Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 253 - Ravaging Before Cuddling

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Chapter 253: Chapter 253 - Ravaging Before Cuddling

His voice. Out loud. Working.

Silence from the other side for one second.

Then her voice — changed. The different quality of someone who had heard something they weren’t expecting, the processing pause of it — but too brief, and then Raven’s voice, low, covering something—

And then her voice again, not to Vikram, not out through the door, directed inward, continuing:

"’Stop— your hand is— Raven—’" 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶

He hit the door with his shoulder.

The shoulder that had been in surgery.

The white, total, comprehensive pain of that contact went from his shoulder to his spine to his skull in a straight, honest line.

He stepped back.

He stood there with his right hand on his left shoulder and his teeth locked against the sound he was going to make.

He stared at the door.

The wood-grain door that was not wood.

He understood.

He understood it with the same cold clarity with which he had understood the accident, the men in black, the nurse, the room assignment. The same architecture. The same engineer.

The door that looked like a hospital bathroom door and was not.

Because Raven had made it that way.

Because Raven had planned this too — this morning, this bathroom, this specific door at this specific moment with Vikram on the outside of it with his surgical shoulder and his working voice and the complete inability to do anything about what he could hear.

His head dropped.

His forehead against the door.

The cool surface of it against his skin. The soundless, absolute barrier of it.

He pressed his ear to it.

And listened.

The bathroom was running water.

The bathtub — the sound of it, the constant low-register background of water, the specific acoustic of a tiled room with running water in the early morning. Steam, probably. The hospital bathroom with the large clinical tub, the kind used for certain post-surgical patients.

Through the door, pressed against it with his ear:

Raven’s voice. Low. Unhurried. The voice that Vikram had spent the last night learning to recognize in the dark.

"’Your body is not agreeing with you.’"

A pause.

Her breathing — rapid, present through the door.

"’I told you to stop,’" she said. The specific quality of a voice that was trying to be firm and was losing the argument with its own sound. "’You already— twice since I woke up. Raven. Twice. I’m sore. I’m—’"

"’And?’"

The single syllable of someone who had heard ’I’m sore’ and was asking what that was supposed to mean.

"’And— it hurts. It hurts, Raven. And you want to— to that place—’"

"’Mm.’"

"’No. Not there. I told you. I’ve never— that’s never been— I’m pregnant, I can’t—’"

"’You promised.’"

Silence.

The specific quality of a silence that arrives when someone has been reminded of something they said and cannot immediately refute the reminder.

"’I— I said tonight—’"

"’It was tonight,’" he said. "’Night is over. Morning counts.’"

"’That’s not what—’"

"’Didn’t you?’"

A longer silence.

"’...Raven—’"

Vikram’s hand, flat against the door, curled.

His eyes — the dry, burning quality of eyes that had been open too long.

He heard the sound of water. Movement. The specific acoustic of a person in a bathtub being repositioned. Her breath changing quality — the quick, caught-breath quality of someone who had been moved.

"’Your body,’" Raven’s voice said, and then a sound from her — not pain, the almost-pain, the the-thing-right-before-pain of someone receiving something at a location that was not expecting to receive it.

"’Stop—’" Her voice. Urgent. "’Stop, your hand is— don’t put it there— Raven—’"

"’Mm.’"

The wet sound of something. Fingers, probably. The specific wet, pulling sound of fingers withdrawing from a place they had been.

Then her breath again — different. The involuntary quality of it. The breath that came out before she had decided to let it.

"’Oh—’" she said. "’Don’t— don’t do that while you’re asking me to—’"

"’I’m not asking.’"

The quiet delivery of that sentence.

Through the door, Vikram heard her breath catch.

"’Raven—’"

"’I’m telling you,’" he said, "’what is going to happen. And your body is already—’"

"’—don’t say that—’"

"’—wet. Since this morning. Since the first time.’"

Vikram pressed his forehead against the door again.

The cool surface.

He closed his eyes.

He heard everything.

Inside the bathroom, the steam was warm and thick.

The bathtub — the large, institutional tub — held both of them in the arrangement of bodies that had settled into it over the course of the morning. The water was still warm. Her back was against his chest in the way it had been since he had woken her, the specific arrangement of a pregnant woman in a tub with a man behind her whose body had opinions about the morning.

Meera’s hands were on the rim.

Both of them, gripping the cool porcelain edge of the tub in the grip of someone who needed something to hold.

Her belly.

Breaking the surface of the water, the round warm swell of it above the waterline, the ripples of the bath water around it every time either of them moved.

His hand.

Moving from her ribs downward. The slow, deliberate tracking of it — his palm over the curve of her belly, the flat warmth of the five-month swell, and then lower. Through the water. Finding its location.

She felt it before it arrived.

"’Don’t—’"

Two fingers.

The slow, committed push of them — and the immediate, comprehensive, involuntary sound she made when they found what they were looking for. The stretched, swollen, post-morning quality of her — the way the fingers found no resistance, the way the tissue that had been, last night, tight and thick, had become something else entirely. Something that registered every touch at double the volume because it had been used at a level that had permanently recalibrated its sensitivity for at least the next several hours.

"’Hh—! Mm—’" She clenched her hand on the tub rim. "’Don’t— I told you it— it hurts—’"

"’It hurts,’" he said.

"’Yes—’"

"’And?’"

She felt her own hips press backward.

The involuntary, treasonous quality of them — pressing toward the hand, seeking the depth that her mouth was telling him to stop.

"’—and,’" she said, the voice of someone reporting something she had not voted for, "’it also doesn’t hurt.’"

"’Mm.’"

His thumb.

Circling.

"’NNGH—’" She caught it. The sharp, bitten-off quality of a sound she was trying to stay underneath. "’Raven—’"

He withdrew his fingers.

She felt them leaving. The absence of them.

And then she felt — at her face level, near her mouth — something else. The back of his hand. His fingers, wet, pressing against her lips from outside.

She knew what was on them.

"’Open,’" he said.

"’No—’"

He pressed.

Not hard. The patient pressure of a man who had developed a thorough understanding of her threshold and was not exceeding it — just applying it. The gentle insistence of someone who had done this before and knew what the response would be.

Her lips opened.

She did not decide to open them. They opened with the specific quality of a body that had been comprehensively trained over the past several hours and was now responding below the level of decision.

His fingers entered her mouth.

The wet, warm quality of his own deposits and her own body on those fingers — the specific, layered taste of everything the night had been, concentrated in the two fingers currently sitting on her tongue. Her tongue, which was — moving. The slow, helpless, involuntary movement of a tongue that had been trained and was operating from training now.

She closed her eyes.

Her own tears came.

The slow, tired, not-angry, just-deeply-sad quality of them. The tears of someone who had found themselves somewhere they had not planned to be and had stayed too long and now their body was participating without them.

He kissed her cheek.

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