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Villain's Breeding System: Evolving 999+ Harem into an SSS-Rank Legion-Chapter 305: Chaper - Veronica’s Target’s Reviews
Ten days.
That was what had passed since Veronica had knocked on the door of apartment 4C with a professional coat and a specific kind of attention that wasn’t sympathy and wasn’t performance.
Ten days since Frau Müller had said — reluctantly, then less reluctantly, then almost not reluctantly at all — ’come in.’
The friendship that had grown in those ten days had a particular character. It was — honest. Not the performed warmth of a professional relationship and not the cautious, feeling-each-other-out warmth of new acquaintances. The specific warmth of two women who had found, in each other, someone who was exactly what they said they were and had stopped being surprised by it.
Veronica had not tried to make it anything else. That was the thing. She had not added anything extra. She had not leaned into the specific narrative of a blind woman being helped by a generous benefactor — the narrative that would have, in Frau Müller’s experience, arrived very quickly and settled very permanently and shaped every interaction that followed.
She had simply — been there. With the precision of someone who had learned, quickly and without needing it explained, what kind of there was useful.
They walked together now.
Not the way Frau Müller walked alone — the precise, interior-mapped, everything-in-its-place navigation of a woman who had organized the whole world around her specific needs and had not needed to update the map in years. But together. The walking that happened when Veronica was beside her.
"Left," Veronica said. Not loud. The specific quiet of someone who had learned exactly how loud this particular instruction needed to be.
"I know left," Frau Müller said. The dry, unhurried quality of it.
"You were going to go right."
"I was considering going right."
"There’s a display rack to the right."
"I had accounted for the rack."
"It moved." Veronica glanced across the aisle. "The woman restocked it. It moved approximately forty centimeters toward the center."
A pause.
"Fine," Frau Müller said. The specific quality of ’fine’ delivered by someone who was not going to say thank you and did not need to.
Veronica smiled. The small, genuine, not-for-performance quality of it. Her red hair catching the window-light from the shopfront glass, the dark professional coat, the specific ease of a woman who had become very comfortable in the particular role of being beside this particular person.
This was what ten days looked like.
"You didn’t have to," Frau Müller said.
They were in the car. The mid-morning light through the window casting itself against the side of Frau Müller’s face — the stillness of her in motion, the specific, listening quality she carried everywhere.
"The sofa is comfortable," Veronica said.
"I had a sofa."
"You had a thing that a sofa had formerly been."
"It was functional."
"It had a spring that had been broken for"—Veronica consulted the memory—"approximately six years, based on the specific depression in the cushion."
Frau Müller was quiet.
"And the television," Veronica said.
"I am blind."
"Correct. And also — there are audio descriptions for everything now. There is a setting that describes visual content in detail. There is a setting that reads program guides aloud. There is a sound system that—"
"Veronica."
"—that has a warm register specifically calibrated for—"
"Veronica."
"Yes."
"You bought me a television."
"I bought you a television, yes."
"How," Frau Müller said. The flat, genuinely trying-to-understand quality of it. "How are you going to do this. My work — your initiative — that doesn’t pay like ’this.’ You can’t afford to—"
"My work gets sold," Veronica said.
Not defensive. Informational. The flat, even delivery of a woman stating a fact.
"I am paid for it. Properly. More than properly." A brief pause. "And there is a man I work for. He funds things. People. Projects. He is — very particular about what he funds and he does not care about the cost when it is something he wants funded."
Frau Müller turned her face toward the window. The listening quality of it settling over her features.
"He paid for the sofa."
"Among other things," Veronica said.
The weight of ’other things’ sitting in the car between them, large and not yet specified.
The car stopped.
Veronica got out first. Walked around. Opened the door — not the performed helpfulness of a professional arrangement, the easy, natural helpfulness of someone who had done this enough times that it was simply what happened when the car stopped.
Frau Müller stepped out.
The air changed.
The street air of Vienna — October, cold-edged, the smell of old stone and turning leaves and the particular quality of air around very old buildings that have absorbed a century of mornings. She felt it. Not through sight — through the quality of the air itself, the scale of the silence pressing back at her from a large enclosed space, the specific echo-quality of high ceilings and stone walls, the way the street sounds behind them were blocked by the mass of something very large in front of her.
Her hand found Veronica’s arm.
"This," she said. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
"Yes."
"This is not—"
"No," Veronica agreed.
"Veronica." The full, flat, ’I-need-you-to-hear-this’ quality of her name. "This is a mansion."
"It’s a house."
"It is a mansion."
"It has," Veronica considered briefly, "more rooms than are strictly necessary, yes."
Frau Müller stood on the front step. Her hand still on Veronica’s arm. Her face doing the comprehensive, processing thing her face did when it was receiving significant input through every available channel. The cold October air. The scale of the silence inside the open door. The quality of a space that had been — waiting.
"How much," she said. Quiet.
"Come inside first," Veronica said.
The hall was large.
The specific, high-ceilinged, old-stone acoustic quality of a grand entrance hall — the way sound moved here, the way their footsteps carried differently than they had on any pavement outside.
Frau Müller walked slowly.
Not the caution of fear. The deliberate, fully-present, listening quality of someone mapping a new space through every input available to her. Her hand at her side — not reaching out in the searching way a stranger moves through an unknown place. Just present. Available. Confident in the slow accumulation of what the room was choosing to tell her.
She stopped at what must have been the center.
Veronica watched her. The specific, unhurried, don’t-interrupt-this watching of someone who understood the process.
The staff stood near the far wall — three of them, still and attentive, the quiet readiness of people waiting to be acknowledged.
"Leave us," Veronica said.
Not loud. The specific, even register of a woman who had grown accustomed to being heard when she chose to speak.
They left.
The hall was — just them. The two of them in the large, October-morning silence of a space that was now Frau Müller’s.
The overwhelmed quality of her stillness. The specific, comprehensive, full-body stillness of someone receiving something too large to process in motion. Her hand reached outward once — the brief, instinctive quality of it — and found the smooth pillar beside her. Her fingers pressed against the stone. Reading it. The way she read everything.
Her mouth opened.
"By the way," she said. The careful, quiet quality of pulling her composure back around her like a coat.
"Yes."
"How much does it cost?"
Veronica opened her mouth.
"’’Kyaaahnn~~!!’’"

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