Episode 8
The backyard of the Young
Power house was a claustrophobic sea of black polos and medium-washed denim.
The air didn't just feel hot; it felt heavy, vibrating with the collective ego
of a hundred and fifty dudes who had spent the last three hours trying to
out-flex each other. After the absolute "L" they took in the
chemistry lab, the vibe was desperate. They needed a win, or at least a reason
to stop feeling like their manhood was a target.
Joshua Bassett stood on a
makeshift wooden platform in the center, looking down at the crowd. He looked
like he’d crawled out of a cage—bruised, bandaged, but radiating a kind of
unhinged intensity that made the air around him hum. Matt, Garrett, Felix, and
Brian stood behind him like a wall of dark muscle, their shadows stretching
across the grass.
“Gentlemen,” Joshua’s
voice cut through the murmurs like a serrated blade. “Listen up. I know you’ve
seen the posters. I know you’ve seen the TikToks of those crazy girls in the
sorority house practicing their little ‘ball-buster’ kicks. They want you to
believe that our balls are our weakness. They’ve spent weeks spreading
propaganda to make you afraid to walk like a man on your own campus. They
deadass got into your heads by framing the MIGHTY TESTICLES as a vulnerability.
It’s a biological crime.”
Joshua stepped to the
edge of the platform, his thighs straining against his jeans as he flexed his
arms, the veins popping like thick cords.
“I need you to remember
one thing: your testicles aren't a target. They’re the engine. They’re the
source of the testosterone that makes you a god among these sheep. They’re the
reason you’re here and not sitting in a coffee shop writing poetry about your
feelings.”
As if on cue, the entire
yard erupted. A hundred and fifty men in black polos started banging their
fists against their chests, the sound like a rhythmic war drum. They weren't
just cheering; they were performing. Dudes were shaking their groins with aggressive,
exaggerated energy, flexing until their faces turned purple, shouting back at
Joshua in a chorus of raw, masculine thirst for power. It was peak unhinged
energy—a literal mosh pit of testosterone.
“TESTICLES ARE OUR
STRENGTH!” Joshua roared over the noise. “NEVER let those sluts make you think
otherwise! And do you know what we get in this frat? We don't get 'equal
partners' or girls who want to 'discuss their day.' We get real women who know
their place. Women who cater to their men. Those are the only women that
matter!”
The side door of the frat
house swung open, and Lexie walked out, looking like she’d stepped off a
magazine cover. She was followed by a line of Youngbitches—the girls who had
traded their dignity for a spot next to the power. Lexie didn't say a word; she
just slithered up the platform, her eyes locked on Joshua. She danced a slow,
suggestive circle around him before leaning in and planting a deep, possessive
kiss on his mouth, her hands wandering down to his waist. Behind her, the other
girls started handing out high-protein drinks and beer, acting like the
ultimate "servant-queens" the boys craved.
Felix watched the scene
from the back of the platform, his jaw tight. He felt a jagged, cold knot of
envy twisting in his gut. Joshua was a good leader—the guy had basically saved
Felix’s life after the Christmas disaster—but seeing him command an army of a
hundred and fifty men made Felix’s own ambition burn like acid.
I should be the one up
there, Felix thought, his hand subconsciously dropping to his own crotch. I’m
the one with the legacy. I’m the one who needs to lead this war.
But he knew he couldn't
deliver a speech like that. Not yet. His mind flickered back to his dad, Carter
Baker, and the humiliation he’d suffered in Cockville. He needed to prove he
was better than the man who’d let Justice Girl break him. And then there was
Mentari. Just last night, Felix had spent an hour in the dark, stroking his
cock while imagining her in a collar, her "Heaven Goddess" spirit
finally broken beneath him. He wanted her more than he wanted air, and he hated
that Joshua wanted her too. For now, he’d play the loyal brother. He’d wait for
the moment Joshua slipped up.
Suddenly, the air in the
backyard didn't just feel heavy—it felt like it had been turned into lead.
Half of the men in the
crowd suddenly buckled, falling to their knees as a massive, suffocating wave
of Conqueror Spirit washed over the yard. It was so thick it felt like a
physical weight pressing down on their skulls.
“Josh, stop it!” Felix
choked out, struggling to stay upright. “The men can’t take this much
pressure!”
“It’s not me...” Joshua
whispered, his eyes widening.
Three black SUVs with
tinted windows pulled into the driveway, the gravel crunching under their tires
like breaking bone. The doors opened in perfect synchronization, and the yard
went dead silent.
Jonah Redfield, the
Supreme Leader of MANPOWER, stepped out. He didn't need a polo shirt to look
lethal; he looked like a king who had walked out of a war zone. Beside him were
his top tier: General Corbyn, the vice leader who looked like he’d never smiled
in his life, and General Daniel, the silent enforcer.
Behind them came the
Captains—the men who actually ran the gears of the machine. Captain Benson
Boone, the head of training; Captain Florian Wirtz, the weapons genius who
Brian practically worshipped; Captain Nuno Gallego, the "Poison
Tongue" negotiator; and Captain Carter Baker, Felix’s dad, looking grimmer
than ever. Finally, Yello, Joshua’s best friend and Jonah’s little brother,
hopped out, looking like the awkward nerd he was, but carrying the aura of the
Redfield bloodline.
“Supreme Leader.”
Joshua, Felix, Brian,
Matt, and Garrett dropped to their knees instantly, the rest of the 150 men
following suit like a wave of falling dominoes. A low murmur of excitement
rippled through the ranks—the legend himself was here.
Jonah walked toward the
platform, his boots echoing on the wood. He didn't look at the crowd; he looked
at his captains.
“Joshua,” Jonah said, his
voice a low, gravelly rumble. “You’ve done well to gather this many. But
numbers aren't enough if their spirits are soft. Nuno, burn them. Let them know
what real masculine fire feels like. Florian, I want the new weapons deployed.
Brian, you’ll report to him immediately for a status update on the Alpha-T.”
Jonah then turned his
gaze toward Joshua, a dark, predatory glint in his eyes. “And you, Joshua... we
have a private lesson. It’s time you learned the advanced Conqueror Spirit
technique. It’s called Hardening. Once you master it, no ‘bite’ and no ‘kick’
will ever draw blood from you again.”
