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100x Rebate Sharing System: Retired Incubus Wants to Marry & Have Kids-Chapter 371 - 370 - Vivian’s Running Away
The sheet came down.
The room came back.
And then everything that had been suspended in the dark under that linen — every fact, every sequence of events, the entire architecture of the last two hours — arrived in Vivian’s body simultaneously, the way cold water arrives when you’ve stepped off a ledge you didn’t see.
She got off the floor.
Not gracefully. There was nothing graceful left in her. Her knees had been on wood long enough that they’d gone partially numb and the blood rushing back made her stumble sideways, one hand hitting the mattress, and she righted herself with the particular furious coordination of a woman who was absolutely not going to fall in front of this man.
"What," she said.
Viktor looked at her.
"What have I ’done.’"
The words came out before she’d finished thinking them — not a question to him, not really, more the kind of thing you say when the inventory of your own actions lands all at once and the number is wrong. Her voice cracked on the last word and she hated it. She hated the crack in it, and the fact that her throat was sore in a specific way that had a specific cause, and the fact that her body still felt warm in places that had no business being warm anymore.
She looked down at her hands.
Then at him.
"You—" She stopped. Started again. "I — we—"
"We," Viktor confirmed, helpfully.
"Don’t," Vivian said. "Don’t be helpful right now. Don’t make that face. Don’t—" Her voice was going somewhere she didn’t want it to go and she pressed her lips together and looked at the ceiling, which was plaster and offered no useful information. "I had — my daughter was outside that blanket. My ’daughter.’ Who I raised. Who I have kept alive through three months of people trying to kill us. She was standing—" She gestured at the door. "—’there.’ And I was—"
She looked at him.
"You were ’tasting,’" Viktor said.
She stared at him.
"The tightness," he added. "Of your—"
"That is not—" Something in her face must have shifted toward something Viktor decided was not safe to continue into, because he stopped. She watched him stop. The deliberate choice of it. The fact that he had looked at her expression and made a rational calculation about whether to finish the sentence and concluded ’probably not.’ This was, she thought, the most self-preservation instinct she had ever observed in him.
"That is not a sentence," she finished, tightly, "that applies to what happened."
"Technically—"
"’Viktor.’"
The sound of his name, her voice putting actual weight on it — not the breathless version from an hour ago, not the version that had come out half-muffled against his shoulder. This version. The one with steel in it.
He was quiet.
His cock had begun to soften. Slightly. The night’s work catching up, the body running its accounting. It still hung thick and heavy between his thighs, glistening faintly, and Vivian noticed this with the part of her brain that had apparently decided to catalogue everything tonight regardless of whether she wanted the information, and she hated that part of her brain very sincerely right now.
She turned away.
Her dress was on the floor at the base of the bed, tangled up with the sheets in the way things ended up when you hadn’t been paying attention to where they were going. Her underthings were somewhere near the window. She gathered them with the swift, jerky efficiency of a woman who has decided the only available defense against humiliation is velocity.
She pulled the dress on over her head.
Her breasts caught on the neckline — the way they always did, the weight and fullness of them requiring a moment of negotiation — and the fabric fell over them with a soft impact, the slight jiggle of it settling, and she heard the change in the room’s quality behind her.
Not a sound. Viktor didn’t make a sound.
But she had, over the past several hours, developed a sensitivity to the texture of his attention, and what she felt from behind her right now was the focused kind. The kind that had a direction.
She didn’t turn around.
She fastened what could be fastened, smoothed what could be smoothed, and then she was walking — toward the bathroom, toward the small mercy of running water and a door with a latch and approximately four minutes of not being looked at.
Her feet crossed the room.
The floorboard — the same one Gwen had stepped on, the one that announced visitors — caught her bare foot at the wrong angle, and her ankle turned, and Vivian went forward.
Fast, the way it happens — no time to arrange hands in advance, no graceful solution, just the sudden reallocation of gravity from ’under her’ to ’in front of her’ and then Viktor’s arms came around her from behind.
His hands landed first on her breasts.
Both of them.
