My Taboo Harem! - Chapter 499: Wordless Love: The Garden

Chapter 499: Wordless Love: The Garden
Diana returned while Phei was feeding her.
Not the sterile liquid sludge the hospital called “nutrition” — those plastic tubs that tasted like regret and cardboard. He had brought real food and added slices of fruit arranged on a napkin with the quiet precision of someone who understood that dignity and beauty still mattered even when the body had spent eight long months in open betrayal.
He held the spoon for her. Just steady patience — bringing the spoon to her lips, waiting for the slow swallow, repeating. The same way he had done for many times. The same way he would keep doing until the day she no longer needed him to.
Maya watched from the chair by the window, silent.
She watched how he tore the bread smaller when the first pieces proved too ambitious. How he wiped the corner of her mouth with a napkin between sentences without ever interrupting her.
How this same body — the one that had walked on air, broken Legacy princes, and made two hundred thousand people scream his name — could go so soft, so slow, so endlessly patient.
As if the only thing in the entire world that mattered was making sure this woman ate enough.
Diana set the bags down without a sound. She took in the scene, said nothing, and let the moment breathe.
When the meal was finished, Diana stepped forward and rested a hand on Phei’s shoulder.
“I’ll take it from here. She needs her shower.”
Phei nodded. Pressed a gentle kiss to his mother’s hair. Stepped out.
Maya stayed to help.
She and Diana worked together with the quiet rhythm of people who had done this many times before — careful on Diana’s part, instinctive on Maya’s. The woman cracked dry jokes about being treated like a porcelain doll. Maya laughed. Diana gently scolded her for moving too much.
They dressed her in the new deep burgundy robe Phei had chosen and settled her back against fresh pillows.
Phei returned.
He sat with her on the bed — careful of the wires and tubes — and began combing her hair with long, slow strokes. He worked through every tangle without pulling, without rushing, talking the entire time about nothing and everything: the food downstairs getting worse, the night-shift nurse who kept calling him the wrong name, the weather forecast promising sun, so she had better prepare to be dragged outside whether she liked it or—
Diana screamed— a strangled, choked gasp that froze the entire room in place.
Because the woman suddenly sat up straight on her own and with no support at the back.
Sitting. On her own.
Spine straight and shoulders back like her body had suddenly remembered what it was made for after eight months of forgetting.
And she sat like that for — Diana’s eyes flicked to the wall clock — twenty-three minutes. Without shaking. Without asking to lie down. Without the familiar grey exhaustion crawling across her face after just ten.
“How—” Diana began.
“Diana,” the woman said, sharp yet warm, the tone of a mother telling a loyal dog to stop barking at the mailman. “Sit down.”
“But you’re— you haven’t— in eight months you couldn’t—”
“Diana.”
Diana sat. Eyes wide. Hands gripping the armrests as if the room might spin out from under her.
Then the woman stood.
Two steps. Small ones. Her hand found the bed rail for balance and her legs trembled — but they held. Two real, weight-bearing, vertical steps on legs that had not carried her further than the bathroom door in months.
Diana’s hand flew to her mouth as the truth sank in, no one bothering to spill the details of the offering that had sparked this impossible turnaround.
The woman shot Phei a sharp glance screaming silence, and he fired back one promising he wouldn’t dream of spilling a word, leaving Diana to gape at the miracle unfolding before her, utterly unequipped to grasp its secrets.
Then the doctors swept in—three of them, summoned by a nurse who’d nearly fumbled her chart while checking vitals in sheer disbelief.
They unleashed a barrage of tests, bloodwork and reflexes and strength checks blending into range-of-motion drills, even making her pace the room’s length once, twice, their eyes gleaming with that tightly leashed professional thrill, the kind trained pros never voice as “miracle” but screamed silently in their minds.
Every metric had skyrocketed, not perfect, not a full cure, but worlds better than yesterday’s bleak numbers—the lead doc triple-checking the chart to confirm it was the same patient after eight stagnant months of zero response to every treatment thrown her way.
Suddenly everything shifted, what they dubbed a “phenomenal response,” an “unexplained positive surge,” the rare spark in long-haul cases where the body just roared back to life for reasons medicine couldn’t touch.
They never uttered “miracle,” but their faces betrayed it all, alive with wonder.
