More fun
Want to support CHYOA?
Disable your Ad Blocker! Thanks :)

Chapter 2 by Genesis-Response Genesis-Response

Who's our lucky master?

Van - A 22 year old enigma

A world of heroes trembles on the precipice of destruction. For ages the Empowered, rare metahumans with unbelievable abilities, had protected humanity from its most terrible foes.

Nearly a century ago, the Genesis Plague had rewritten humanity in a single night. A mysterious enemy calling himself the Architect took credit for the vile plague and announced that the age of heroes was over. He declared victory and then vanished as quietly as he had arrived. Whatever the Architect had done, whatever impossible code he had carved into the species, the result was absolute. No male child born after the Plague could manifest powers.

The world had not lost all at once. They still had their heroes and heroines after all. But a slow creeping doom had settled. A district lost here. A city block there. A shipping lane too dangerous to cross.

A generation of girls born with gifts, then a smaller generation after them, then a smaller one still.

After a time, the Architect’s creatures began to appear.

He called them his Alters—savage, inhuman soldiers. They grew stronger, stranger, less predictable with each passing decade.

Humanity adapted because humanity always did. Women with powers took up the burden. The world kept turning on the strength of girls barely old enough to drink. Some of them were veterans by 25. The Older heroines became exhausted legends who had somehow lived long enough to see hope become old fashioned.

One more year. One more campaign. One more funeral. One more miracle.

Amid this chaos. Our newest Master arrives. He had no power. No energy projection, no flight, no armored skin, no mind like a living machine. He was an ordinary man living on the edges of a tattered society, completely overlooked. .

He was thinking about that when the floor dropped out beneath him.

There was no sound. No warning. One moment he was standing in the narrow apartment the realtor agency insisted on calling “secure housing”, staring at rain streaking down reinforced glass. The next, his stomach lurched, his knees buckled, and the world blazed into white.

He caught himself on one hand against a gleaming floor that looked like marble and felt faintly warm through his palm. When he looked up, he saw a ceiling painted the color of late afternoon, though there was no sun. Tall windows ran along one wall, opening onto a manicured campus with artificial beauty: walking paths, trimmed hedges, tiled roofs, flower beds too symmetrical to real. Beyond it all, a blue sky as perfect as a painting.

“Please stand, Master Van.”

The voice was female, smooth, and unhurried.

Van turned.

The woman wore a dark fitted jacket over a pale blouse, a skirt cut with the attentive neatness of private-school authority, and heels that made no sound on the stone as she turned to track his arrival. Everything about her was immaculate, from the fall of her black hair to the thin silver chain at her throat. Glasses rested low on her nose. Van thought she looked like the kind of woman who wore them as a statement but did not need to.

She was beautiful, of course. That was somehow the last thing he noticed. She seemed separate from her own beauty, like it was a mask she wore.

“Who are you?” he asked, hating how small the question sounded.

She smiled, and it was not a warm smile. It was the smile of a woman pleased that a lesson had begun.

“Verena Sable,” she said. “Headmistress, host, and acting administrator for this season of Harem Hotel: Genesis Response.”

There was a pause just long enough for the words to settle into him with a kind of pain he couldn’t identify. He couldn’t say why, but there was a gut deep rejection of those words.

“No,” Van said.

“An understandable first response.”

“What is this?”

“A necessary intervention.” She took a few measured steps toward him. “For your world. For several others. And, if all goes well, for the future.”

“I’m not doing this.”

That smile again. Softer, somehow. More insulting for it.

“You misunderstand your position, Van. This is not a recruitment.”

Behind her, something gave a soft mechanical chime. A decorative wall panel came alive with light. Text unfurled across it in elegant gold letters:

HAREM HOTEL: GENESIS RESPONSE

MASTER: VAN

CONTESTANTS: 8

CURRENT BONUS POINTS: 0

Van stared.

Verena turned slightly, as if acknowledging an invisible audience beyond the room. When she spoke again, her tone shifted—still calm, but brighter around the edges, polished for performance.

“The premises are simple,” she said. “Your world is losing its war. The current generation of heroines is too few, too broken, and too heavily burdened by the failures of the last. Conventional heroics have bought time. They will not buy victory.”

She looked back at him.

“You are the base upon which a superior structure may be built.”

Van felt something cold settle behind his ribs. “I’m a person, not a tool or whatever else you think I am.”

“Yes,” Verena said. “Which is why this season has promise.”

She folded her hands.

“Eight contestants have been selected from your world. Not at random. They are the women our producers and predictive models identify as the most viable participants for this iteration of the program. Over the coming cycles, they will live and train here. They will attend classes, complete assigned tasks, compete in scheduled challenges, and accumulate Victory Points through performance, adaptation, and relational development.”

Van’s jaw tightened. “You drafted them.”

“We did.”

“They didn’t agree to this.”

“No,” Verena said. “But Harem Hotel has never shown much regard for consent when it drafts its contestants.”

He took a step toward her before he could stop himself. “Send me back.”

She did not move. Did not even blink. Van wasn’t sure she even breathed.

“After eight challenge cycles,” she said, “your assembled team will return to confront the Architect. If they have progressed sufficiently, your world may survive.”

Van felt like the walls were closing in on him. He **** himself to breathe. “You keep saying team.”

“Of course.” Verena’s voice was pleasant. “A harem is merely one of the more honest words for the structure we cultivate here. But forms must be followed, after all.”

He stared at her.

She continued as though discussing a syllabus.

“The contestants begin at zero Victory Points. At one hundred, a contestant secures her success, receives a beneficial exit transformation, and may claim a wish within approved parameters. If they fail to achieve this benchmark after 8 challenges, a contestant is removed from further advancement under punitive terms. Bonus Points may also be earned and spent within the facility.”

The glowing wall shifted. More text bloomed in orderly lines.

MANDATORY DAILY SCHEDULE

GROUP BREAKFAST

ASSIGNED CLASSES / TASKS

BOND ASSIGNMENT

CHALLENGE EVERY NINTH DAY

POST-CHALLENGE TRANSFORMATION POLL

Van’s stomach turned.

“Transformation?” he said.

“Physical, mental, spiritual, social. The exact offerings vary.” Verena’s tone remained frustratingly even. “All changes are permanent. Some contestants learn to value them.”

“And if they refuse?”

For the first time, she stiffened through her schoolmistress poise.

“They will not be permitted to refuse the structure itself."

Van looked past her, out at the impossible campus, and understood at once that none of it was meant to comfort him. The lawns, the sunlight, the warm marble underfoot—every last piece of it had been built to make a gilded cage.

Verena studied him for a moment, then seemed to decide something.

“You need not enjoy your role,” she said. “In some respects, I would prefer that you did not. Easy men are rarely equal to difficult futures.”

He laughed once. It came out sharp and empty. “You think I’m going to help you do this to them?”

“No,” she said. “I think you are going to help them survive it.”

Before he could answer, a bell rang somewhere beyond the walls—clear, elegant, and terrible.

One by one, eight small lights appeared along the golden display. The first turned from white to red.

CONTESTANT INTAKE: ONE

Verena inclined her head toward the doors.

“Compose yourself, Master Van,” she said. “Your first heroine has arrived.”

Please log in to view the image

What's next?

Want to support CHYOA?
Disable your Ad Blocker! Thanks :)