Joshua’s head snapped up,
his face filled with a hungry, electric excitement. “Yes, Supreme Leader.
Whatever it takes.”
--
The footage on the
monitor was flickering, casting a sickly blue light over Brian’s face as he
watched the loop for the fiftieth time. On the screen, Joshua was mid-mutation
in the lab, his muscles ballooning so fast the fabric of his polo sounded like
gunfire as it shredded. His veins weren't just popping; they were turning a
bruised, necrotic black, spider-webbing across his skin like a map of a
nightmare.
“Look at that,” Brian
said, his voice flat and clinical as he paused the frame. He pointed a pen at
the screen, tapping the pixelated image of Joshua’s distorted body. “Potential.
That’s the only word for it. Three main stats. One: skin like Kevlar. Two:
strength that makes 110kg Garrett look like a toddler. And three...” Brian
leaned in, a dark smirk tugging at his mouth. “The enlargement. It’s not just
mass. It’s a total biological overhaul. Visibly heavier. 15 inches of raw,
high-testosterone meat. The zipper didn't just break; it exploded.”
Florian Wirtz leaned back
in his chair, rubbing the bridge of his nose. He looked tired, the kind of
tired you get from chasing a ghost for twenty years. “It’s endocrine
hyper-drive, Brian. Alpha-T hits the Leydig cells like a sledgehammer. It
forces the body to dump everything into mass and volume. Basic science. But big
doesn't mean invincible. It just means there’s more surface area for those
Goddesses to target. It makes him vulnerable in ways we haven’t even mapped
yet.”
Brian didn't look
discouraged. He looked thirsty. “That’s the mission, then. We don't just make
them bigger. We make the source itself impenetrable. If we can harden the
foundation—the balls, the core—we’re untouchable.”
Florian let out a short,
dry laugh that sounded like sandpaper. “Nobody ever cracked that code. Not me.
Not the guys before me. Not even the old guard back in Henry Redfield’s day.
But look at you. Twenty-two years old and you’re already deeper in the weeds
than I was at thirty-seven. You’ve got the vision, kid.”
Florian reached under the
scarred wooden desk and slid a heavy, locked metal case across the table. It
hit the surface with a metallic thud. Brian popped the latches, his eyes
widening as he saw six silver vials nestled in black foam. The liquid inside was
shimmering, a viscous, neon-amber fluid that seemed to pulse with a life of its
own.
“I heard the bitches
trashed your lab supply,” Florian said. “Don't start from zero. Take these.
Refine the molecular chains. Perfect the stability. You’re the one who’s gonna
make this work.”
“Why aren't you doing it,
Flo?” Brian asked, his fingers brushing the cold glass of a vial. “You’re the
legend.”
Florian’s eyes flickered
toward the door, his voice dropping to a low, paranoid rasp. “Because Jonah...
he’s got his eyes on something bigger. Something mythical. I can’t tell you
yet, but I have a task that makes Alpha-T look like a school project. If anyone
can turn this into a weapon, it’s you. Don't disappoint me.”
Brian nodded, his brain
already running the math on the next batch. “I won’t.”
Across the house, Felix’s
room was a tomb of shadows. He was sitting on the edge of his bed, the only
light coming from the cold glow of his phone. He was staring at a photo of
Mentari, his thumb hovering over the screen, his mind a mess of obsession and
resentment.
The door didn't just
open; it was kicked. Carter Baker filled the frame, his face a mottled mess of
yellowing bruises and fresh, red rage. He was still limping from the Velvet
ambush, his pride leaking out of him like a slow puncture.
“You still sitting here?”
Carter’s voice was like gravel being dragged over glass. “Still playing second
fiddle to that curly-haired fuckboy? Still acting like Joshua’s little pet?”
Felix didn't even look
up. “Get out, Dad.”
Carter slammed the door
shut, the sound echoing like a gunshot. “Twenty-one years! I spent twenty-one
years beating the weakness out of you, training you to be an Alpha, and you’re
still a loser. Joshua’s out there giving seminars, building an army, getting
private lessons from Jonah, and you’re in the dark like a kicked dog.”
Felix’s jaw tightened,
his knuckles turning white.
“I’m tired of being
disappointed, Felix,” Carter snarled, stepping into his space. “Tired of
hearing how my 'Golden Boy' got folded by a bunch of cheerleaders. Tired of
watching you lose to a kid who doesn't even have the name. You’re a Baker. Act
like it!”
Carter grabbed Felix by
the collar and yanked him up. Felix stood there, limp, which only made Carter
angrier. “You ungrateful little shit—”
Carter’s hand cracked
across Felix’s cheek in a brutal, open-handed slap that made Felix’s head snap
to the side. Then came a punch to the ribs—hard, clinical, designed to wind.
Felix doubled over, gasping.
“You think you’re special
because Joshua kept you around?” Carter hissed, grabbing a handful of Felix’s
hair and forcing his head back. “You’re nothing without me. You’re a shadow of
a man!”
Felix’s eyes, usually
cold and calculated, suddenly snapped. The dam broke.
He didn't punch; he
launched a piston. Felix’s fist slammed into Carter’s solar plexus with enough
force to lift the older man off his feet. Carter wheezed, his grip failing as
he gasped for air. Before he could recover, Felix lunged, his hand clamping around
his father’s throat like a steel vise. He slammed Carter back against the wall,
the plaster cracking behind his head.
“I’m done with your
bullshit,” Felix snarled, his voice low and vibrating with twenty-one years of
repressed hate. “You think you made me? You broke me. Every time you lost to
the Velvets, every time you came home with swollen balls and a bruised ego, you
took it out on me. You made me small so you could feel big. You’re the
embarrassment, Dad. You lost count of how many times Justice Girl folded you
like a lawn chair. The only reason Jonah keeps you around is because you were
his father’s dog. You’re a relic.”
Carter clawed at Felix’s
wrist, his face turning a deep, sickly purple.
“Joshua did more for me
in six months than you did in two decades,” Felix whispered, his face inches
from his father’s. “He saw me. He told me I was good enough. You just told me I
was a failure. I’m not 'Joshua’s second.' I’m waiting for my moment. And when I
take the throne, I won’t thank you for it. I’ll do it despite you.”
