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Milf Cult

AuthorBechi
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
[Divine Charm System Activated] [You have been chosen to rebuild the Sisterhood of Eternal Grace] [Current Stats: Charm: 3/100 | Leadership: 2/100] [Mission: Recruit powerful women. Level up. Save humanity from supernatural threats.] . . . Jake Morrison's life was a disaster, until a mysterious system chose him to rebuild an ancient sisterhood of powerful women. Now he's got supernatural abilities, a harem of mature beauties with deadly skills, and demons trying to kill him.
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Chapter 1 - Worst day ever

The lights on the ceiling flickered over jake as he stared at his computer screen. Twenty-nine years old, receding hair-line, and a dead-end job in a dying company. This was his life.

"Morrison. My office. Now."

Jake's heart dropped at Mr. Hendricks' tone. His manager never sounded like that unless someone was getting fired. He glanced around looking for who he could share his complain with but his coworkers suddenly found their monitors fascinating. That was when he knew he was in trouble.

The walk to Hendricks' office felt like it was draining the life out of him.

"Close the door," Hendricks said.

"I'll cut to the chase. We're letting you go."

"What? Why? I've never missed a deadline—"

"Company's downsizing. Nothing personal."

Hendricks finally looked at him with no expression on his face. "We need exceptional people and you? You're just... adequate."

Adequate. it was true. Jake had never been exceptional at anything. Average grades. Average looks. Average life. He had always been a background character in every story, even his.

"You'll get two weeks severance pay, Clean out your desk by end of day."

Jake stumbled back to his cubicle in a daze. Four years of his life fit into one cardboard box. A coffee mug. A dying plant. Some pens. Was this really all he had?

His phone buzzed. Finally, a message from Lisa. Girlfriend. maybe she'd been busy, maybe she wanted dinner tonight—

-We need to talk. I don't think this is working out. You're nice, Jake, but I need someone with more ambition. Someone going places. I'm sorry.

Dumped. Via text. On the same day he got fired.

Jake wanted to scream. Instead, he just stood there, holding his box of meaningless possessions, trying not to cry in front of everyone.

"Tough break, man," Kevin from the next cubicle muttered.

Jake didn't respond. He just walked out into the Seattle rain, because of course it was raining.

.

.

.

His mother called as he waited for the bus, his cardboard box disintegrating in his arms.

"Jacob, sweetie, I was wondering if you had thought about going back to school—"

"Mom, I just got fired."

"Oh, honey. Maybe this is a sign. You could move back home—"

"I'm not moving back home. I'll figure it out."

"You always say that, but Jake, you're not getting any younger. I'd like grandchildren before—"

He hung up. He would feel guilty later, but right now he couldn't handle her disappointed concern on top of everything else.

By the time he reached his tiny studio apartment, Jake was soaked, defeated, and wondering when his life had become such a disaster. He dropped the soggy box on his couch and just stood there, dripping on his cheap carpet floor.

He should update his resume. Start job hunting. Call Lisa back and... what? Beg?

No. Instead, Jake found himself walking out of his room with no destination in mind, just walking to escape the feeling of depression hitting him. The rain had slowed to a drizzle, and the streets were glowing under the streetlights.

He wandered through the Market place, past closed shops and restaurants he knew he couldn't afford. His feet carried him down a narrow side street that he didn't recognize.

That's when he saw it.

A shop wedged between a closed bookstore and what looked like a condemned building. The sign read "Curios & Antiquities" in faded gold letters. Warm light spilled from the window, and something about it drew him in.

A bell rang as he entered. The shop smelled like dust and incense, crammed with random objects; old books, strange statues, jewelry,things he couldn't identify.

"Welcome, welcome," said a voice from somewhere in the back. "Everything chooses its owner, not the other way around."

Jake couldn't see the shopkeeper. He almost left, but something caught his eye, a soft blue-white glow from near the back.

He pushed aside some books and found a pendant. A Silver chain, crystal centerpiece that seemed to contain a swirling light within It. It was the most beautiful thing he'd ever seen, and looking at it made his chest feel warm.

He reached out without thinking.

And The world exploded in light.

Jake gasped, stumbling backward, but the pendant was somehow in his hand now. The glow intensified, becoming almost blinding, and Jake felt something surge through him...

Then it stopped. The light faded and The pendant looked ordinary now.

"What the hell was that?" he whispered.

The shop was silent. Empty. Jake looked around, but he seemed to be alone. Where was the shopkeeper?

He walked to the counter. No one there. Just a small card: "Take what chooses you. Payment will be rendered in time."

"Weird"

Jake pocketed the pendant and walked out. When he looked back, the shop was dark, the sign barely visible.

He shook his head, it had been a long Terrible day. He was probably hallucinating from stress.

As he walked home, the pendant hung against his chest, Jake had no idea his worst day was about to become the first day of an extraordinary life.