Home The Lustful Villain: Every Milfs and Gilfs are Mine! Chapter 573. Talking Way Through All Of This Is Useless! Only Fight! To Survive!

The Lustful Villain: Every Milfs and Gilfs are Mine!

Chapter 573. Talking Way Through All Of This Is Useless! Only Fight! To Survive!
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Chapter 573: 573. Talking Way Through All Of This Is Useless! Only Fight! To Survive!

The militia units around Raizen were coordinating like trained forces that understood they were engaging a system-holder; they kept their perimeter tight and pushed inward at overlapping angles instead of charging directly, following the combat doctrine that the Underlayer had developed specifically for situations where a single opponent had abilities that raw numbers alone could not overwhelm.

Raizen’s fire came in short, controlled bursts aimed at perimeter control rather than offense, buying space rather than taking ground. It was a smart move he had done.

But...

Not smart enough.

"There," Lilith said.

The militia’s third unit had angled inward from the direction Raizen’s fire arc had spent the longest covering, using the rotation pattern against him. When Raizen’s fire swung to cover that direction, it created an opening in his original front, allowing the first and second units to exploit the gap and compress their attack simultaneously.

Raizen caught it half a second too late.

He committed to covering the third unit’s angle, which was the right call against the third unit’s angle specifically and the wrong call against the combined three-unit push, because the opening he left on his original front was wider than the coverage he maintained on the third.

"He’s protecting something behind him," Lilith said. "He chose coverage over escape..."

"There’s something in that district he decided was worth choosing wrong for."

"We’ll find out in the restructuring review," Rex said.

The engagement lasted another four minutes before the militia’s coordinated pressure found its conclusion. Rex watched without expression, noting the tactical quality of what the militia had done and filing it as evidence that Pavellia’s monitoring restructuring had produced something with genuine operational value.

The militia doctrine he was watching was not the doctrine the Underlayer’s forces had been running eighteen months ago. It was more disciplined and more adapted to the specific problem of containing system-holders without triggering the kind of escalation that turned a containment into a mutual destruction event.

Pavellia had built the doctrine.

And he filed that.

"Dante Verakis," Lilith said.

"What’s he doing?" Rex said.

"He found the shaft," she said. "He figured out it was sealed approximately twenty seconds ago." 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎

"He’s standing in front of the access point right now." She paused. "He’s thinking."

"What are his options?" Rex said.

"He can go back the way he came and try to find a different route through the residential density, or he can go deeper into the lower district and look for the tertiary infrastructure exits, or he can pick a defensible position and wait for the patrol units to find him."

"He’s mobility-class," Rex said. "He’s going to move."

"Standing still isn’t his instinct."

"He moved," Lilith confirmed. "Going deeper."

"Lower district’s tertiary exits are sealed too," Rex said.

"He doesn’t know that," Lilith said.

"He will in about six minutes," Rex said.

...

They watched the pattern of Verakis’s movement through Lilith’s perception, the specific track of someone choosing speed over concealment, threading through the lower district’s residential infrastructure at a pace that kept him ahead of the patrol units but was generating enough noise in the process that the patrol units’ tracking had no difficulty maintaining contact.

Mobility-class system-holders made a consistent mistake: they optimized for speed and forgot that speed in a closed environment was only useful if the environment had somewhere to go. The lower district of the Underlayer was a closed environment with sealed exits.

"He’s found the tertiary access," Lilith said.

"And," Rex said.

"He’s looking at it," she said.

"He’s realizing it’s sealed." A pause. "He’s looking at the patrol units behind him."

"How far behind?" Rex said.

"Forty meters," she said. "They’ve been staying at range and letting him run."

"Now that he’s stopped at a dead end, they’re closing."

Verakis’s situation worked out like it always does in a closed environment: at forty meters, with no way to go back and patrol units in front, the options for someone with a mobility-class system didn’t change the result.

