My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 417: The New Player on the Game Board

Chapter 417: The New Player on the Game Board
“What matters is not where his power settles in a week. What matters is the fear he has planted. Every Legacy family — every last one of them — is currently hiding behind their walls like mice who have just learned the cat can breathe fire. Even if Phei returns to his so-called ’square one,’ they will never forget the night the sky tore open and a boy they once called a charity case made their fellow patriarch scream.”
The sigils on the Red Door resumed their slow orbit, each one a dead constellation remembering the shape it used to hold and plotting revenge on the next universe that dared to forget it.
“And even if their bloodlines do awaken,” the voice continued, almost purring now, the sound of silk being drawn across the edge of a blade that had already tasted god-flesh, “even if the Angels themselves stir from their long slumber… Phei’s bloodline is older. His awakening came early. He has tasted the void, and the void has remembered him.”
A beat. The void pulsed once — acknowledging the claim. Yes. It had tasted him. And it had liked the flavour. It wanted seconds.
“No matter what happens from this week forward, the Legacies have been softened. They have been shown who truly holds power. And from now on, whenever that boy moves — whenever he breathes, whenever he chooses a woman, whenever he simply walks down a corridor — they will react. They will flinch. They will calculate. They will dance on the strings he doesn’t even know he’s holding yet.”
The laughter returned — softer now, more intimate, like a lover whispering filth in the dark.
“And when the strings finally snap… oh, my sweet dragon… I will be there to watch him burn the board and build a new one from the ashes.”
Consort’s fingers relaxed slightly on the katana hilt — just enough to remind the blade she hadn’t forgotten it existed, but not enough to signal she was relaxed.
She understood.
The Mistress had never wanted Phei to rule the Legacies outright right away.
That was the mistake lesser minds would make — seeing the display of power and assuming the goal was domination, crowns, thrones, the usual boring male power fantasy bullshit.
The Mistress didn’t want the chess pieces knocked off the board.
She wanted them afraid of the hand hovering above them. Dependent on Phei’s whims.Predictable in their fear.
A terrified animal was an animal whose next move you could calculate before it calculated it itself — and then you could bet against it, short its entire miserable life, and laugh while it screamed.
Still, one concern remained.
“If the Angels awaken,” Consort said quietly, voice the exact temperature of a blade left outside in winter, “if the true old bloodlines rise in response to what he has done… they will be—”
“Enough.”
The single word was not loud. It didn’t need to be.
The void itself flinched — actually contracted, the endless dark pulling inward for one instant as if the nothing was trying to make itself smaller, less noticeable, less likely to be addressed next.
The Red Door’s sigils froze mid-motion, each one caught in whatever obscene shape it had been forming, suspended like insects in amber that had just realized amber was a death sentence.
“We are not here to babysit
destiny and Phei, little blade,” the voice said, gentler now but no less absolute — the gentleness of a hand that could close into a fist at any moment and chose not to only because the moment was pleasant and the screaming hadn’t started yet.
“We wait. We watch. We see what Phei can do with the fear he has sown.”
A pause.
“Besides…” A low, amused hum that made the Red Door’s cracks glow brighter, the light spilling out in thin, warm lines that almost — almost — looked inviting, like the door was winking at her. “The Price family is already moving behind everyone’s backs. Did you think I would miss that?”
Consort said nothing. She had not missed it either.
“They smell opportunity. They smell weakness. Let them scurry. Let them plot. It only makes the board more interesting — more deliciously pathetic when the pawns start eating each other thinking they’re kings.”
Consort bowed deeper. The movement was measured to the millimetre — too shallow and it was insolence, too deep and it was fear, and Consort had spent ten thousand years calibrating the exact angle that communicated I hear you, I obey you, and I have a question you haven’t answered yet, Mistress, because you enjoy making me ask it.
“And the monster that now hunts him?”
A thoughtful silence. Longer than the others.
The sigils on the Red Door slowed their dance — not frozen this time but cautious, the way a heartbeat slows when the body senses something in the dark that might be predator or prey or both.
Then a soft, almost playful hum that made the cracks in the Red Door glow warmer for a moment — gold bleeding through the red, the light shifting from wound-colour to something that looked almost like firelight on bare skin.
“Ah~ Yes. The monster.”
The voice behind the door sounded almost… fond.
The fondness of a collector admiring a piece that had arrived unexpectedly and complicated the gallery in ways that delighted rather than concerned — the way you might smile at a venomous snake that had just crawled into your collection and started eating the boring ones.
“That is rather interesting, isn’t it? A creature that even the Legacies
whisper about in their nightmares. One that has been waiting — patiently, quietly, with the specific hunger of a predator that knows its prey by scent and has been following that scent since the boy first drew breath and screamed. And now the shroud his family had pressed on him is off… the monster had felt it crumble.”
Consort’s grip on the katana tightened again.
Not anticipation this time.
Something closer to the muscle memory of a warrior who had fought things that shouldn’t exist and remembered what it cost — usually in limbs, sometimes in sanity and always in blood.
The hum deepened, turning almost sultry — the voice of something that found danger attractive, that looked at a threat to its investment and saw not risk but seasoning on the meat.
“Remember this, my faithful Consort: we are not his protectors. We never were.”
The words hung in the void like a verdict already rendered, still warm from the gallows.
“We are investors. We placed a wager on a dragon still in the egg. If he cannot overcome this so-called monster… if he falls, if he breaks, if he proves unworthy of the power we have allowed him to taste without killing him before he reached his full potential…”
A soft, final chuckle that sent a visible ripple through the void — the nothing itself contracting in a shiver that radiated outward in every direction, making distant stars that had survived Phei’s earlier outburst flicker and die.
Each one winking out with a tiny, silent gasp. The void ate them without chewing.
“Then he is worth nothing. We will kill him ourselves. Cleanly. Painlessly. And we will return to the original plan.”
The sentence landed like a coffin lid closing — not with anger, not with cruelty, but with the calm, absolute certainty of an entity that had invested in a billion projects across a million ages and had killed each failed investment with the same efficiency and the same lack of sentiment.
Phei was not a person to the voice behind the Red Door. He was a position in a portfolio.
A bet placed on a race. A seed dropped into soil that either produced a harvest or was ploughed under and forgotten.
The laughter began again — low, rich, endless — rolling through the void like the tide of an ocean that had no shore, filling the nothing with the sound of something ancient and terrible enjoying itself enormously.
The sigils on the Red Door resumed their slow, eternal dance. Dead constellations remembering shapes they used to hold. The cracks glowed steady now — warm, patient, the light of something that had all the time in every universe and was content to wait.
Consort remained exactly where she was.
Head bowed. Hand on katana. The perfect blade waiting for the next command.
Behind the Red Door, One Above kept laughing.
The void listened and waited for its true owner!
It had nothing else to do.