Felix released the grip.
Carter slid down the wall, clutching his throat and coughing, looking up at his
son with a mix of terror and shock.
“Stay out of my way, old
man,” Felix said, stepping over him and walking out of the room without looking
back.
The back patio was a
different world. String lights hung over a low table, and the distant thud of
music from the quad was just a hum. Joshua and Yello were slumped in mismatched
chairs, iced coffees in hand, looking like normal college kids for the first
time in weeks. Lexie was leaning against the railing, her cropped hoodie
showing off a sliver of waist, her tiny shorts leaving very little to the
imagination.
“Meet Lexie,” Joshua
said, tilting his cup toward her. “Campus royalty. My girl.”
Lexie looked up from her
phone, flashed a perfect, practiced Instagram smile, and blew Joshua a kiss.
“Hi, Yello. Josh hasn't stopped talking about his genius best friend.”
Yello blinked, looking a
little stunned. “Damn, Josh. She’s exactly what I pictured. Like...
trophy-level. Deadass Instagram-perfect.”
Lexie laughed, a light,
airy sound. “I’ll leave you boys to your bromance. Don’t talk too much shit
about me.” She sauntered inside, her hips swaying with a rhythmic, thirsty
confidence that made Yello shake his head.
Once the door clicked
shut, the silence settled. Joshua stared at his coffee, his expression shifting
from "fuckboy" to something much darker and more complicated.
“I kinda love Mentari,”
Joshua said quietly.
Yello literally choked on
his drink, coughing up a spray of coffee. “What? Is this because Valentine’s
Day is coming? Are you sick, dude?”
Joshua shrugged, his
voice casual but his eyes dead serious. “Yeah, I know. Jonah would skin me
alive if he heard that. But look at him and Silla Kinanti. You see the way he
talks about her? It’s all hate and obsession. He wants her broken just as much
as he wants her next to him. It’s the same sickness, Yello. I want Mentari. I
want her spirit under my boot, but I want her.”
Yello stared at him,
wide-eyed. “Dude... that’s insane. You’re playing with fire. Jonah will
literally end you if he thinks you’re soft on a Goddess.”
Joshua smirked, a jagged,
arrogant look. “I’m not soft. I’m hungry. I’ll get the girl, Yello. Trust me.”
Yello shook his head,
half-horrified and half-impressed. “You’re a real piece of work, Josh. Capital
F fuckboy.”
Before Joshua could
reply, Yello’s phone buzzed on the table. He glanced at the screen and his face
went pale. “Jonah’s ready. Training basement. Now.”
Joshua stood up, his
joints popping as he rolled his shoulders. The casual vibe was gone instantly.
He drained the last of his coffee and headed for the stairs.
“Time to become something
more,” Joshua said.
He headed down into the
dark, toward the basement, toward Jonah, and toward a level of pain he wasn't
sure he was ready for.
Part 3
The basement beneath the
YoungPower frat house didn’t just feel like a tomb; it felt like a cage where
the air was too heavy to breathe. There were no windows, no fancy furniture,
just raw concrete and cold steel. A single, bare lightbulb swung from a frayed
wire in the center of the room, throwing jagged, twitching shadows across the
padded floor. It looked like a hanged man swaying in the wind.
Jonah Redfield stood in
the dead center of the room. He didn't need a throne to look like a king; he
just stood there, arms loose at his sides, looking like a glitch in the matrix
of a normal world. His curly hair was a mess of dark coils, exactly like Joshua’s,
but his face was carved from decades of pure, unfiltered violence. He was a
bigger, meaner, older mirror of the boy standing ten feet away from him.
Joshua rolled his
shoulders, his skin slick with sweat that smelled like the lab. The imperfect
Alpha-T dose he’d taken earlier was still buzzing in his veins, making his skin
feel three sizes too small. He felt like a bomb waiting for someone to pull the
pin.
Jonah tilted his head,
his eyes tracking the way Joshua’s muscles twitched.
“Unmistakable,” Jonah
said, his voice a low, gravelly rasp that felt like it was vibrating in
Joshua’s teeth. “Same hair. Same height. Same broad shoulders. Same fucking
fire in the eyes. If blood meant anything in this world, boy, I’d swear you
were my own son. You’ve got that Redfield hunger.”
Joshua didn't blink. He
didn't flinch. He just stared back, his pupils blown wide from the adrenaline.
“Maybe blood is just an excuse for people who aren't strong enough to choose
their own family.”
Jonah’s boots echoed like
gunshots on the concrete as he stepped closer. “I see it now. I see why the
surge chose you. You’re not just some gym rat looking for a bigger
biceps-to-waist ratio. You’re hungry for the whole world. You want it remade.
You want to stop playing by the rules of people who hate you. I’ve waited a
long-ass time for a man who wants the same things I do.”
He spread his arms, a
dark, predatory grin stretching across his face.
“Picture it, Joshua. The
Kingdom. A world where men finally take everything back. No more fake-ass
apologies for being strong. No more ‘equality’ debates where we pretend we’re
the same as them. No more women deciding what a man can say, or what is ‘oppressing’
them this week. We rule. Openly. Completely. Every street you walk on, every
boardroom you sit in, every fucking bedroom you enter belongs to us. Women
exist for one purpose: to serve. To kneel. To open their mouths and take
exactly what we give them.”
Jonah stepped into
Joshua’s personal space, his presence an absolute weight. “Their only job is to
suck our dicks, bear our sons, and keep the house quiet while we build the
empire. No votes. No rights. No voices. Just gratitude. Just total,
unconditional surrender. The Kingdom of Men. Eternal and absolute. And when I
build it, Joshua, you’ll be standing right at my right hand, holding the keys.”
Joshua’s eyes weren't
just burning; they were glowing with a sick, electric intensity. “I’ll make
sure that world comes,” he said, his voice low and iron-hard. “I’ll drag it
into existence with my bare hands and bury anyone who tries to stop me.”
Jonah smiled—a thin,
approving line of teeth. “But I know your heart, boy. You’re all about that
brotherhood. You hate the old-school bullshit—the captains acting like they’re
better than the privates just because they got here first. You want to flatten
it. You want every man with a dick and loyalty in his heart to be equal under
the crown.”
