My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 410: Unleashed

Chapter 410: Unleashed
One arm extended in casual command, fingers loosely curled as though holding the reins of a storm rather than a man’s skull.
The gesture required no effort—his other hand dangled relaxed at his side, fingers twitching with idle power.
Void-black hair lashed and coiled around him like a living corona of midnight serpents, each strand questing independently, tasting the terror in the air, drinking the fear. His eyes—twin gravitational maelstroms rimmed in dying-star white—pulsed once, and the entire hall dimmed as though the universe itself had exhaled.
Around him raged a self-sustaining cataclysm.
Black void-lightning arced from every inch of his body—not outward in destruction, but inward in insatiable hunger, dragging light, heat, sound, and motion into spiraling graves of absolute nothing.
Shards of frozen starlight crystallized from nowhere, orbiting him in lethal constellations—each fragment a blade of glacial eternity trailing comet-tails of pale fire, slicing the air with the sound of creation being unwritten.
Abyssal gales howled in a vortex anchored to his form—simultaneously searing and cryogenic, ripping tapestries from walls, tearing velvet curtains into ribbons that froze mid-shred and hung like black ice sculptures, detonating the last surviving chandeliers into cascades of crystal that suspended themselves in defiance of gravity, glittering like captured nebulae.
The floor beneath him shattered in perfect fractal mandalas of black frost—marble devoured cell by cell, transmuted into humming void-crystal that sang with each beat of his heart.
The ceiling bowed—centuries of oak beams and plaster genuflecting toward their new sovereign.
Physics itself stuttered: shadows stretched in impossible directions, echoes arrived before their sources, air thickened to syrup then thinned to vacuum in rhythmic waves that made every breath feel like drowning in starless deeps.
With every pulse of his power the void expanded—then contracted—then expanded wider, each cycle claiming more: walls rippling like liquid obsidian, windows flashing impossible vistas—skies with seven fractured moons, oceans of liquid night stretching to inverted horizons, cities of black crystal floating in voids where time ran backward.
The mansion groaned in structural agony, foundations buckling as though the earth itself were trying to retreat from the boy who had become its reckoning.
Melissa appeared at the top of the grand staircase.
She froze.
One hand on the banister, the other pressed to her throat. Her nightgown—pale silk that had once been a symbol of Legacy elegance—now clung to her like a shroud in the abyssal wind. Hair whipped wild around her face.
Eyes wide, reflecting the twin voids of the boy she had once held in secret, the boy she had chosen over empires.
Melissa had been in Victoria’s room—hands still slick and crimson from extracting jagged mirror shards from her daughter’s split knuckles, nightdress spattered with fresh arterial red—when the first shout struck her not in the ears, but in the marrow.
A deep, tectonic vibration that bypassed sound entirely.
It lived first in her teeth, then in the hollow cage behind her sternum where the oldest terrors nest.
The way mountains know an earthquake is coming before the ground ever moves.
Victoria stood behind her—still bleeding, still seething—but the fury in her eyes had fractured into something nameless when the second roar landed.
A feeling no Legacy child had ever been taught to name: the instinctive knowledge that the apex predator had returned, and the food chain had just been rewritten in blood and void.
Delilah appeared from the eastern corridor, Sienna clamped to her side.
Delilah’s face was a ruin—cheek swollen purple, Harold’s handprint branded in livid crimson, lower lip split and crusted black.
She gripped Sienna’s arm with both hands, knuckles blanched to bone-white—not for balance, but for tether.
Because whatever roared downstairs was pulling at something primal inside her, something that recognized the call and wanted to answer, and she was terrified of what would happen if she let herself fall toward it.
They reached the top of the grand staircase and froze.
Their father—the untouchable Harold Maxton—hung suspended three meters above the shattered marble like a marionette with cut strings.
Encased in a colossal claw of living void veined with glacial starfire. Legs dangling. Trousers dark and glistening. Mouth stretched in a scream that produced no sound because the hand devoured every vibration before it could escape.
Phei’s void-eyes turned toward them.
For one fractional heartbeat, something flickered in those abyssal spirals.
Recognition
.
Of his loved ones: his family? Of damage done. His gaze traced Delilah’s split lip. Victoria’s bleeding hands. The perfect imprint of Harold’s palm on Delilah’s cheek—an imprint that matched, to the millimeter, the scale of the talons currently cradling their father’s skull like a fragile egg.
The storm surged.
“You dared,” Phei said.
The words did not travel through air. They rewrote it.
Each syllable warped spacetime into visible helices—violet distortions blooming outward like fractures in stained glass.
Reality bent around the declaration the way light bends around a singularity.
The final chandelier did not shatter. It imploded—crystal, brass, chain compressing into a pinprick of absolute black that hung for one suspended heartbeat before detonating in a radial burst of void-sparks.
Each spark froze mid-flight, hanging like frozen embers of dead stars, glittering with cold, merciless light.
Danton stood at the foot of the stairs.
His body vibrated so violently his teeth clacked in uncontrollable staccato. Hands locked around the banister—wood splintering under white-knuckled grip.
The Dominance Aura no longer pressed against him.
It obliterated the very concept of hierarchy he had once taken for granted.
Harold at the apex.
Himself safely mid-tier. Phei at the bottom. That ladder had not been inverted. It had been erased.
There was now only Phei—and the infinite, unbridgeable gulf between him and every other living thing.
The distance between a god and the ash left after a supernova. Danton’s knees buckled.
He collapsed—body folding forward until forehead met cracked marble, spine curved in instinctive submission.
The maids—three of them—had already dropped. Faces pressed to stone. Hands clamped over heads.
Bodies curled into the tightest fetal knots possible. Not hiding—there was nowhere left to hide—but instinctively compressing themselves into less.
Less mass. Less presence. Less existence.
As though biology itself understood that in the face of this much unbound power, the only survival strategy was to become nothing at all.
Maria clung to the banister halfway up the stairs—phone still warm in her pocket from the message she had sent.
She had seen Harold strike Delilah. Seen the split lip bloom. Seen the girl she had raised from fours years old curl on cold marble the same way Phei had once curled under the same fists. And something in Maria—something forged in fourteen years of silent endurance, older than fear, older than loyalty—had finally broken.
She had texted him. She had summoned rescue. She had summoned cataclysm.
Her legs gave out. She slid down the steps until she knelt—breath coming in shallow, panicked sips, tears carving clean tracks through the dust on her cheeks.
Not only from terror.
From the sheer, crushing density of power saturating the hall—pressing on her ribs, forcing her lungs to labor twice as hard for half the oxygen, making her heart stutter in arrhythmic worship.
Phei’s void-eyes—those twin gravitational abysses ringed in glacial-white death throes—swept the room one final time.
He catalogued every wound. Every trembling form. Every drop of blood that had no right to be where it was. Every collapsed maid. Every fractured life.
His voice rolled forth again—calm as the silence between heartbeats, ancient as the first dark, merciless as entropy itself.
“Now… you will learn what that costs.”
The void surged—a tidal wavefront of pure unmaking exploding outward from his body in every direction. It swallowed the last guttering candles. Devoured the suspended crystal shards. Drowned the final defiant sparks of light.
Until the only illumination left in the Maxton Mansion was the cold, glacial glow bleeding from the razor-thin rings encircling his void-black eyes.
Two pale suns burning in an endless night.
Harold dangled in perfect darkness—whimpering, broken, urine frozen to black frost on his thighs.
And Phei had not even begun to release the full measure of his awakening.


