My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 371 - 371: The Monster Arrives

In the shadowed overhang of the upper deck, where the stadium’s roar dulled to a distant thunder, she stood alone.
The black was absolute. Not fabric, not cloth blackness either—something that drank light and gave nothing back.
The dress molded to her like spilled ink given form, every curve sharpened to lethal elegance beneath a coat so long it brushed the tops of her calves, heavy as funeral silk yet moving without a whisper of friction.
Her shoes were black on black, matte and unassuming until the sole caught stray light: thin veins of black gold inlaid beneath, glowing with the dull, malevolent sheen of something mined from places the sun never touched.
Shantel.
Five hundred thousand dollars a pair. Five in existence.
Most women in Paradise would have killed for them. She wore them the way a blade wears rust—without care, without pride, only inevitability.
She did not move.
She watched.
Her eyes—pools of liquid obsidian, pupils dilated beyond human proportion—followed Phei’s every motion on the court below.
The way he rose for the tomahawk, the way the rim bent to his will, the way the crowd surged toward him like iron filings to a magnet. She saw the awakening flicker in his silhouette, raw and unrefined, a dragon’s first uncoiling beneath human skin.
Her lips parted. Not a smile. Just a fracture.
A manic delight curled the edges upward until the expression bordered on rictus, teeth gleaming too white against the dark.
Oh, the thought slithered through her mind, ancient and amused. I see you’ve grown into quite the man.
The grin stretched wider, splitting like overripe fruit.
We meet once more, little prodigy.
She tilted her head, studying him the way an astronomer might study a star that had just gone supernova—clinical, covetous, already calculating the light it would shed when it finally collapsed.
You’ve been hiding well, I see. Very well indeed. But nothing hides forever. Not from me.
She turned then. The coat swirled in a slow vortex of shadow, liquid darkness trailing her like spilled night.
One step. Two.
The black gold beneath her heels flashed once—impossible, defiant gleam against the dim concrete—and then she was moving through the crowd. Bodies parted without conscious thought, people stepping aside as though brushed by cold wind.
She did not hurry. She did not need to.
And then she was gone.
Swallowed by the sea of faces as though she had never existed at all.
Melissa had just cleared the last step from the VIP booth—Harold’s endless questions finally silenced, the Castellanos’ veiled threats brushed off with practiced smiles—when she saw it.
A retreating silhouette. Long hair like poured midnight trailing behind her, catching the red exit lights and turning them dull. And beneath the heels—just a heartbeat of exposure, just a cruel flicker— Black gold.
There was one person who can give her this feeling, this… dread!
The feeling of death.
Melissa’s heart detonated in her chest.
Her body locked mid-stride. One hand shot out, slapping the wall for balance as her knees threatened to fold. Cold sweat bloomed across her back, her neck, her palms.
Breath came in shallow, ragged bursts that tasted like panic and bile. No. No no no no NO—
She stumbled sideways into the nearest corner, pressing her spine against concrete as though it could anchor her.
A hand flew to her mouth to muffle the sob that tried to claw free. Nails found their way between her teeth; she bit down hard, copper flooding her tongue.
The old habit returned like muscle memory from a nightmare she thought she’d outgrown.
I’ve failed.
The words landed like fists.
I’ve failed to guard him from that monster.
Years of vigilance—networks of whispers, favors hoarded like ammunition, nights that she sometimes spent staring at security feeds until her eyes burned—collapsed in a single glimpse.
She had built every layer of protection she could imagine until she succeeded.
She had kept Phei’s name buried, his power masked, his existence a rumor even among the Legacy circles. And on the night he finally shone—on the night the world saw what he could become— it had found him.
Melissa’s teeth tore deeper into her nail beds. Blood welled, warm and sticky. She didn’t feel it.
What do I do? What do I DO?
Tell him? March down there right now, drag him into the tunnel, press her mouth to his ear and breathe the truth: There’s a monster here. Not metaphor. Not exaggeration. Something older than the families, hungrier than Heavenchild ambition. She’s found you again, Phei. She’s here for you.
But if she did—if she shattered this moment—his laughter still echoed faintly from the court below, bright and unguarded, the first real joy she’d witnessed in him since— she couldn’t finish the memory.
Tell him now and she stole more than one night. She stole tomorrow. And the day after. And every sunrise that followed. Every shadow would grow teeth. Every quiet moment would taste of waiting.
Phei would live looking over his shoulder until the day that monster finally stepped out of the dark.
Don’t tell him. Let him have this victory. Let him bask. Let him believe—for one perfect, fragile stretch of time—that the world was only basketball and brotherhood and applause. But if she didn’t tell him—if that thing moved, if it struck, if Phei survived long enough to learn that Melissa had seen her, had known, and chosen silence—
She shivered so violently her teeth clacked together.
Would I be able to handle the results?
The mark on her skin—the invisible bond between them—
She pressed her forehead to the wall, concrete biting into skin, trying to force clarity through the terror.
He’s powerful, she told herself, clinging to the evidence of tonight.
The impossible dunks. The way the air had thickened around him. The awakening that had rippled outward like a shockwave only she could name. Among the yet-to-awaken Legacy heirs, Phei was already unmatched.
A storm wearing human skin. Only a handful alive could match him blow for blow.
But that monster wasn’t alive in the way that word usually meant. That monster was something else. An abyss with a heartbeat. An ocean wearing a woman’s face.
And Phei’s power—raw and radiant as it was—remained a pond staring into that endless dark.
Melissa closed her eyes. Tasted blood and concrete dust. And still the question looped, merciless: What do I do?


