My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 369 - 369: The Girl Who Moves in Silence

The stadium’s roar fractured like a thousand jagged shards.
Gasps rippled outward like shockwaves—first one, then a dozen, then twenty thousand voices colliding in raw, disbelieving confusion. The celebration that had been building like a tidal wave crashed and broke.
Phones—still raised, still recording—trembled in frozen hands as every screen captured the exact moment Paradise’s carefully curated illusion shattered.
The emergency exits exploded open.
Not one door. All of them. Staff entrances, service corridors, loading bays—every concealed threshold vomited black-clad figures into the arena light.
Tactical vests gleamed dull yellow under the house lights. FBI in bold block letters across chests and backs. No badges flashing for show. No warnings beyond the initial command.
“EVERYBODY STAY WHERE YOU ARE!”
The megaphone voice cracked like dry lightning, slicing through the din. 200,000 bodies locked in place. Breath held. Hearts hammering in sudden, collective silence. The air itself seemed to thicken, heavy with the metallic tang of adrenaline and the faint ozone scent of fear.
They moved like surgical steel.
Not a riot squad or crowd control. A kill team with warrants. They flowed down the aisles, up the tunnels, converging on one fixed point with the quiet certainty of men who had already won before they stepped inside.
Kyle Abrams-Manson stood near the Reapers’ bench, still in his sweat-soaked jersey, shoulders hunched, trying to melt into the background of defeat. His face was the color of old parchment—humiliation from the game still burning fresh.
He’d been edging toward the tunnel, head down, praying the crowd’s euphoria would cover his exit.
He never saw them until gloved hands closed around his biceps like iron clamps.
“Kyle Abrams-Manson?”
His head jerked up. Eyes ballooned. Wider than when Phei had crossed him into the floorboards. Wider than when the tomahawk had come down like divine retribution.
“What—I don’t—my father will—”
“Kyle Abrams-Manson, you are under arrest for the murder of Darius O’Neil.”
The sentence landed like a sledgehammer through glass.
Murder.
The word ricocheted through the stands. Whispers ignited into murmurs into outright shouts. Phones flared brighter as people searched the name—Darius O’Neil—
The story that had been smothered, paid off, threatened into silence clawed free in front of twenty thousand witnesses.
“You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.”
Kyle thrashed—not coordinated resistance, just animal panic. Limbs jerking, voice cracking higher with every word.
“This is a mistake! My family—do you know who my family is? Do you know what they’ll do to you?”
The agent didn’t blink. Didn’t tighten his grip. Didn’t need to.
“You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you.”
“I CAN AFFORD A THOUSAND ATTORNEYS! THIS IS—YOU CAN’T—”
“Additional charges include obstruction of justice, tampering with evidence, conspiracy to conceal a death, and improper disposal of human remains.”
The final phrase sucked the oxygen from the nearest rows. Several people recoiled visibly—hands flying to mouths, bodies leaning away as though the words themselves carried contagion.
Improper disposal of human remains.
Kyle Abrams-Manson—Legacy heir, starting-five prodigy, untouchable golden boy—was being accused of burying a body like common trash.
The cuffs clicked shut.
The metallic snap echoed louder than any buzzer.
No one moved to intervene.
That silence would echo longer than the arrest itself.
Not his teammates, faces carved from shock and dawning horror. Not the coaches, suddenly fascinated by their clipboards. Not the Legacy parents in the VIP boxes, watching the first real crack spiderweb through the fortress they had built over generations.
Even the local police—those quiet, well-compensated guardians who had made so many problems vanish over the years—stood motionless at the court’s edges. Hands at their sides. Eyes forward. Making damn sure no one obstructed federal jurisdiction.
Because the FBI didn’t accept envelopes. Didn’t bow to old money. Had spent months threading needles through shell companies, burner phones, deleted security footage, coerced witnesses.
When they moved, they moved with evidence so ironclad even the Abrams-Manson fortune couldn’t bend it.
Kyle was dragged past Phei.
For one suspended heartbeat their eyes locked.
Kyle’s face was stripped raw—terror in its purest form, the look of a boy who had believed his last name was armor and was learning, publicly, excruciatingly, that armor could be peeled away.
Phei’s expression never flickered.
Cold. Calm. Satisfied.
A faint, almost imperceptible nod—the smallest acknowledgment that justice, for once, had remembered its own name.
Then Kyle was gone. Hauled through the tunnel mouth, shoved into the black SUV idling at the loading dock, swallowed by a system that finally refused to look the other way.
The stadium detonated.
****
Halfway across the city, in a windowless interrogation room that smelled of stale coffee and old fear, Chief Morrison sat chained to the steel interrogation table.
