My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 423: Lucienne

Chapter 423: Lucienne
Phei rose from the bench, towel slung over one shoulder like a conqueror who’d forgotten the war was already won. The gym had gone quiet again.
He crossed the rubberized floor with that slow, deliberate stride that made every step feel like it carried more weight than physics allowed — each footfall a quiet promise that gravity was only obeying him out of politeness.
She didn’t stop running until he was close enough that she could feel the shift in temperature — the air cooling, thickening, pressing against her skin like the prelude to a storm she hadn’t ordered.
Then—without breaking rhythm, without looking at him, without any acknowledgment that she’d noticed his approach — she tapped the emergency stop on the console. The belt slowed beneath her feet in a smooth, controlled deceleration.
She stepped off, ponytail swinging once like a whip that hadn’t decided whether to strike, and turned to face him.
Sweat glistened along her collarbones, caught the overhead lights, made the carved lines of her abs shimmer like wet marble under moonlight.
The long black compression leggings hugged every curve without apology — thighs flexing with residual power, hips cocked just enough to remind anyone looking that they were allowed to look but never allowed to touch.
She stood with the specific, unhurried posture of a woman who had been beautiful her entire life and had long ago stopped treating it as either an asset or a liability.
It simply was.
She’d been born with a face that stopped conversations and a body that started wars, and she’d spent however many yearsshe’d been alive learning to exist inside both without letting either one define her.
The result was an aura that most men read as ice and most women read as threat.
“Phei,” she said.
Just his name. One syllable. But the way she said it — no catch in the breath, no dilation of pupils, no hint of the hundred involuntary tells that every other woman in this building produced within five seconds of being near him.
She said his name the way a customs officer says passport — functional, unimpressed, waiting to see if what you’re carrying is worth her time or just another forged document she’ll stamp and send away.
“Lucienne,” he returned, voice low, deliberate, letting every syllable of her full name linger, rolling the sounds through his Charm Speech lure like smoke curling around a throat.
She blinked.
A flicker behind her eyes — surprise and a door opening half an inch that had been locked for years.
“You do that every time,” she said.
“Do what?”
“My name.” She tilted her head. “I’ve heard it said a thousand times by a thousand people. Not once has it ever sounded like that. You make it sound like I am some otherworldly being.”
Phei shrugged — a small, easy movement, the gesture of someone who genuinely didn’t understand the question because the answer was too obvious to need words.
“Maybe you’re.”
She held his gaze longer than she should have.
“That was smooth,” Lucienne said, voice bone-dry. “Do you practice those in a mirror?”
“I don’t own a mirror.”
“Liar.”
“I have a window. The city reflects better than glass. More dramatic.”
The corner of her mouth twitched. She killed it fast — smothered the smile before it could fully form — but he’d seen it.
The proof that there was a woman under that composure who laughed at stupid things and was furious at herself for wanting to.
“I told you,” she said, recalibrating, planting one hand on her hip. The motion made the sports bra shift just enough to draw every eye in the room that wasn’t already locked on them. “Lucie is fine.”
He let his eyes trace the shape of her name on his own lips before speaking it again.
“Lucienne.A name that beautiful isn’t built for shortcuts.”
“Built for shortcuts.” She repeated it back to him slowly, tasting the words like they might bite. “You talk about my name like it’s architecture.”
Oh it is… at least to him given her beauty.
“Everything about you is architecture.”
The words landed differently than either of them expected. His voice had dropped without his permission — into that lower register, the one that bypassed eardrums and went straight to nerve endings, the one that Charm Speech and natural resonance turned into something tactile, something that felt like fingertips tracing the inside of a wrist while whispering filth.
Lucienne’s lips parted.
Half a second. Maybe less. Her composure reconstructed itself from the rubble, faster than it had fallen.
“Your voice,” she said, acknowledging it — which meant the battle lines had already shifted. “Is it always like that? Or is this a performance?”
“Like what?”
“Like…” She searched for the word, and he watched her search — watched the way her throat moved when she swallowed, the way her pupils flared just enough to betray her. “Like every word has hands. Like I’m not just hearing you, I’m being touched by you. It doesn’t sound like a voice. It sounds like a—”
She stopped. Shook her head once, fast, as if physically rejecting the sentence before it escaped.
“A what?” Phei asked, leaning forward by exactly one inch. “Go on.”
“No.”
“Please.”
“Absolutely not.”
“Was it ’aphrodisiac’?”
