My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 370 - 370: His Ordnance.

“Against Brett? Anderson?” she’d asked, assuming the obvious targets—
“No.” His laugh had been soft. Dark. Almost fond. “Kyle.”
“Kyle?” She’d sat straight up in bed, pulse jumping. “But you don’t have as much on him. The accident is—”
“I’m not the one bringing it to light.”
She’d gone still.
“Renee’s dropping the piece mid-game day. A question about his death—on Darius O’Neil. The kid Kyle hit with his car while the six sat in the back, drunk and laughing.”
“And then?”
“That’s it. That’s only the opening play, Maya. That’s just getting the ball rolling. Just to pour colors on the invisible walking crimes of the Legacies. What happens next…”
He’d let the sentence hang.
And Maya had understood.
Because she had been moving pieces of her own.
The Seven had taken Phei once.
Kidnapped him. Beaten him. Tried to kill him.
He’d walked out anyway—refused to bend, returned sharper, deadlier.
And then—impossibly—he had told her.
Not the ice queens. Not the firebrands. Not the ones who already wore his mark openly.
The rambling girl. The nervous one. The princess who lingered at the edges, who everyone underestimated because she let them.
But Maya had had enough of this. She wouldn’t let him get hurt again.
They’d beaten him methodically—fists wrapped in designer leather, laughter sharp as broken glass—because pain was just another accessory, and Phei was wearing it beautifully that night.
They’d hurt him like it was sport, secure in the fiction that consequences were for other people.
And Maya had listened.
Over the line, voice thin with pain he tried to hide, he’d told her everything. She’d held his hand in the only way distance allowed—through silence that matched his, through questions soft enough not to bruise what was already broken.
She’d made him mental tea he never drank because cups can’t cross cities and neither could comfort that night.
She’d heard every ragged breath, every pause where words died before they reached air, every proof that existence itself had become an effort.
And something inside her had gone very, very quiet.
Not grief. Not fury. Nothing so loud, so common.
The cold that doesn’t tremble. The cold that finds the marrow and lives there, patient as rust, precise as a scalpel left in place—and the glacial certainty that mercy is a luxury she will never again afford them.
She promised him nothing aloud.
But in the vault where Maya Scarlett kept the parts of herself the world never saw—the parts too sharp for small talk, too final for promises—she made the vow:
I will make them pay.
Every single one.
And they will never hear the mechanism engage.
She began the next day.
Not with Phei’s chessboard moves, his patient collection of leverage and long games. Phei played legacy against legacy, waiting for the perfect checkmate.
Maya didn’t play.
Maya engineered collapse.
The Scarlett name carried no fleets of yachts, no judicial appointments.
On paper: mid-tier. Respectable. Background furniture. Deliberately so.
Because the Scarletts owned what louder families could never purchase: access. Keys to rooms that existed on no map. Debts owed by people whose payroll came from black budgets and deniable ops.
Generations of favors banked with agencies that answered to no electorate, no constitution, only reciprocity signed in shadow ink.
They never made noise.
They made dossiers.
And a dossier, handled right, outweighs every trust fund and every senator on speed dial.
She’d watched her mother dismantle boardrooms with seven digits dialed at 3 a.m. She’d seen her father accept envelopes whose contents could reroute elections or reroute rivers. She’d learned young that the people who roared were almost never the ones who killed quietly.
The killers smiled. Nodded. Looked harmless.
Like her.
Watching Phei move below—awkward, anxious, the girl everyone reduced to lovesick collateral—they had no idea she was already measuring necks for the drop.
When she turned her attention to Kyle Abrams-Manson and the death of Darius O’Neil she didn’t place calls.
She activated ghosts.
The unaltered police report—the one before Abrams-Manson attorneys performed their editorial miracles—arrived in her secure inbox. Native file. Fresh from a locked server. Courier already deleting his own fingerprints.
Next, the coroner’s original notes. Before cash convinced him to downgrade vehicular homicide to tragedy-with-a-side-of-sympathy. Maya read the dispassionate autopsy of it three times: every fracture, every internal bleed, every clinical second Darius spent dying on asphalt while seven drunk heirs laughed, drunk and thought this was some joke.
Witness statements “lost” in the system? Located in a Delaware storage unit, misfiled by design, paid for by wire. Duplicated. Duplicated again. Scattered to encrypted servers in six jurisdictions with timestamps no court could erase.
Phone records—the post-crash dominoes: Kyle to father, father to chief, chief to DA—four hours to launder murder into accident misfortune. A week to compile.
Thoroughness was her signature.
Bank trails? Elementary. Money bleeds metadata; she knew the shadows where it pooled.
The body relocation—because the real crash site had been too exposed, too likely to draw dawn joggers or curious dogs—took longest. Satellite archives governments pretended were fiction.
Analysts who could read disturbed earth from orbit like palm lines. She located the grave to within three meters. Documented what three years had left of Darius O’Neil.
Every secret. Every bribe. Every erased file that should have caged Kyle Abrams-Manson for life if the system hadn’t worn his family crest.
She assembled it.
Indexed. Fortified. Built a case so complete no fixer, no favor, no whispered threat could unwrite it.
Then she waited.
Because Sierra and Maddie and the rest of the glittering chorus still thought revenge needed applause. A confrontation. Credit.
Maya knew better.
Revenge required only one thing.
Results.
And in the silence between one heartbeat and the next, the ice inside her smiled—small, satisfied, final.
She watched the panic ripple outward like blood in water.
Sierra and Maddie huddled close, voices low and urgent, dissecting the fallout the way vultures pick at roadkill.
What did this mean for the hierarchy? Who would move next? How deep did the rot go, and could their own families protect them? They were scared—genuinely scared—because for once the game had tilted off its gilded axis and no one knew whose hand had shoved it.
They had no fucking clue.
The girl standing two feet away—the one with the wide, guileless eyes and the fidgety half-smile, the one who still rambled about nothing when nerves got the better of her—had just touched one of Paradise’s untouchable dynasties.
They thought she was background noise. The lovesick tag-along. The awkward heiress from one of many Downtown rich families, who never quite learned the steps to their cruel little dances. The rambling disaster they tolerated because Phei loved her, and pity was cheaper than confrontation.
They had no idea she was ordnance.
His ordnance.
Forged in the dark hours after he’d called her—voice cracked, breath shallow, bleeding on cold tile while the city pretended nothing had happened.
Maya Scarlett. The one he’d trusted when trust felt like swallowing glass.
And she’d made a promise.
I will be worthy of you.
I will be the shadow that moves when the spotlight blinds everyone else.
I will be the quiet that ends them before they hear the safety click.
She would never claim the kill. Never step into the light to bask in the wreckage. Never let them see the architect behind the collapse. Let them think it was karma, or rivals, or some faceless bureau finally growing a spine.
Let them whisper theories in marble hallways while she stood beside them nodding, anxious, harmless, hopelessly devoted to a boy who might never look at her the way she looked at him—like he was the only oxygen left in a room full of smoke.
Because this wasn’t about credit.
This wasn’t about Phei finally noticing her devotion had teeth.
This was about him.
About making sure no one ever got close enough to break him again.
Phei had planned to bring the incident to light.
Maya had planned to nail the fucking coffin shut and seal Kyle inside forever.


