My Taboo Harem!

Chapter 740: Between Goddess and Girl



Chapter 740: Between Goddess and Girl

A/N:We’re stepping into a small Sienna arc that we would mix with other thing happening, take the Sienna arc very carefully. It has a huge impact to the story. Also, thanks for reading the Roxanne side-story.

Sienna had seen the ruin before it arrived and yet it was not through some prophecy or borrowed sight. She did not borrow fragments of futures the way oracles did. She read the living equations of people—the precise vectors of pride, calculation, and limitation that shaped what they would do next.

It was there the instant Marcus Heavenchild’s pale grey eyes crossed the threshold of the Empyrean Dining Hall, written across his face like ink already drying on a page the fool had not yet bothered to open.

Not prophecy, that was the crutch of lesser things that needed the future shouted at them in riddles because their own sight was too weak to parse the present.

Sienna simply watched mortals the way one watches patterns repeat across centuries until the repetition itself became the only reliable truth, until the next petty cruelty or desperate grasp for status had stopped surprising her somewhere around the fourth or fifth dynasty.

It was dry, accumulated patience—the fatigue of an existence that had already tallied too many ledgers written in blood and vanity.

The patterns were a tired vaudeville of egos, every act ending in the same predictable squelch of humiliation, and today the Heavenchild was the star of the shit-show, his cue the boy’s whispered verdict.

Darkly comedic, built on blood reduced to puddles on marble, the hall’s laughter the universe applauding its own punchline.

From the moment his patrician smile composed itself and his measured stride carried him toward the centre of the marble, she had already balanced the coming ninety seconds with unhurried certainty: the charity-case insult delivered with lacquered courtesy, Elena’s inevitable interjection, the public demotion dressed as incest wit, the escalation that would name Melissa, name Delilah, name Sierra, name Maddie, and close with some phrase he believed elegant enough to leave him victorious.

And then the boy at the head of the table—Phei she observed with the faintly amused detachment a Nether Goddess reserved for very young men carrying very large futures—would refuse to grant him even the dignity of a scene.

He would answer without words but in the only currency that mattered. And Marcus Heavenchild would leave the hall considerably worse than he entered it.

She had expected to be mildly impressed. She had budgeted for it.

What unfolded instead made something shift inside her without permission.

Whispered words, soft enough to be mistaken for mercy, and the air itself changed and Phei’s presence stopped pretending to be seventeen.

It settled across the marble with the patient sovereign weight of something that had grown tired of wearing small shapes and Marcus’s pale composure cracked along his mouth like ice spreading across a frozen lake before he had to crawl before Phei.

Then every muscle remembered it obeyed a higher being than his will, and the body seized in full view of the entire hall while the boy crouched beside him to deliver some private promise she had not bothered to hear because she already knew its shape.

The two-degree finger signal, manager bowing toward Phei rather than the Legacy prince now sprawled on marble.

She sat through all of it with her cappuccino held at the precise angle her right hand had chosen ninety seconds earlier, her face arranged in the small, composed expression a Ryujin Tiamatyoungest princess was expected to wear when her family’s adopted boy publicly dismantled a sworn enemy of their bloodline.

She had been almost impressed. Not mildly... almost.

For a Nether Goddess currently wearing the fragile glass of a seventeen-year-old girl, that was the emotional equivalent of a more excitable woman clutching pearls and demanding smelling salts while declaring the vapours had finally claimed her.

She did not let it show, she just took a slow appreciative sip and watched David film the trail of urine on the marble in crisp 4K, Maddie’s roast about the eastern-corner waitress at the appropriate volume and with the appropriate timing.

She let her face remain the quietly unimpressed mask of someone whose cousin had finally taught the Heavenchilds a long-overdue lesson in decorum.

No one at that table read the second undertone beneath the first—that if anyone in Paradise was ever going to pull even a fractional upward curve from the corner of a Nether Goddess’s mouth, it would only ever be him.

The shift was no mere ripple either; in a way it was akin to an abyss clearing its throat, threatening to swallow the glass whole right there amid the clink of silverware and the stench of humbled pride.

She had budgeted for mild impression, not this—the dangerous, almost-smile that could unravel eons of careful containment.

The boy, that walking paradox of power in a teenage wrapper, was the universe’s latest jest at her expense.

The lift doors closed and sealed her into the mirrored cabin with its recessed lighting and its inoffensive cello soundtrack.

Sienna exhaled, and on the surface it was the polite breath of a young woman who had finished breakfast and intended to nap before lunch.

Beneath that, though, it was the longer breath of a her body no longer entirely convinced it could continue containing what it carried.

She pressed the button for her floor. The cabin rose smoothly past and her left hand, resting against the polished the rail, cracked.

It was a small sound, almost unadible.

Before a hairline split along the side of her index finger, opening from cuticle to second knuckle in one quiet sigh of escaping pressure.

From the fissure, a thin thread of luminous black-violet energy began to leak—Nether Energy in its raw, uncompiled state, the substrate of a goddess who had once unmade a small galaxy on a slow Tuesday afternoon, now slipping out of its seventeen-year-old human body because it could not yet hold her awakening power continuously.

She looked down at the crack... the slow, rebellious leak before she took a small evaluative breath.

Then, with the unhurried grace of a girl correcting a stray lock of hair, she folded her hand against the dark fabric of her dress, pressed the leaking finger where the cabin’s camera could not see it, and closed her eyes as the pain arrived.

It was hell itself, distilled into the narrow confines of a luxury lift—a grinding, existential flaying that tore at the very lattice of her flesh, the membrane between goddess and girl ripping with the sound of galaxies shearing apart in slow motion.

The black-violet energy erupted now in earnest, not a leak but a flood of raw netheric fury, hissing and bubbling against the dark fabric like the void itself spitting in disgust at the indignity of containment.

Pain lanced up her arm, across her shoulder, into the core of her being.

It was like being subjected to a thousand icy needles forged from the deaths itself, each one carrying the echoes of her Unfinished Children’s forced manifestation—the half-formed abyssal spawn who had crumbled the dome, forcing her to expend more and push the human body harder.

And now she was paying the price in full with interest that burned like the birth of a new hell.


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.