Dante Verakis was a momentum junkie, a guy whose soul was wired for the kinetic rush of going from point A to point B. To him, the world was a sequence of vectors to navigate, a labyrinth to run through.

But as he spun into the tertiary access corridor, the frantic rhythm of his heart suddenly dropped to a jarring silence.

Before him loomed the heavy, reinforced bulkhead of the access shaft—a slab of cold, unyielding metal, perfectly flush within its frame. There was no hum of machinery, no hiss of hydraulic pressure, and no telltale vibration of an open vent.

It was utterly silent and sealed.

Verakis’s breath came in ragged pulls, his lungs burning from the high-velocity sprint through the dense residential sectors. He spun on his heel, his eyes darting back to the mouth of the corridor he’d just escaped.

The patrol units were no longer adrift. No more patient, predatory distance.

They moved with terrifying synchronicity, the rhythmic sound of their boots hitting the metal floor in unison, a sign that the hunt was over and the harvest had begun. They were gaining on a wall of disciplined steel and purpose, moving steadily, inexorably, closer.

He was a mobility class specialist trapped in a cage.

His instincts told him to turn, to find a vertical way, to leap, and to flow, but the design of the lower district was a cruel master. The walls were too near, the ceilings were too low, and the exits were illusions of escape.

He looked up at the ventilation grates, but they were too narrow for a man of his kinetic mass. He looked at the side conduits, but they were choked with heavy infrastructure.

He was a predator by accident, a predator who’d become prey, caught in a corridor that wasn’t a highway but a coffin.

The first unit hit the twenty-meter mark, weapons up in a low ready position, movements lacking the frenetic energy that Verakis was currently drowning in. They weren’t in a rush because they didn’t have to be.

They understood the geometry of the room. They knew the math of the kill.

Verakis drew his weapon, a wild arc of energy shimmering with the instability of his fading stamina. He planted his feet on the cold floor, gathering himself for a final, violent lunge.

This was a final attempt to break the line using pure, unfiltered force. He would fight. He would bleed. He would ensure they paid for every inch of ground they claimed.

But the momentum was spent. Just as the net tightened, the very thing that had been his greatest asset became the thing that drained his reserves and left him hollowed out.

The first volley opened with suppressing fire, its staccato roar transforming the narrow hallway into a chaotic chamber of sparks and screaming metal. Dante lunged, a desperate flash of movement against the encroaching dark, but the weight of the closed environment crushed his spirit as surely as it crushed his path.

He lasted six minutes from the moment he had started running.

...

"Kaida Lunereth," Lilith said.

"She’s in the water processing facility," Rex said.

"She got there four minutes ago," Lilith said. "She’s been trying every concealment application she has against the marking." A pause. "It’s not working."

"It won’t," Rex said. "She knows it’s not working. She’s going to spend the next several minutes accepting that the approach isn’t the solution before she tries something else."

"What does she try next?" Lilith said.

"She accepts the situation and tries to negotiate her way out," Rex said. "I could tell that she’s the most analytically capable of the three."

"When she runs out of technical solutions, she’ll look for social ones."

"And when that doesn’t work?" Lilith said.

"Then she runs out of options," Rex said. "Which means... she’s fucked."

Lilith was quiet for a moment. The kingdom below continued its motion.

The sounds of it reached the spire in the layered, fragmented way that ambient urban noise always reached height, individual threads of chaos dissolving into a general register by the time they arrived.

"She came out of the facility," Lilith said. "She’s talking to the patrol units."

Rex said nothing.

"They’re not listening," Lilith said.

"The patrol units were briefed," Rex said. "Negotiation after marking is not a variable they have been given authority to consider."

Lilith turned and looked at him with the specific expression she used when she had something to say and was deciding whether the conversation would be improved by saying it.

"You’re watching all three of them die," she said, and it was not an accusation but rather an observation.

"Yes," Rex said.

"With the same attention you’d give a tactical exercise," she said.

"More attention than that," Rex said. "A tactical exercise doesn’t have real variables."

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