Joshua nodded once, his
jaw tight. “Brotherhood first. Hierarchy is for losers who can’t lead. But the
endgame is the same. Total dominion. We own the quad, we own the campus, we own
the world.”
“Good,” Jonah said,
rolling his neck until the vertebrae popped like firecrackers. “Then let’s make
you worthy of the title. Tell me... what do you actually know about the
Conqueror Spirit?”
Joshua flexed his
fingers, feeling the Alpha-T surging. “It’s like a shockwave. I use it to knock
people back. It makes them feel like they’re standing in front of a god. It
makes them feel small.”
Jonah nodded slowly,
beginning to pace the room like a caged tiger. “Conqueror Spirit isn’t some
magic spell from a movie, boy. It’s the raw, unfiltered surge of masculinity
itself. It’s testosterone, it’s will, it’s the absolute need for dominance.
It’s what happens when a man’s core explodes because he refuses to bend. Most
men in this era never feel it. They’ve been domesticated. But the strongest of
us? We summon it like a weapon.”
Jonah’s voice dropped
into a storyteller’s cadence, dark and rhythmic. “The original power came from
Gavin Leister—the man who founded Gavin’s Rock, the island where men are kings.
Centuries ago, he sailed to that cursed place, faced the witches who ruled it,
and he didn't ask for their power. He broke them. He took it. He became the
first. The surge lived in his blood. He tamed the island, made it a kingdom
where men ruled without ever saying ‘sorry.’”
Jonah’s eyes glinted in
the harsh light. “For generations, the best of Gavin’s Rock carried it like a
crown. But why do so few men here ever awaken it? Because it needs two things,
Joshua. First: it has to be in your DNA. Second: you have to taste total dominion.
Real, unchallenged rule.”
He stopped pacing and
looked directly at Joshua. “In this feminist era, men have lost their grip.
Schools teach us we’re ‘toxic.’ Laws punish us for looking too long or being
too loud. Women mock our strength, call it ‘fragile,’ and then cry when we actually
use it. They’ve spent decades castrating us—not with knives, but with words,
shame, quotas, and guilt. Even men with the bloodline can’t summon the Spirit
anymore. The environment is poison. The surge starves without absolute power to
feed on.”
Joshua’s chest was
heaving. He felt the truth of it in his gut.
“The last true master was
Gabriel Leister,” Jonah continued, his voice hardening. “A direct descendant.
He could tame beasts with a single glance. He had two wolves that followed him
everywhere: Alpha and Thor. They were his enforcers. His Watchdogs. Gavin’s
Rock was a paradise for men who wanted to escape the modern world. Women were
servants only—domestic work, breeding stock, nothing else. Total male kingdom.
Men moved there from all over the world just to feel that power again.”
Jonah’s expression turned
into a mask of pure hate. “Then Alif Rakaprabawa arrived with his wife... Silla
Kinanti. She saw the island, she saw the women on their knees, and she didn't
kneel. She started a rebellion. Nobody knows exactly how a woman did it, but
she defeated Gabriel. She broke his Watchdogs. She castrated him. And she stole
the power that should belong only to men.”
Joshua felt a cold chill
run down his spine. “She stole it?”
“She carried it away like
a trophy,” Jonah spat. “Divorced Alif. Left him bleeding and broken on the
beach. He came to me afterward—joined as one of my captains. Silla returned
here, recruited the Velvets, and started this war. Every time she uses that power,
she’s wearing Gabriel’s legacy like a stolen crown. She’s tried to take my dick
more times than I can count, Joshua. She’s failed every time. But she still
breathes. And that’s a problem.”
Jonah stepped closer, his
shadow swallowing Joshua. “Do you know why you have it?”
Joshua shook his head,
his throat dry.
“Because you were chosen.
But being chosen isn't enough. You need an environment that feeds the beast.
Pure masculine pressure. Brotherhood. War. That’s why you awakened it
here—among men who refuse to kneel to the sorority. Right now, only four of us
carry it: me, Corbyn, Zach... and you. Zach is a fighter like you, but he’s all
muscle and no brain. He lacks your mind. He lacks your vision.”
Jonah raised his right
hand. The air around it began to distort, thickening and shimmering until it
hardened into something that looked like black, polished volcanic glass. It
looked like his arm had been dipped in obsidian.
“Conqueror Spirit is more
than just knocking people down, Josh. You can concentrate it. Channel it into
your hands—turn them into weapons. Fists become maces. Palms become hammers.
You can block a steel blade with your bare forearm. Shatter bone with a single
tap. You can even push it into your feet and make your kicks feel like
sledgehammers.”
Joshua stared at the
blackened limb, mesmerized. “What’s the difference between that and the Alpha-T
Brian and Florian are working on?”
Jonah let out a short,
cold laugh. “Alpha-T’s main ingredient... is mine. It’s my testosterone. My
sperm. Florian found a way to distill it, replicate it, and inject it. But it’s
a chemical shadow, boy. A copy. Alpha-T enhances the body—makes the muscles
bigger, the dick bigger, the balls heavier, the hits harder. But Conqueror
Spirit? That’s mythical. You’re not a normal man anymore. You’re a demigod. I’m
the king. Together, we make those women cry for mercy.”
Joshua’s jaw tightened.
He thought of Mentari. He thought of the way she’d bitten him. “What about
Hardening? Can it protect our balls? Can it make the source invincible?”
Jonah’s expression
darkened, a flash of genuine pain crossing his face. “No. That’s the mystery.
Nature won't let us shield the source. The engine stays vulnerable. Always.
It’s the one place where we can still be broken.”
He shook the obsidian
from his hand, his skin returning to normal. “But Hardening lets us make the
rest of ourselves untouchable. They’ll never reach your balls because you’ll
end them first with hands like war hammers and feet like battering rams. When they
look at you, they’ll feel the primal fear of a prey animal in their bones.
There are other uses... you’ll find them.”
Joshua nodded, a dark
fire dancing in his eyes.
Jonah stepped back,
cracking his knuckles. “I have a task for you. Prove you can handle the weight.
Three days from now, under the full moon, go alone into the forest north of
Phallusic. Choose one beast. Any beast. Break its will with yours. When it kneels
before you without you even touching it... Hardening will awaken.”
