So maybe what you discovered (although it probably needs more testing) is that the average "views to words ratio" for a non-explicit story with a low number of views is around 0.25? I find these kinds of metrics interesting, in part because it's the sort of thing that's used by business people to decide all sorts of stuff about which games, apps, streaming shows, subscription services etc are likely to succeed or not.
I'm not sure what "pages to views" would represent... maybe we would guess that the ratio will go up as the story gets more popular, but down if there are TOO many words (more than people want to read). That's why you'd usually have to incorporate time into this kind of metric, since 100,000 words in a week would probably get less views than 100,000 words spread out over 50 chapters in four months.
I suspect the more interesting metric might be "weekly favorites per view," which you would get by taking the favorites for each week, and dividing it by the views for each week. A higher number means more of the people who viewed did a favorite, and that would indicate a more enthusiastic audience? (Of course many Scribble Hub readers don't do favs, which is why you have to compare between series to figure out what a "high" or "low" average is.)