the floor.

Four seconds.

The ’Serenity III’ ceased to be structurally coherent.

Then ceased to be.

From the treeline, if you looked back, the ship was still there.

This was not true in the way that things were usually true — the ship was present in the specific, surface-level way that a thing was present when what you were seeing was the light-based impression of it rather than the thing itself.

An illusion.

The specific, perfect quality of a morning at sea with a vessel resting on a sandbar, shimmering slightly in the heat that was beginning to build, looking exactly like what it had looked like twenty minutes ago.

"’Should we go back?’" someone said.

Celia looked at the ship.

At the treeline they’d entered.

At the depth of the green ahead.

"’We’ve come too far in already,’" she said.

This was, technically, not yet true — they’d been walking for twelve minutes. But it was the answer that the situation required and so it was the answer she gave and the group, collectively, decided to accept it.

She looked forward.

Raven was ahead of them.

Not far. He’d slowed when the women caught up, the group having organized itself the way groups organized themselves — with him at the front simply because he’d been first and hadn’t stopped being first and no one had challenged the spatial arrangement.

He had still not looked back.

"’Hey,’" Celia said.

He didn’t turn.

"’HEY.’"

He stopped.

She caught up to him. The women behind her, the specific sound of six women navigating a forest path that was less path and more suggestion, the undergrowth catching at fabric and the ground uneven.

He was looking at the trees.

Not distracted — assessing. The specific, reading quality she’d seen him deploy since the corridor of the ship, the information-collection that he did without appearing to do it.

"’What are we going to eat,’" she said.

He looked at her.

The corners of his mouth.

"’We’ll start,’" he said, "’with some very refreshing liquid.’"

She knew the sentence was going somewhere she didn’t want it to go.

"’Don’t—’"

"’From coconuts,’" he said.

He brought his hand up.

One coconut. In his right hand, held up between them at eye level, the green husk of it immediate and undeniable.

Her fist had already committed.

The knuckle of her middle finger connected with the coconut at the speed of someone who had been waiting to punch something since the corridor of the ship and had found the opportunity.

The coconut was a coconut.

"’OW—’"

"’Ah—’"

"’—you BASTARD—’"

She grabbed her hand with her other hand. The specific, radiating ache of knuckles that had met something denser than the thing they’d been aimed at. Behind her, the women clustered — the braid one reaching for her arm, the glitter fresher saying something, Nara appearing at her shoulder with the concerned expression of someone who was also trying not to look at Raven’s face.

He looked down at her.

From above. The unhurried expression of someone waiting for the inventory to complete.

She looked up.

His right hand: one coconut.

His left hand: six coconuts, held in the casual grip of someone for whom six coconuts represented a negligible load.

She stared at the left hand.

The group stared at the left hand.

"’Ladies,’" he said, and there was a quality in his voice that she already recognized as the specific precursor to something she was going to have to respond to, "’would you like to drink some white juice — ’" he lifted the coconuts slightly " ’— out of my... nuts?’"

Silence.

The kind of silence that a joke produced when it was bad enough and also, under the badness, accurate enough to produce two simultaneous reactions.

The braid woman — her name was Aisha, this emerged within the first hour — made a sound that was suppressed laughter clamped into a neutral expression at the last possible moment.

The glitter fresher — Preet — did not clamp it in time.

Nara said, looking at the ground: "’That was terrible.’"

"’I thought it was alright,’" Raven said.

"’It was terrible,’" Nara said.

"’The coconuts are still—’"

"’Give me the coconut,’" Celia said. Her hand still aching. The specific, direct energy of someone redirecting.

He handed her a coconut.

She took it.

It was warm from his grip.

She did not think about this.

They drank.

The coconuts were good. This was an objective, physical fact — the specific, hydrating sweetness of fresh coconut water in the early tropical heat of a morning that was becoming a day with the full, committed intent of the equatorial sun.

The women sat on exposed roots and drank and the specific, communal simplicity of the act redistributed the tension of the previous twenty-four hours into something that was at least momentarily manageable.

The island, in the daylight, was less wrong than it had been from the ship.

It was just an island.

Birds. The sound of them in the canopy, the specific, dense layer of tropical birdsong that expressed the presence of a functioning ecosystem. The undergrowth was wet from the storm, the leaves still holding water in their cups, the ground soft and dark with moisture.

"’We need shelter,’" Raven said. Not a discussion. A fact being stated.

"’The ship—’" the braid woman, Aisha, started.

"’Weather’s turning again,’" he said. He looked at the sky through the canopy. The specific, reading quality. "’Six hours. Maybe five.’"