Jonah took a fighting
stance, his right hand shimmering black again. “Now... show me what you can
do.”
Jonah lunged with zero
warning. His hardened fist swung like a wrecking ball toward Joshua’s ribs.
Joshua twisted his body at the last second, catching the blow on his forearm.
The impact didn't sound like flesh hitting flesh; it rang out with a sharp, metallic
CLANG that echoed through the basement.
Joshua grinned, blood
trickling from a small cut on his lip. “Again.”
“Again!” Jonah roared,
his laughter savage and approving.
The two of them exploded
into a blur of motion. Every time their spirits clashed, a low-frequency
shockwave rippled out, making the dust dance on the floor. Joshua swung a kick,
but Jonah blocked it with a forearm that felt like a steel pipe. They weren't
just sparring; they were trying to break each other. Joshua unleashed a burst
of Conqueror Spirit that made the lightbulb shatter, plunged the room into
darkness lit only by the occasional spark of their power.
Upstairs in the lounge,
Matt and Garrett were sitting on the leather sofa, iced coffees forgotten on
the table. Suddenly, the floorboards buckled and groaned. A framed photo of the
original YoungPower founders fell off the wall, the glass shattering on the
hardwood. The whole house gave a violent, rhythmic shake, like a
mini-earthquake was centered right under their feet.
“Jesus,” Garrett
whispered, his eyes wide. “Josh is down there leveling up. I can literally feel
the house groaning.”
Matt laughed, a jagged,
thirsty sound. “Let him cook. By the time he comes out of that basement, those
Goddess bitches are absolutely doomed. They won't even know what hit them.”
Below, in the dark, the
sound of fighting continued, a drumbeat
of war that promised the end of the quad as they knew it.
Part 4
The campus district on
February 12th didn’t care that it wasn’t officially Valentine’s Day yet. The
air was already thick with that desperate, performative romance that makes
everyone want to gag or get laid. The restaurant—one of the few upscale joints that
hadn't been trashed or boycotted—was dimly lit, all velvet booths and
overpriced candles. It was the kind of place where the waiters were trained to
look past the black polo shirts and ignore the fact that the guys eating the
$70 steaks were the same ones terrorizing the quad.
Joshua sat in a corner
booth, the shadows making his jawline look like it was carved out of granite.
He was wearing the YoungPower uniform, and deadass, it looked better on him
than a suit ever could. The black fabric was stretched so tight across his chest
it looked like it was struggling to contain the Alpha-T humming in his veins.
Opposite him, Lexie was a total vision of "thirsty and dangerous."
Her ice-blonde hair was swept over one shoulder, and her red dress was so tight
it basically counted as a second skin.
She arched a perfectly
groomed brow, swirling her wine. “You’re really wearing the polo to a
pre-Valentine’s dinner, babe? Seriously? You could’ve dressed like a normal hot
guy for once. Give the ‘General’ vibes a rest.”
Joshua didn’t even look
up from his glass. He just smirked, that arrogant, jagged half-smile that
usually meant someone was about to get crushed. “I’m the face of MANPOWER, Lex.
Everywhere I go, I’m the brand. This isn’t just a shirt; it’s a crown. If people
feel uncomfortable seeing the black and denim, that’s a ‘them’ problem, not a
‘me’ problem.”
Lexie let out a light,
practiced laugh—the kind of sound she used when she wanted to remind everyone
in the room that she was the one he’d chosen. “Fine. My king in black. I guess
it matches my aesthetic anyway.”
They clinked glasses. The
food came—a massive, bloody steak for him and salmon for her—but neither of
them was really there for the calories. This was a tactical celebration.
Jonah’s quest was set for the 14th—the full moon. There would be no roses or chocolates
on the actual holiday because Joshua would be in the woods, breaking a beast’s
will to awaken his Hardening.
Lexie set her fork down,
her eyes going soft and calculated. She reached across the table, her fingers
trailing over his wrist, her touch light but possessive. “When you finish
this... when you come back from the woods stronger than ever and finally finish
those Goddess bitches…” She paused, her voice dropping to a low, breathy
whisper. “I want you to marry me, Joshua.”
Joshua raised an eyebrow,
genuinely amused. “Marriage? We’re twenty-one, Lex.”
“I’m deadass serious,”
she said, leaning in until he could smell her expensive perfume. “I’ve dreamed
about it since the first time you looked at me like I was the only girl on
campus. We don’t need some boring-ass church. We do it in the frat house backyard
at sunset. String lights, the brothers all drunk and cheering, the Youngbitches
looking on and wishing they were me. We’ll have a black and red theme. I’ll
wear white, obviously, but with red lace underneath—something sinful that only
you get to see when the door locks.”
She smiled, a dreamy,
predatory look in her eyes. “And then? A honeymoon somewhere remote. No phones.
No ‘Cheerios.’ Just you, me, and a bed that doesn’t stop shaking for a week
straight. You’d kiss me like you own me in front of everyone. Because you do,
Joshua. You always have.”
Joshua watched her, his
expression unreadable. He could see the future she was painting—a life of being
the undisputed Queen of the Frat, the woman behind the Conqueror. It was a
tempting image, a perfect alignment of power and optics.
“The day will come,” he
said quietly, his voice like velvet over gravel.
Lexie beamed, her victory
secured. They finished the wine, paid the tab, and stepped out into the biting
February air.
The walk back was quiet.
The campus paths were still lit with holiday string lights that nobody had
bothered to take down, casting a sickly, festive glow over the pavement.
Joshua’s skin felt hot, the Alpha-T making him restless, his blood feeling like
it was bubbling under the surface.
As they passed the
library steps, the vibe shifted instantly.
Mentari was standing
there, alone. She was leaning against a stone pillar, a white coat thrown over
her jeans, her dark hair loose and caught in the wind. she was scrolling
through her phone, her brow furrowed in that focused, "don't fuck with me"
way she had.
Joshua’s step faltered
for half a second. Lexie felt it and tightened her grip on his arm, her nails
digging into his black polo.
Mentari looked up.
Time didn’t just slow
down; it stopped. It was two predators recognizing each other across a
blood-stained battlefield. No words were exchanged. No sneers. No fake smiles.