Thirty-two years on the force. Fifteen as chief. Countless envelopes slipped under doors, countless files quietly shredded, countless Legacy problems made to vanish like smoke. His hands—once steady enough to sign off on every cover-up in Paradise—now trembled against the cuffs.
The metal bit into his wrists, cold and unforgiving.
Two FBI agents flanked the door, black tactical vests still zipped tight. In the far corner, two CIA operatives stood silent, suits crisp, faces blank. They didn’t need to speak. Their presence alone screamed escalation—this wasn’t local dirty laundry anymore.
This had climbed ladders all the way to Langley and D.C.
“I want my lawyer,” Morrison said. Fourteenth time. Voice flatter each repetition.
The lead agent—mid-forties, calm eyes, no wedding ring—tilted his head like he was studying a mildly interesting insect.
“Your lawyer is currently being processed at his residence,” he replied, almost gentle. “Evidence tampering. Accessory after the fact. You’ll need new counsel.”
Morrison’s face drained to the color of wet concrete.
“I don’t know what you think you have, but—”
“We have everything.” The agent slid a thin manila folder across the scarred table. It landed with a soft slap that sounded louder than it should.
Morrison stared at it like it might bite.
“Bank records,” the agent continued, voice even. “Phone logs. Witness statements recanted under new pressure. The original autopsy report you ordered sealed. The coroner you paid to rewrite ‘blunt force trauma’ as ‘accidental fall.’ The evidence locker you personally cleared three days after Darius O’Neil’s body surfaced in the river.”
Each item landed like a nail.
“You’ve been the Legacy families’ personal eraser for decades, Chief. Taking their cash. Making inconvenient kids disappear. That stops tonight.”
Morrison’s mouth opened. Closed. No sound came out.
The folder stayed closed. It didn’t need to be opened. They both knew what was inside.
****
Outside the station, parked three blocks down in the deepest shadow between streetlights, a black Cadillac waited.
Engine off. Lights dark. Tinted windows so dark they turned the night inside blacker than black. To any passing patrol car it was just another luxury sedan cooling its heels on a quiet street.
Inside, a woman sat motionless in the driver’s seat.
Her face stayed hidden in the gloom, but the faint glow from her phone screen caught the sharp line of her jaw, the slow curl of satisfaction at the corners of her mouth. Years of quiet orchestration—whispers in the right ears, documents slipped to the right investigators, pressure applied in the right places—finally ripening.
Her phone buzzed once. Soft vibration against leather.
A single message from her contact inside:
Chief in custody. No complications.
She allowed herself the smallest exhale. A smile—private, razor-thin—curved her lips.
She opened her messages. Found the contact labeled simply “Miss.” Typed three words:
It’s done, Miss. As instructed.
Sent.
The engine purred to life. Headlights stayed off. She pulled away from the curb smooth and silent, melting into the Paradise night like ink into water.
Her role was complete.
The rest belonged to the girl who had lit the fuse.
BACK AT THE ACADEMY
Maya Scarlett stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Sierra and Maddie amid the collapsing celebration.
The arena had become a storm of noise—shouts overlapping, phones flashing, the viral wave of Kyle’s arrest spreading faster than oxygen through fire. Victory’s euphoria had soured into something jagged and unrecognizable: triumph laced with horror, shock laced with morbid fascination.
Her phone vibrated against her thigh.
She slipped it out just enough to read the screen.
Samatha: It’s done, Miss. As instructed.
One glance. No reaction beyond the faintest tightening of her fingers around the device.
She slid the phone back into her pocket. Turned to Sierra and Maddie with the same wide-eyed, slightly flustered expression they’d all come to expect from her—the rambling, harmless Maya who tripped over words and never quite fit the sharp edges of their circle.
“What’s happening?” she asked, voice pitched exactly between bewilderment and worry. “Did they really just arrest Kyle? For murder?”
Sierra’s jaw clenched so hard the muscle jumped. “Apparently.”
“Oh my god.” Maya pressed a palm to her chest, eyes rounding in perfect distress. “That’s—I mean—murder? Kyle?”
“We’ll find out more soon,” Maddie muttered, her usual chaos-gremlin spark dimmed, voice quieter than usual. “This whole day is insane.”
Maya nodded along, earnest. Concerned. Innocent.
No one saw the small, secret smile she hid behind it—the one that belonged only to her.
Phei had called her that morning.
Not Sierra. Not Maddie. Not Delilah or Emily or any of the others who circled him like constellations.
Her.
Voice rough with finality and something colder underneath—the low, deliberate tone he used when the board was set, and the first piece was about to fall.
“I’m making a move today,” he’d said. “During the game day.”


