My Taboo Harem!-Chapter 472: A God or Not?: Terrifying Maya Scarlett

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Chapter 472: A God or Not?: Terrifying Maya Scarlett

Cassiopeia’s voice drifted through the empty penthouse like smoke laced with honey—sweet, deliberate, impossible to dismiss.

"Are you really that afraid of little old me that you had to bundle the entire family into a limousine and send them away?"

She remained at the floor-to-ceiling window. Still framed against the glittering sprawl of the city. But now she had turned—one hip cocked against the cool glass, arms crossed beneath the impossible weight of her breasts, midnight silk clinging and sliding in ways that made the fabric appear liquid, alive, drinking the neon and starlight.

"I only wanted to belong," she murmured. A theatrical little pout shaped her lips—the kind rehearsed in three-way mirrors until it became surgical. "Instead you treat me like I’m contagious."

Phei let out a low, warm chuckle. The sound of someone utterly untroubled.

He glanced sideways at Maya.

Winked.

Maya answered with a small, private smile—the smile of someone who had already run the numbers, seen every branching path, and quietly chosen the one that pleased her most. Then she said, light as air,

"I’ll be upstairs. In the bedroom. Try not to stay up too late, you two."

She spoke as though excusing herself from dull small talk, not from a room that held both a soul-binding relic and the woman currently wearing it like a second, dangerous skin.

Phei watched her leave... he didn’t know what he’d done to deserve this woman... this mythical being called Maya Scarlety.

He watched the long, graceful line of her body ascend the floating staircase to the third floor—his floor, his bedroom—silver hair catching the dimmed sconces and scattering soft lunar sparks across the dark walnut steps.

She moved the way she always moved: unhurried, sovereign, as though time and physics had long ago agreed to bend around her convenience.

The loose fabric of her dress whispered against her thighs with each step. Her bare feet made no sound at all.

She never once looked back.

She was not afraid.

Not of Cassiopeia. Not of the bracelet pulsing faintly at the other woman’s wrist. Not of anything currently breathing in this building.

Phei found that... riveting.

The sleeping arrangements had arranged themselves without words. Cassiopeia would claim the second floor.

He and Maya would take the third.

Maya had simply walked upward, claiming the highest ground with the calm inevitability of someone who had been taking high ground her entire life.

And the quiet, bone-deep pleasure that had curved her mouth when she named the bedroom—his bedroom—had nothing to do with pillows, or proximity, or even safety. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢

She was pleased.

Deeply, uncomplicatedly pleased to be sleeping in his bed. With him. While a creature wrapped in midnight silk and ancient hunger waited one floor below.

Riveting.

Upstairs, the master bathroom was warm stone, ambient gold light, and silence.

Maya crossed the heated slate floor barefoot, leaving behind Phei’s bedroom—the faint trace of his cedar-and-rain scent still clinging to the sheets, his shirts hanging in the walk-in like quiet promises—and stopped before the wide, unframed mirror that spanned the vanity wall.

She undressed without hurry or performance.

The dress lifted over her head in one fluid motion. Folded once. Set on the counter with the same deliberate care she gave very few things.

Beneath it: a plain cotton bra, soft, unadorned, chosen for comfort rather than display. She reached behind, unhooked it.

Let it drop to the tiles with a small soft sound.

Then the underwear—simple, matching cotton—slid down her legs. She stepped free. Left them where they fell.

For one measured heartbeat she stood completely bare.

Long, lean limbs. The gentle slope of collarbone into shoulder. Small, high breasts whose pale-rose nipples had already drawn tight in the shift from clothed warmth to open air.

A narrow waist flaring into hips that carried both strength and grace.

The faint silvery trail of hair between her thighs catching the light like frost. Skin luminous under the bathroom’s honeyed glow—every curve and hollow rendered in soft, living gold.

She did not pose.

She simply existed—naked, unapologetic, quietly absolute.

Then she reached for the white bathrobe on the hook. Phei’s robe. Far too large.

Sleeves swallowed her hands. Hem puddled at her calves. She tied the belt loosely; the deep V of her chest parted naturally, framing the inner swell of her breasts, the shadowed valley between them, the robe clinging just enough to hint at what it was meant to conceal.

The sunken tub waited, already drawn. Steam rose in slow spirals.

Water faintly blue-green from mineral salts, scented with something clean and ancient—eucalyptus, cedar, a trace of something oceanic.

She let the robe fall.

It pooled around her feet like discarded moonlight.

And she stepped into the bath.

Slow. Deliberate. Eyes closing as heat rose to meet her—first ankles, then calves, then thighs.

Water climbed her body like reverent hands: over hips, across the flat plane of her stomach, up her ribs, until it lapped gently at the undersides of her breasts. She sank until only her collarbones and the tops of her shoulders remained above the surface.

Silver hair fanned outward across the water like spilled mercury.

She leaned back.

Head resting against the smooth stone lip.

Maya sank slowly—deliberately—letting the heat rise to claim her inch by reverent, torturous inch.

A long, deep sigh left her lips—contentment so pure it bordered on reverence. The sound of a woman who had spent the entire night exactly where she intended to be, and was now permitting herself to feel the rightness of it... of her man’s presence in the same space with him and just him.

Because to Maya, Cassiopeia might as well be insignificant in her presence.

Her shoulders loosened. Spine softened. The water held her like it had been waiting centuries to do so.

Then her eyes opened.

And fixed—without hesitation, without searching—on a precise point in the empty air above the bath.

Four feet up. Three feet left of the vanity. A space containing nothing visible.

Nothing at all.

She stared.

Straight through the veil.

Eira froze.

Not figuratively.

Actually froze.

Eira’s translucent wings locked mid-flutter—frozen in perfect, crystalline arrest, every gossamer vein suddenly etched in void-ice that crackled like glass under sudden pressure.

Her tiny body went rigid, limbs locked in place as though dipped in liquid nitrogen.

The faint black-diamond dust she always shed in moments of agitation hung suspended around her, glittering motes caught in absolute stillness, refusing to fall.

She was invisible.

She knew she was invisible.

Only Phei could see her. The only other person who could see her was someone carrying the raw unfiltered powers and level of a god could pierce the veil she wore like skin.

And yet.

The girl in the bath was staring directly at her.

Not near her. Not vaguely in her direction. Not at some architectural quirk of the ceiling or a trick of steam on the mirror.

At her.

Brown eyes—warm, liquid, almost sleepy—locked onto Eira’s exact spatial coordinates with the cold precision of a laser-guided missile. No searching sweep. No accidental glance. Just... fixation. Pinpoint. Unblinking.

"No," Eira breathed, the word barely a vibration in her crystalline throat. "No, no, no, no. That’s—that’s not—she can’t—"

Maya’s lips curved. The smallest twitch. Not quite a smile. More like the prelude to one. The prelude to something amused and ancient.

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