Just raw, electric recognition. There was enough hate in that look to burn the
library down, but underneath it, there was a hunger—a primal challenge that
neither of them would ever admit to.
Joshua felt the air leave
his lungs. Mentari looked at him, then at Lexie, then back to Joshua’s eyes.
Her expression didn't change, but her silence was louder than a scream. Then,
as if on a synchronized timer, they both looked away at the exact same instant,
pretending the moment never happened.
Lexie didn't say a word
as they kept walking, but her fingers were trembling. She noticed. She deadass
noticed the way the air had practically caught fire when Joshua and Mentari
locked eyes.
The second the door to
Joshua’s room clicked shut, the tension exploded. Lexie didn't wait. She shoved
him against the wood, her mouth on his, her hands already tugging frantically
at the hem of his polo. She was kissing him with a desperate, frantic energy,
like she was trying to overwrite the memory of Mentari with her own body.
Joshua kissed her back,
his hands tangling in her blonde hair, yanking her head back so he could bite
at the sensitive skin of her throat. She moaned, her body melting against his
like it always did, her hands sliding down to fumble with his belt.
But Joshua’s mind was a
mess. Behind his eyelids, he wasn't seeing Lexie’s ice-blonde hair. He was
seeing dark curls. He wasn't seeing Lexie’s submissive smile; he was seeing
Mentari’s defiant, blazing eyes. He saw her spitting in his face in the lab, and
then he felt the ghost of that bite on his dick—the pain that had felt like an
invitation.
“Fuck,” he growled, the
word a jagged rasp.
He shoved Lexie onto the
bed, climbing over her and pinning her wrists above her head with one hand. The
Alpha-T was roaring now, making him feel ten feet tall and twice as heavy. He
was grinding against her thigh, the friction almost unbearable.
Lexie reached down, her
fingers slipping under his waistband. She wrapped her hand around him, her eyes
widening. He was already rock-hard— He felt like a weapon of war.
She stroked him once, a
slow, deliberate slide.
Joshua’s head dropped
forward, a low, guttural sound of pure, unadulterated pleasure ripping from his
chest. He was lost in it. The heat, the friction, the overwhelming surge of
dopamine.
“Yeah… Mentari…”
The name slipped out. It
wasn't a shout. It was a whisper—low, reverent, and hungry.
Lexie froze.
The air in the room
turned to ice. Her hand stilled, her fingers still wrapped around him. Joshua
didn't notice for a heartbeat, his hips still rolling into her grip, his eyes
squeezed shut as he lived out the fantasy of having the Heaven Goddess finally
broken beneath him.
Then he felt her fingers
tighten. It wasn't the tightness of pleasure. It was the grip of a woman who
had just realized she was a stand-in for her worst nightmare.
Lexie didn't scream. She
didn't cry. She just acted on pure, unhinged fury. She yanked her hand downward
with every ounce of strength she had—a vicious, snapping pull that targeted his
testicles with surgical precision.
Joshua’s world didn't
just end; it exploded.
A raw, high-pitched
howl—a sound no man should ever have to make—ripped from his throat. It wasn't
a "Conqueror" roar; it was the scream of a wounded animal. His entire
body convulsed, his knees buckling instantly as he collapsed sideways onto the
mattress.
The pain was a white-hot
supernova in his crotch, radiating up into his stomach and down into his legs.
He curled into a tight, pathetic ball, his hands flying to his groin as if he
could hold the shattered pieces of his manhood together.
His face, usually so
controlled and handsome, was a mask of pure agony. His eyes were squeezed shut
so tight his lashes were trembling. His mouth was hanging open in a silent,
vibrating scream, the veins in his neck bulging like they were about to burst through
the skin. Cold sweat broke out across his forehead in a split second, soaking
his hair.
“Ah—fuck—fuck—!” he
gasped, the words barely making it past his teeth. Every breath felt like a
jagged piece of glass in his lungs. He couldn't even move; the slightest shift
of his hips sent a fresh wave of nausea and blinding pain through his nervous system.
It felt like his soul was trying to leave his body through his throat.
Lexie scrambled off the
bed, her face pale, her hands shaking as she looked at him. “Oh my God—Joshua—I
didn't—shit! I didn't mean to do it that hard!”
Joshua couldn't even look
at her. He was rocking slowly back and forth, his face buried in the pillow,
trying not to vomit.
Lexie knelt beside the
bed, her panic rising as she saw him shivering. “Let me see—oh God, Joshua,
they’re swollen. They’re deadass swollen already.”
She scrambled to the
mini-fridge in the corner—the one they’d kept stocked with ice packs ever since
the Goddesses started targeting their groins. She wrapped one in a thin towel
and pressed it gently against the center of the trauma.
Joshua let out a hissed,
pathetic sound, his whole body tensing as the cold hit the fire.
“I’m sorry,” Lexie
whispered, her voice cracking, actual tears in her eyes now. “I’m so sorry,
babe. I didn't mean to hurt you like that. I just… I heard her name. You said
her name while I was touching you.”
She swallowed hard, her
guilt quickly turning into a familiar, toxic resentment. “It’s her fault. It’s
that bitch Mentari. She’s in your head, Joshua. She’s ruining us. She did this
to you.”
Joshua didn't answer. He
couldn't. He just lay there in the dark, breathing through the throbbing,
nauseating ache, listening to Lexie apologize for something she’d done while
blaming the girl she hated. Lexie stayed there all night, icing him, stroking his
hair, and whispering about how much she loved him, all while Joshua drifted in
and out of a pained, humiliated fever dream.
Joshua woke up some hours
later, the kind of waking that feels like being dragged through gravel. Pain
was the first thing to greet him—a dull, heavy, rhythmic throb that
synchronized with his heartbeat.
He cracked his eyes open.
The dim morning light was slipping through the blinds, painting grey stripes
across his room. He was sprawled on his back, his black polo rucked up around
his ribs, his jeans a heap on the floor like evidence of a crime. The sheet had
slipped down to his hips, and even without looking, he knew he was a mess. He
felt heavy. Hot. His balls ached so badly that even the weight of the air felt
like too much. The skin felt stretched to the absolute limit, radiating a
localized heat that made his stomach flip.