Phei shone brightest in the room, almost bouncing on his toes with a grin so wide it threatened to crack his face in two, and when the doctors greenlit short supervised outdoor jaunts—“Yes, wheelchair only but with someone always at her side”—he bolted into the corridor mid-sentence to snag one, pure joy fueling his sprint.
“Take me out,” she laughed at his buzzing eagerness, “before you vibrate right through the floor.”
He didn’t need telling twice, scooping up the handles with a grin that lit the whole room.
The doctors chuckled softly while nurses clustered by the door, pretending to fuss over charts but stealing glances at the boy wheeling his mom down the hall, pure golden-retriever joy radiating off him like he’d just been promised the best walkies ever.
“He’s so cool,” one whispered, eyes sparkling.
“Unfairly cool,”her friend agreed with a fond sigh.
They soaked up two full hours outside—the longest she’d escaped that room in months—Phei guiding her wheelchair along the hospital garden’s winding paths, past vibrant flower beds and ancient shade trees, benches etched with names of families who’d once lingered here dreaming of their own miracles.
Late afternoon, sun bathed everything in golden warmth, the air thick with fresh-cut grass and the sweet, heavy bloom of a Paradise evening settling in soft.
He strolled slow, pointing out treasures like the new rosebushes by the fountain, that one bench where Dr. Osei faked phone calls at lunch to dodge chit-chat, and the exact spot a rogue patient’s cat had gone wild in the physio garden last month, terrorizing everyone until a janitor nabbed it with a fishing net.
Her laughter bubbled up real and free at the cat tale, drifting across the garden and drawing smiles from a couple nurses on their smoke break, their faces softening in the glow.
He opened up about the basketball game then, the Challenge—not the wild impossible bits like walking on air or the system or the ice, just the raw thrill of the court, the crowd’s roar shaking his bones, that electric win forcing two hundred thousand eyes to finally see him for real.
Her gaze shimmered with quiet, swelling pride, wrapping him in wordless love.
Casually, like it was no big deal, he shared the flood of offers rolling in—brand deals, sponsorships, ambassador gigs from companies whose logos dotted billboards and magazines she knew by heart—his voice light, but she heard the depth underneath, the way he always downplayed what burned brightest in him.
“My boy,” she murmured, those two words heavy with a mother’s endless ocean of love, worth more than any billion-dollar promise.
He let her know he’d be gone a bit—a week, maybe—something he had to sort out, no details needed since they’d long mastered that quiet understanding between them.
“But when I get back,” he said, dropping to a crouch so their eyes locked warm and level, “I’m hoping I can help you walk. Not wheelchair steps or sit-down tries. Real walking. Out those front doors. Into the sunlight. On your own strong legs.”
She held his gaze forever it seemed, searching those familiar eyes.
“Be safe,” she whispered, voice thick with it.
“Always.”
“I mean it, Phei.”
“I know, Mom.”
Her hand rose to cup his face, soft and sure, and he melted into the touch like he was five again. For that stolen moment, they were just a mom and her boy in a sun-kissed garden, flowers unfurling lazy petals, the fragile promise of walking hovering between them like a shared heartbeat too tender to squeeze.
They lingered in easy chatter after that—everything and nothing weaving through the air like threads of gold.
Phei wheeled her inside later, pausing at Room V.123’s door for goodbye, her fingers clinging to his until the last heartbeat, sliding apart slow and reluctant, like letting go of a dream you might never recapture.
“Come back to me,” she whispered, eyes holding all the world.
“Wild horses couldn’t stop me, Mother.”
He turned away quick before his throat tightened too much, steps carrying him down the hall with her warmth still echoing in his palm.
The car ride home wrapped them in quiet, Paradise unfurling past tinted windows in strokes of gold and deepening purple, sunset blazing like God had called in the world’s best artist to splash the skyline wild.
Maya nestled close beside him, her hand warm and steady in his over the console, silver strands of hair shimmering in the fading light like captured stars.
She’d been a rock all day—through the shopping and feeding, the gentle shower and combing, the garden laughs and that aching goodbye—watching everything unfold from the VIP floor elevator onward, her patience holding back the question flickering bright behind those knowing eyes.
But now it spilled free, soft as a breath.
“Phei.”
“Mmm?”
“Who is she?”
The car purred steady while city lights blurred into streaks, and Phei gazed at the road ahead, the sky’s bloody sunset, Maya’s small hand anchoring his—then he told her, voice low and true.