Her expression went flat. Perfectly, brilliantly flat — she had just watched a man read her mind and was going to pretend he hadn’t until her dying breath.
“I was going to say weapon,” she said.
“Those aren’t mutually exclusive in our sitiutaion. The best weapons make you want to be hit again.”
She chuckled — “God. You are impossibly cocky. Has anyone ever told you that?”
“Every woman I’ve ever met.”
“And it doesn’t concern you?”
“Concern implies I might be wrong.” He held her gaze — the full weight of it, the amethyst and the frost and whatever ancient thing was swimming behind both. “I’m not wrong.”
“About what?”
“About the fact that you like talking to me.”
Silence.
Her gaze sharpened again, playful warning returning like a shield being raised.
“But you should make sure your admirers don’t get the wrong idea.” She flicked her eyes toward the rest of the gym. “Or they’ll organize my disappearance.”
They both looked.
Every woman in the room was watching.
Some openly — abandoning all pretence, machines idle, water bottles forgotten. Some pretending to adjust weights while stealing glances so obvious they could’ve been filmed as a comedy sketch. One girl on the leg press looked like she was calculating the weight required to crush a human femur.
Phei chuckled — low, warm, unbothered.
“No,” he said simply. “They’re harmless. Sweet even. You’ll be fine.”
Lucienne arched one perfect brow.
“Sweet?”
“Mostly.”
“You’re certifiably delusional.” She folded her arms. “That brunette on the cable machine has been staring at me for six minutes straight. She looks like she’s mentally composing my obituary.”
“She’s just passionate.”
“About murder.”
“About fitness. The murder is a hobby.”
Phei laughed together with her — the real one that made Valentina, standing three metres away with her arms folded and her smirk weaponized, raise both eyebrows.
Lucienne heard it too.
“So… are you free tomorrow?” Phei didn’t miss a beat.
“Isn’t it rude to ask me on a date while your woman watches?”
“I never said it was a date,” he echoed. Then, softer — the velvet register, the one that made syllables feel like fingertips tracing the inside of a wrist — “But I would very much appreciate it if you allowed me to change your mind about that.”
Lucienne hummed — low, thoughtful. “What if I had a pattern?” she asked, almost idly. “A type. Rules. Standards no one’s ever met.”
Phei stepped half a pace closer — not crowding, just enough to make the temperature drop another degree around them.
“I’m known to ignore patterns when they don’t suit me.” His voice dropped, intimate, dangerous in its gentleness. “Besides… unless it’s a god, no one else deserves you. You’re just all that.”
Lucienne’s eyes sparkled — dark amusement, genuine surprise, something hotter flickering beneath both.
“Yet here you are,” she murmured, voice dropping to match his, “asking me out.”
Phei’s smile turned slow. Lethal. Beautiful.
“And as you can see…”He spread his hands slightly, letting the cold aura ripple outward just enough to make the nearest treadmill console flicker. “…I’m no ordinary human either.”
She giggled — soft and startled and delighted.
“No,” she agreed, shaking her head, the ponytail swaying. “No, you definitely aren’t.”
Lucienne exhaled through her nose. The smile turned rueful —
“I’ll consider it,” she said at last. “But it won’t be tomorrow.”
“I didn’t expect tomorrow.”
“Good. Because I don’t move fast.”
“Neither does anything worth having.”
She stared at him. The stare lasted three full seconds — which, in flirtation time, was approximately a decade.
“You always have an answer,” she said. “For everything. Doesn’t that exhaust you?”
“Not when the conversation’s this good.”
Phei dipped his head in perfect, gentlemanly acceptance — the manners that lived underneath the cockiness, the courtesy that made the arrogance bearable, the specific combination that Lucienne was rapidly discovering she had zero immunological defences against.
“The consideration alone is enough,” he said quietly. “Take your time. I’ll be here.”
He held her gaze for one heartbeat longer — long enough for her to feel the weight of everything he wasn’t saying.
The future he’d already decided on. The patience he was willing to deploy.
The absolute, unshakeable certainty that she would eventually say yes — not because he’d wear her down but because she’d realise on her own that she wanted to.
Then he turned.
Valentina fell into step beside him without a word. They walked toward the private exit together —
She chuckled — soft, private, almost to herself.
Then she stepped back onto the treadmill.
Tapped the speed up two notches.
And resumed her run.
Ponytail swinging.
Ass flexing with every powerful stride.
Still proud.
Still unbroken.
And very, very aware that the boy who had just asked her out was already planning how to unravel her completely.
“Cocky bastard,” she murmured.