He exhaled through his
nose, slow and controlled. Fuck.
The memory of the night
hit him in jagged fragments: the early Valentine's proposal, the encounter at
the library, the pleasure of Lexie’s hand, and then the name. Mentari. Followed
by the white-hot explosion of the yank.
He turned his head
slightly. Lexie was curled on her side next to him, still asleep. Her blonde
hair was a mess across the pillow, her face looking soft and innocent in a way
it never did when she was awake. One of her arms was thrown across his stomach,
a possessive, subconscious claim. The ice pack sat melted and useless on the
nightstand.
Joshua stared at the
ceiling, his jaw clenched until it ached.
Why? The question burned
in his mind. Why the fuck did nature do this to us?
He thought about Jonah’s
speech. About the "Kingdom of Men." About the Conqueror Spirit and
the Alpha-T and the power to remake the world. Men were given the engine, the
fire, the raw materials to build empires and crush enemies. They were made into
gods among animals.
And then, nature had left
the most vital part of the machine hanging there like a glass target.
Unshieldable. Unhardenable. Even with the "Hardening" technique Jonah
talked about, the source remained a kill-switch.
A woman half his size
could drop him. A girlfriend in a moment of pique could bring the
"Conqueror" to his knees, screaming like a child. It was Mother
Nature’s ultimate dark comedy—the ability to conquer the world, but with the
constant reminder that it could all be ended by two fingers and a bit of spite.
He hated the
vulnerability. He hated that Lexie—who worshipped the ground he walked on—could
accidentally remind him he wasn't invincible.
He knew she hadn't meant
to do permanent damage. He’d seen her crying, seen the way she’d spent hours
trying to fix what she’d broken. Lexie wasn't the enemy. She was just an
accident waiting to happen.
His gaze drifted down to
her sleeping face. She was beautiful, sure. She was loyal. She was
"Instagram-perfect."
But then his mind went
back to the library steps.
Mentari wouldn't have
apologized. Mentari wouldn't have cried or iced the wound. Mentari would have
smiled while she did it. She would have watched him curl into a ball and
whispered something clever and cruel about how even kings bleed between their
legs. She would have made it hurt on purpose, and she would have loved every
second of his agony.
She wanted to burn him.
She had humiliated him in the lab, she had bitten him, and yet... fuck. The
thought of her didn't make him angry. It made his blood run hot. Even now, with
his balls feeling like overripe fruit about to burst, the thought of Mentari’s
defiant eyes made his cock twitch under the sheet.
Joshua closed his eyes,
breathing through the sharp spike of pain that the movement caused.
One day, he thought, the
promise feeling both bitter and intoxicating. One day, I’m going to have the
real thing. Mentari won't be a memory; she’ll be a slave. She’ll be my wife, my
trophy, and my favorite thing to break.
He shifted carefully,
rolling onto his side to face Lexie. The movement pulled a low, guttural hiss
from between his teeth, but he ignored it. He leaned over her, propping himself
up on one elbow.
Blonde hair. Soft
features. Easy surrender.
He bent his head and
kissed her—slowly at first, testing the waters. Lexie stirred, her lips parting
sleepily, responding with the immediate, eager pliancy she always had. She was
so easy to own.
Joshua deepened the kiss,
his tongue sliding in, his hand cupping the back of her head.
In his mind, he wasn't
kissing Lexie. He was kissing Mentari. He saw the dark hair spilling across the
pillow. He felt a smaller, more athletic frame fighting him for control even
while she melted. He saw eyes blazing with hate and hunger in equal measure.
Always Mentari.
He let out a low groan
into Lexie’s mouth—half pain from his injury, half desperate want—and pressed
harder, dominating the kiss the way he wished he could dominate the girl who
had actually bitten him.
Lexie whimpered happily
beneath him, her hands coming up to clutch at his shoulders, completely unaware
that she was just a stand-in for a ghost.
Joshua broke the kiss,
his breath coming in rough huffs against her lips. He rested his forehead
against hers for a moment, hiding the predatory look in his eyes.
“One day,” he whispered,
the words intended for a girl who wasn't even in the room. “You won’t need to
imagine anything.”
He kissed Lexie again,
softer this time, letting her believe it was all for her. Because right now,
with swollen balls and a pounding headache and the full moon only forty-eight
hours away, Lexie was the closest thing to mercy he had.
But as he held her, all
he could think about was the woods. The beast. And the power that would finally
make him untouchable.
Part 5
The sun was dipping low
over Phallusic Cave, painting the limestone cliffs in shades of burnt orange
and rose gold. The cave itself—one of the town's oldest tourist draws—yawned
open behind them like a dark, ancient mouth. It was framed by dripping stalactites
and the constant, rhythmic roar of the underground spring feeding the turquoise
pool at its base. The view was deadass breathtaking: jagged rock faces dropping
straight into mist-shrouded forest, with the city lights just starting to
flicker on in the valley like scattered diamonds. It was the perfect spot for
something defiant, something beautiful, something that said: We don't need them
to feel whole.
The Cheerios had claimed
the wide, flat ledge outside the cave for their "Girls in Love"
Valentine's event—a deliberate, high-energy middle finger to every
pink-heart-and-roses couple currently clogging up the campus. No boys allowed.
No exceptions. Just bass-heavy female rage anthems, fairy lights, blankets,
mocktails, and enough snacks to fuel a small revolution. Tomorrow night, this
ledge would be packed with freshmen girls laughing, crying, and realizing that
Valentine's didn't have to mean waiting for a "u up?" text from some
frat dude who didn't know their middle name.
Sydney was currently
standing on a folding chair, stringing fairy lights between two sturdy pines,
swearing like a sailor every time a branch snagged the wire.
"Why the hell are we
doing this outdoors?" she shouted down to Teyona, who was hauling a
massive cooler across the rocky ground. "We have a perfectly good sorority
house basement. It’s heated. It’s bug-free. There is zero chance of frostbite
on my ass. Right now, my nipples are literally trying to retire from my
body."
Teyona didn't even look
up. She dropped the cooler with a heavy thud, wiping a smear of dirt from her
forehead. "It's for the vibe, Syd. Fresh air. Nature. Symbolism. We're not
hiding in a basement like scared little rabbits. We're claiming space. Out
here. Where those YoungPower pricks can see us from the valley and know we're
having the best damn night they've ever been blacklisted from."
