Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 224- Trying to Enjoy the Ride

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 224: Chapter 224- Trying to Enjoy the Ride

The interior of the Range Rover at speed was — the specific, enclosed warmth of a high-end vehicle moving through Mumbai night traffic. The leather.

The ambient sound system doing something soft at a low volume that the driver had apparently defaulted to. The lights of the city coming through the windows in the specific, moving-light way of a car on a wet road.

Meera was sitting.

Her hand on her belly. Her other hand, reaching toward him — she had reached toward him twice since the car started moving and had pulled back both times, the specific, hesitating reach of someone who wanted to help and wasn’t sure what helping looked like.

He was sitting with his hand pressed flat against his side. His breathing — controlled. The specific, deliberate breathing of someone who was managing something through respiratory pace.

She looked at his face.

She reached again.

This time she didn’t pull back. Her hand found his chest — the flat, open-palm contact of someone who was checking, not gripping. She could feel his breathing under her hand, the specific, deliberate rise and fall of it.

"’Raven,’" she said. "’I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry, it was my husband, he — you took that because of me, because of the whole—’"

"’It was not your fault,’" he said. Simply.

"’It was,’" she said. "’He thought—’"

"’He thought,’" Raven said, with the specific, patient quality of someone returning the conversation to a precise point, "’a wrong thing. That is not your fault either.’"

She was looking at him.

Her hand still on his chest. She could feel the specific, controlled quality of his breathing — too controlled, the specific, deliberate control of someone who was managing pain through respiratory architecture.

She rubbed, gently.

The specific, maternal gesture — the instinctive, warm friction of someone who wanted to help and had found the available action.

He looked at her hand.

Then at her face.

The specific, purple-eyes-in-the-dark-car quality of them. The interior ambient light catching the edge of them.

"’Meera,’" he said. His voice quieter now. The specific, slightly strained quality of someone who was going to say something and was organizing the sentence carefully.

"’What?’"

A pause.

"’Can you remove my pants?’"

She stared at him.

The specific, arrested stare of someone who has received a sentence and is replaying it.

"’It—’" His voice, the specific, pained exhale of someone who had been maintaining stoicism and the maintaining had just become more expensive. "’It hurts down there. The kick. I think the impact — the waistband is—’" He breathed. "’I can’t manage it from this angle.’"

She looked at his face.

He was looking at her with the specific, patient expression of a man who had asked a practical question and was waiting for a practical answer.

Her hand was still on his chest.

"I-I..."

"I—I..."

She was looking at him.

The sentence had been sitting unfinished in her mouth for three full seconds and he had not filled the silence for her, which was the specific, patient quality of someone who had asked a question and was going to wait for the answer however long the answer required.

Then his breathing changed.

Not dramatically. The specific, quiet change — from the deliberate, architectural control he had been maintaining since the parking lot to something shorter. Tighter. The specific quality of a breath that was being produced by a body that had been managing something and was reaching the end of managing it.

He looked at his hand.

He turned it over in the car’s ambient light — slowly, the specific, examining quality of someone checking a report.

"What—"

"My disease," he said.

Two words.

Flat. Not the performed delivery of someone building toward something. Just the specific, plain naming of a fact.

Meera stared.

And then the garden arrived.

Not gradually. The specific, complete arrival of a memory that has been sitting in recent storage — the bench, the stone, the moonlight through the leaves, the specific way his voice had sounded when he’d said ’I produce a lot. Semen. Physiologically.’ The specific, uncomfortable plainness of it. ’If it builds — there’s a pressure. Mental. Like a specific, low-grade suffocation. My body requires relief. Regularly.’

Her husband had kicked him.

Her husband had kicked him precisely there. In the parking lot, with the specific, blind-rage aim of a man who had not thought about where he was kicking — who had been angry and had aimed at the nearest available target and had hit the specific, exact location of a condition she had been trusted with.

Her husband had done this.

He groaned.

Low. The specific, real groan — not the managed, contained sound from earlier. The specific, unmanaged register of something that had been building since the parking lot and was arriving past the capacity of breath-management to suppress.

His hand pressed flat against his lower abdomen. The specific, pressure-applying gesture of a body trying to manage from outside what it could not manage from inside.

She looked at his face.

The specific, strained quality of it. The jaw. The furrow between his brows that was not performance — she had seen his face in many registers tonight, had been watching it since the Ferris wheel, and she knew by now the difference between what his face looked like when he was performing and what it looked like when he was not. This was the not.

Her hand was still on his chest.

She felt herself moving before she had finished the decision to move.

One knee, finding the floor of the limousine. The specific, careful descent of a pregnant woman going to her knees — the way her body distributed the movement, the way her hand found the seat edge for the brief moment of transition. The carpet of the limousine floor under her knee. Her dress adjusting around her belly as she settled.

She was on her knees in front of him.

Her hands found his belt.

’What am I doing,’ she thought.

The thought arrived in the specific, evaluating tone of someone watching their own hands do something their brain was still processing. ’This is another man. He is not Vikram. He is — I don’t know him, I’ve known him for one evening, he is Priya’s boyfriend, he is—’

He groaned again.

The sound of it.

The specific, involuntary groan of a body that had moved past what stoic management could contain. His hand pressing harder. His breath coming shorter.

’Vikram did this,’ she thought. ’Vikram’s foot. Vikram who drove away. Vikram who said she was never enough.’

Her hands worked the belt.

The buckle coming free — the specific, metallic sound of it in the enclosed quiet of the moving car. Her fingers at the button. The button. The zip.

’skit—’

She spread the fabric.

The bulge over his underwear — the specific, visible, straining quality of something that was pressing against the fabric from the inside with the particular pressure of something that had been building and had been aggravated and was currently demanding. She could see the shape of it through the cotton. The heat of it was present through the fabric even without contact.

She gulped.

The specific, involuntary gulp of someone whose body has received information and has produced the automatic physiological response.

She looked up at him.

He was looking down at her. His face — the strained quality, the jaw, the sweat at his temple that had not been there at the park. The specific, honest face of someone who was in something real.

"Can you—" She stopped. Her voice was very quiet. "Can you lift your hips slightly? I need to—"

RECENTLY UPDATES