My Taboo Harem!

Chapter 442: Light in the Darkness



Chapter 442: Light in the Darkness

The Romano Café stood in Downtown like a black-glass cathedral built by people who had been wealthy since before borders had names.

Seventeen stories of obsidian and brushed gold rose from the most expensive square block in Downtown Paradise with the kind of arrogance that didn’t need signage.

But it had one anyway.

The word café was doing heroic, dishonest work here. This wasn’t a café the way a private jet wasn’t transportation. The Romanos had poured three generations of money—money still faintly warm from activities polite society preferred to forget—into this place.

They had turned mafia into legitimacy the slow, patient way: restaurants, hotels, quiet acquisitions, occasional quiet wars with the Price family over who owned the skyline.

A massive block of raw ice—glacial blue-white—sat on a polished steel pedestal at the base of the entrance steps. Ringed with frost-kissed plants and underlit by blue LEDs that made the whole sculpture pulse like something dredged from the bottom of an arctic trench.

And from the exact center of that impossible cold: fire. Real, living flames. Tall, hungry tongues of orange and gold licking upward from inside the frozen heart, heat and ice locked in the same space without apology, without physics daring to intervene.

Ice and fire. Coexisting. Defying every natural law just because the Romano family could afford to pay the laws to look the other way.

Blue light caught the flames and shattered them across the wet pavement in trembling gold reflections.

None of that mattered tonight.

Phei stood beside it.

The outdoor terrace wasn’t crowded. You didn’t crowd a place where a single appetiser cost more than most people’s rent. The clientele paid precisely for privacy—for the luxury of pretending no one else existed. Quiet murmurs. Clinking crystal. Everyone minding their own empire.

Until Phei stood there.

One hand in his pocket, the other thumb-scrolling something mundane on his phone. The blue glow from the ice sculpture painted one side of him cold and ethereal; the warm gold spilling from the café windows bathed the other side in something almost holy. Women’s fingers tightened on wine stems without conscious thought.

He wasn’t performing… just existence. And existence, in his case, was a weapon.

The women on the terrace were looking—with the slow, predatory hunger of people rich enough to want anything and refined enough to recognise when something exceptional had wandered into their hunting ground.

Their companions—suddenly, inexplicably—became background noise.

Phei didn’t notice. Or didn’t care. Same difference.

Then the car arrived.

He recognised the silhouette before the tyres even kissed the kerb. Park Seraph.

Jade’s family flagship. Low, wide, vicious—sharp angles and flared haunches like a panther mid-leap.

The P-with-wings grille emblem caught the café’s gold light and threw it back like a challenge.

She carried a small black clutch. Dark hair loose, waves catching the gold light and turning it warm, liquid.

She handed the keys to the valet without glancing at him—her focus was already locked. Had been locked on Phei since the moment the door opened.

She walked toward him.

And she smiled. Smaller than usual. Shyer. The smile of a woman who had spent two hours in front of mirrors and now stood before the only verdict that mattered, hoping—praying—it was enough.

She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. Shifted the clutch. Transferred her weight from one stiletto to the other in a tiny, unconscious adjustment.

“You look…” Phei began.

He didn’t finish. Didn’t need to. His eyes did the rest—slow, involuntary, tracing the halter strap down to her collarbones, lingering where the dress met her waist, then lower to the slit that revealed pale skin with every step.

The words slipped out raw, unplanned.

“…like the only thing in this city worth looking at tonight.”

Patricia’s cheeks bloomed full crimson—the blush of someone caught performing modesty and secretly thrilled by it.

“Thank you,” she said softly. Pleased. Her gaze dropped to his suit, swept up again in a quick, approving once-over she tried—and failed—to disguise.

She had done it. With nothing but black silk, loose hair, and a thigh-high slit that could ruin dynasties, she had walked out of a matte-pink supercar and made the boy with god-tier charisma forget every other woman on the terrace existed.

He extended his hand.

She took it.

Her fingers slid into his—warm, deliberate, choosing this moment—and as she stepped beside him, she glanced over her shoulder. Brief. Subtle. A look that lasted less than a heartbeat.

But it landed like artillery.

Aimed directly at the women still watching from their tables—who had spent the last five minutes drinking Phei in like vintage Bordeaux.

Patricia’s chin lifted. Just a fraction. Her grip on his hand tightened. And those intelligent, composed eyes delivered one unmistakable message to every woman on the terrace: Mine.And you can’t have him.

Then she turned back to Phei and smiled as though nothing had happened at all.

He smiled back—slow, real, unguarded for once.

He led her toward the entrance.

The stairs rose in three wide, shallow steps of polished black stone, underlit with soft gold that made each tread glow like molten metal cooling.

Phei’s hand found the small of Patricia’s back anyway.

Not guiding. Not possessive.

Just there—a warm, steady palm against the thin black fabric of her dress, fingers splayed wide enough to feel protective without claiming ownership. The contact was light, instinctive, the kind of touch that said I’ve got you without ever needing to speak it.

His other hand gestured ahead—after you—with the effortless grace of someone who had been opening doors and leading women for lifetimes, not mere weeks.

Patricia glanced sideways at him as they climbed. Surprised. Not by the gesture itself, but by its quality. No performance or the rehearsed chivalry pulled from some movie scene.

His hand had simply moved there the way a hand reaches for a light switch in the dark—automatic, thoughtless, because the alternative never crossed his mind.

And when she slowed for a half-step, he matched her pace instantly. No pulling. No impatience. Just synchronicity.

He is seventeen. Where the hell had he learned this?

The answer Patricia would never know: he hadn’t learned it at all.

It lived in his bones—the same buried reflex that once made him step between a child and danger in a tower lobby without calculating the cost.

The Cool Aura rolled off him with each step. It touched Patricia first—sliding under her skin like the first slow sip of vintage Bordeaux, making her fingers press just a fraction harder into his arm.

But it didn’t stop at her.

It spread outward in soft, concentric ripples: the hostess at the entrance doors stiffened mid-greeting; a descending couple inhaled sharply; the two women entering behind them both paused, then pretended they hadn’t noticed the sudden temperature drop in their bloodstreams.

Through the grand entrance. Past the ground-floor bar where the music was curated to feel like atmosphere instead of invasion—low jazz, brushed drums, the occasional shimmer of a saxophone that never overstayed its welcome.

“It feels strange,” Patricia said as they walked.

“What does?”

“This.” She gestured loosely between them. “Being officially on our first date.” A small pause. “We’ve been… whatever we’ve been. For days now. The classroom. The tension. The almosts. And now we’re just—walking into a restaurant. Like normal people.”

“We are normal people,” Phei said.

She gave him a sideways look that made him reconsider the entire sentence in real time.

Relatively normal,” he amended.

She laughed—the elevator was already waiting, doors open.

Four occupants: a couple in their forties dressed in the careful elegance of people who had planned this night for weeks; two women in their thirties, friends, clearly on their third cocktail and laughing a little too brightly.

Phei guided Patricia in first. Hand at her back again—positioning her beside him, slightly ahead, his body angled in a way so subtle it was almost invisible: he had placed himself between her and the rest of the small metal box.

Not blocking her view. Shielding her.

Giving her a secure space, the invisible buffer zone of a man who understood that a woman in heels and silk appreciates not being the most exposed person when strangers share breathing room.

The two women noticed him instantly.

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