The particular grip of someone who reached for available handles in a moment of emergency and found exactly what they found.
He caught her. She was standing, technically. Stumbling still, toes scrambling for purchase, but caught — his chest against her back, his arms a bracket around her body, his hands full of her through the fabric of the dress she’d just put on.
The warmth of his palms through thin cloth.
The weight of her in his hands, significant and soft.
Vivian made a sound.
"What," Viktor said above her, his voice carrying the mild confusion of a man performing two tasks at once and checking on the status of both, "are you doing."
"I—" Her voice was a ruin. "Let go of—"
"You were going to hit the floor."
"I wasn’t—"
"You were." His grip adjusted. Not releasing, just redistributing — the slide of his palms moving to hold rather than grab, steadying her by the architecture of her chest with the practical efficiency of someone who had assessed the available options and made the logical one. "Your ankle—"
"Let ’go,’" Vivian said, "of my—"
"I’m holding you upright."
"You’re—" She looked down. At his hands. At where his hands were. "You are ’groping me.’"
"I’m holding you upright," Viktor repeated, steady, like this was a factual disagreement between reasonable people.
"Those are ’not the same thing.’"
His chest was still against her back. She could feel his breathing, the slow even cadence of it — still managed, still controlled, only the slight warmth of it against the back of her neck betraying that he was not, in fact, entirely unaffected by the current arrangement. His hips had settled against her as he’d caught her and she could feel, through the layers of fabric and her own dress, the pressing insistence of him against the curve of her ass.
He wasn’t soft anymore.
"Viktor," she said, her voice going very quiet.
"Mm."
"That is—"
"You’re shaking," he said. His chin had dropped to her shoulder, and he said it against the side of her neck, the warmth of his breath landing on skin she’d apparently made available by wearing her hair up, and the crawl of it down her spine was absolutely not welcome and absolutely present. "You’ve been on a floor for half an hour. Your legs—"
"My legs are—"
"Unsteady," he said. His hands moved. Slowly. Down from their current location, traveling over her ribs, over the slight softness of her waist, lower, and his lips were at the side of her neck now, not quite touching, the proximity of them more information than she could comfortably process. "Let me—"
His fingers found the hem of her dress.
"—clean you," he said. "Properly."
Vivian grabbed his hand.
Both hands. Both of hers around both of his wrists, stopping the motion. Her knuckles had gone pale with the grip.
The room held still.
Viktor’s mouth was against the curve of her neck, not moving, just there, the warmth of him a single continuous point of contact that she was refusing to name.
"’How dare you,’" she said.
It came out very quiet. Very even. The voice of someone who has used up the shaking version and found the harder one underneath.
His hands didn’t push. Didn’t pull. Just waited.
"You are crossing a line," she said.
"Vivian—"
"’A line.’" She released his wrists. Took one step forward. The floorboard didn’t catch her this time — her feet found their footing, her legs steadied, and she walked the remaining distance to the bathroom door without stumbling, without touching anything, without looking back.
She opened it.
She went through.
The latch clicked.
Viktor stood in the middle of the bedroom.
His shirt was wrinkled at the shoulder. His trousers were still somewhat around his thighs. His hair was a specific kind of disheveled that had a specific kind of cause.
He looked at the closed bathroom door.
He looked at the ceiling.
Then he lifted his shoulder in a slight shrug — the gesture of a man conducting an honest audit of his own behavior and arriving at a number he finds somewhere between surprising and inevitable — and said:
"Did I really cross the line."
He meant it as a genuine question.
The ceiling didn’t answer.
He reached for his trousers.
The arms came from behind.
Not aggressive. Not sudden. The specific approach of someone who moves the way cats move — not announcing themselves, just arriving, the warmth of it materializing against his back before his peripheral awareness fully registered it. Slim arms folding around his ribs, hands meeting at his chest, a cheek pressing between his shoulder blades.
Soft. Rounded. The press of two points against his spine that had a particular quality.
Perky. Compact. Warm.
Viktor’s hands went to his trousers.
"Elara," he said.
The arms stilled.
A pause.
"You recognized me?"


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