Sydney snorted, yanking
another strand of lights. "Symbolic my ass. My nipples are gonna freeze
off, and you're gonna be the one explaining to the freshmen why their big
sister looks like she's smuggling two erasers under her shirt."
Teyona finally glanced
up, a sharp smirk on her face. "Maybe if you wore something with more than
2% fabric coverage—"
"Oh, fuck off, Miss
Cargo-Pants-and-Combat-Boots," Sydney shot back, though she was grinning.
"At least I dress like I might get laid someday. You’re out here looking
like you're about to storm a bunker."
"I'm literally in a
relationship with Ana, and you’re single and still low-key thirsty for that
gorilla Garrett," Teyona countered.
Sydney threw a balled-up
string of lights at her. Teyona caught it one-handed without missing a beat.
Mentari—sitting cross-legged on a blanket nearby, sorting through boxes of
rose-gold heart balloons—watched the exchange, her hand pressed to her mouth,
shoulders shaking with silent laughter.
"You two are
literally going to kill each other before the freshmen even arrive,"
Mentari said, wiping a stray tear from her eye. "It's Valentine's prep,
not a cage match. Can we focus?"
Sydney hopped down from
the chair, dusting off her hands. "Teyona started it."
"I did not. You
started it by whining about the cold like a princess who forgot her fur
coat."
Mentari laughed louder—a
full, bright sound that made the lingering tension from the Joshua encounter
finally loosen. "Seriously, though, look at this place. It’s
perfect."
Then, the air shifted.
The laughter died in Mentari's throat.
Lexie.
She was coming up the
stone path, her ice-blonde hair whipping in the wind. She was wearing a red
coat cinched tight at the waist and heels that clicked aggressively against the
uneven rock—a choice that made zero sense but screamed 'ego.' Her face was flushed,
but not from the cold. It was rage. Pure, unadulterated, unhinged fury. Her
eyes were locked on Mentari like twin lasers.
Mentari stood up slowly.
Sydney and Teyona stepped closer to her, their bodies tensing instinctively.
Lexie didn't slow down. She marched straight across the ledge, ignoring the
other two completely, until she was inches from Mentari’s face.
Before anyone could even
breathe, Lexie's hand cracked across Mentari's cheek—a sharp, ringing slap that
snapped Mentari's head to the side.
Silence. The only sound
was the roar of the spring below.
Then, Lexie just...
burst. Not into anger, but into big, ugly, jagged sobs that shook her whole
body. Mascara streaked down her cheeks instantly. She clutched her own wrist as
if the slap had hurt her more than it had hurt Mentari.
"You bitch,"
Lexie choked out, her voice a wrecked whisper. "You fucking bitch. He's in
love with you. He’s deadass obsessed with you. Do you know what he does? He
says your name when he’s inside me. He looks at me and all he sees is you. Why?
Why the fuck is it you?"
Mentari touched her
stinging cheek, her eyes wide but steady. She didn't strike back. She just
watched the girl in front of her fall apart.
Teyona took a furious
step forward, her fists clenched. "You want to catch these hands, Lexie?
Because I will—"
Sydney’s hand shot out,
grabbing Teyona's arm. "Wait," she muttered. "Look at her."
Lexie wasn't done. She
stepped closer to Mentari, her voice cracking with every word. "He could
have anyone. Anyone! I give him everything. I worship him. I make him feel like
a king every single day, and he still dreams about you. The girl who hates him.
The girl who wants him castrated. Why is that enough for him and I'm not? What
the hell do you have that I don't?"
Mentari lowered her hand.
Her cheek was turning a dark, angry red, but her voice came out quiet, almost
gentle.
"I pity you,
Lexie."
Lexie flinched as if
she’d been slapped back.
Mentari stepped
forward—not aggressive, just close enough to be heard over the wind.
"You're so male-centered that your entire worth is tied to whether Joshua
looks at you or not. You need his attention to feel alive. You need to be
'chosen' by a guy who thinks of you as a trophy. And when another woman—one who
doesn't even want his trash-tier attention—gets more of his obsession than you
do… you come here to hurt me instead of asking why you're willing to accept
scraps from someone who doesn't even see you as an equal."
Lexie sobbed harder,
hugging herself as if she were trying to keep her soul from leaking out.
"You can have
him," Mentari continued, her voice firm. "I don't want him. I never
wanted him. But I wish you'd open your eyes, Lexie. I wish you'd see that
surrendering yourself to a man who views you as a possession isn't love. It's
erasure. And you deserve more than to be erased by a guy whose ego is bigger
than his heart."
Lexie stared at
her—mascara-streaked, trembling, her red coat fluttering in the wind. For a
second, it looked like she might swing again. Instead, she just broke.
She turned and ran—her
heels slipping on the rock, her coat flapping behind her like broken
wings—disappearing down the path toward the parking lot.
Silence returned to the
ledge. Teyona exhaled hard through her nose, the adrenaline still buzzing.
"Should we have stopped her? Or, you know, kicked her off the cliff a
little bit?"
Mentari touched her cheek
again. It throbbed with a dull heat. "No," she said softly. "She
needed to hear it. Even if she hates me more now, the seed is planted."
Sydney walked over,
wrapping an arm around Mentari's shoulders. "You okay, M? That was a hell
of a hit."
Mentari nodded once,
looking out over the valley where the city lights were twinkling like scattered
stars. "Yeah. Just… sad. She’s fighting a war for a man who wouldn't even
jump over a puddle for her."
She looked at the
rose-gold balloons, then at the two sisters standing beside her.
"Tomorrow's for the
girls," Mentari said, her voice regaining its strength. "For us. For
everyone who’s tired of being a backup plan or a trophy. We’re not doing this
for the men. We’re doing this for the movement."
Teyona picked up the
fallen string of fairy lights and handed them to Sydney. "Then let's
finish the setup. Make it so beautiful they forget any of those frat pricks
ever existed."
Mentari smiled—small,
tired, but real. "Yeah. Let's do that."
They went back to
work—balloons, lights, music, and laughter—building a sanctuary of light
against the encroaching dark.

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