My Taboo Harem!-Chapter 489: Moon: Not Dyed

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Chapter 489: Moon: Not Dyed

Phei stepped out of the bathroom, towel-dried hair still damp and tousled, dressed in fresh dark jeans and a simple black tee that hugged his shoulders just right. The walk-in closet doors were still open, soft morning light spilling across the racks in warm golden pools, and there she was—Maya—already seated at the makeup vanity in the far corner.

She perched on the cushioned chair in nothing but one of his oversized button-down shirts she must have pulled from his side of the closet while he showered.

The hem skimmed mid-thigh, sleeves rolled to her elbows, the top three buttons left undone, so the collar framed her delicate collarbones and the faint shadow between her medium, high breasts.

Her silver hair—still damp from the shower—hung in loose, shimmering waves down her back, catching every stray beam like liquid starlight, strands clinging softly to her neck and shoulders in dark, wet ribbons.

She caught his reflection in the mirror first. Her eyes lifted, met his, and that shy, radiant smile bloomed across her face again—small, luminous, like dawn breaking just for him.

Phei crossed the room slowly—barefoot, quiet—until he stood behind her chair.

He reached for the wide-tooth comb on the vanity, lifted it, and met her gaze in the mirror.

"Can I...?"

Maya nodded almost instantly—eager, breathless—eyes shining with quiet trust.

"Please," she whispered. Then softer, almost reverent: "It would be an honor."

Phei’s chest tightened at the words—warm, aching, sacred. He smiled, small and genuine, the kind of smile he saved only for her.

"The pleasure is all mine, Love."

He stepped behind her, close enough that she could feel the heat of him along her spine, the faint damp warmth of his shirt brushing her shoulders. His fingers gathered the thick, silver fall of her hair—gentle, careful—lifting it away from her neck so he could start at the ends.

The strands were cool and silky from the shower, sliding through the comb like water over stone.

No tangles, no resistance; just perfect, effortless glide—each pass feeling like touching something holy, something made of moonlight and trust.

He worked upward in slow, patient strokes—section by section—combing from root to tip, letting the hair spill over his forearm in a shimmering cascade.

Every pass felt like reverence: the cool silk of her hair against his skin, the faint floral scent of her shampoo rising with each stroke, the way her shoulders softened and relaxed under his careful hands.

He could feel her breathing slow, deepen—tiny sighs escaping her parted lips as tension she hadn’t even known she carried melted away.

Maya closed her eyes.

A tiny, contented sigh slipped free—soft, melting—her head tipping back slightly, trusting him completely with the most vulnerable part of her. The open collar of his shirt she was wearing slipped wider, revealing more of her pale throat, the delicate hollow where pulse fluttered beneath porcelain skin.

Phei watched her in the mirror for a moment—eyes shut, lips parted, lashes fanned dark against flushed cheeks—then continued combing, voice low and warm, almost a whisper.

"They don’t even look dyed."

Maya’s eyes flew open.

She stared at his reflection—wide, startled—searching his face for any hint of teasing.

Phei wasn’t looking at her eyes.

He was looking at her hair—fingers threading through the silver strands with quiet wonder, comb gliding slow and steady, expression soft and reverent.

"You think?" she asked, voice small, hopeful, barely daring to believe.

He hummed—low, affirmative—never breaking rhythm.

"Mm. Perfect. Like it’s always been this color. Like it grew out of you just to match the way you... shine." His thumb brushed the nape of her neck as he gathered another section—gentle, deliberate.

"Like the moon decided to live in your hair so I’d never stop looking at you."

Their eyes met in the mirror then—his amethyst purple and steady, hers glassy and shining with unshed tears of joy.

They smiled at the same time—slow, private, the kind of smile that belonged only to them, that needed no words to carry every promise ever made.

He kept combing—long, soothing strokes—until every strand lay smooth and gleaming, falling in a perfect silver waterfall down her back, catching the morning light and scattering tiny prisms across the vanity.

Neither of them spoke again for a long minute.

Just the soft rasp of comb through hair.

Just the quiet rhythm of breathing in sync.

Just the sacred, simple intimacy of him caring for her like this—gentle hands, reverent touch, no rush, no demand—only the unspoken vow that he would always choose to be the one who tended to her, who saw her beauty and handled it like something precious.

Maya reached up once—hesitant—fingertips brushing his wrist where it rested on her shoulder.

"Thank you," she whispered—voice trembling with emotion.

Phei leaned down—pressed a slow, lingering kiss to the crown of her head, right where the silver parted, lips brushing warm against cool strands.

"Anytime, Scarlett," he murmured against her hair. "Every morning. Every night. As long as you’ll let me."

She turned her head just enough—cheek brushing his jaw—then tilted her chin up, offering her lips in silent invitation.

He took it—softest brush of mouth to mouth, barely parting, just breathing each other in.

No tongue. No heat.

Just the gentle press of lips that said I see you. I choose you. I’m here.

When he pulled back, her eyes were shining brighter—tears clinging to lashes like tiny diamonds.

"I love you," she whispered—voice small, certain, sacred.

Phei’s throat tightened—emotion thick and sudden. He cupped her face gently—thumbs stroking her cheekbones—and pressed his forehead to hers.

"I love you too, Maya Scarlett," he whispered back, voice rough with feeling. "More than forever. More than anything."

She smiled—radiant, trembling—then leaned back into his chest, letting him wrap his arms around her from behind.

His palms flattened over her stomach through the open shirt—warm, steady—holding her like she was the only thing anchoring him to the world.

They stayed like that—mirrored in the soft light—silver hair spilling over his shoulder, his arms cradling her small frame, both of them breathing slow and deep.

Because some mornings weren’t about rushing.

Some mornings were about combing silver hair with reverent hands.

About whispered confessions and forehead kisses.

About building forever—one gentle, perfect stroke at a time.

****

A/N: We’re done with Maya and Phei, aren’t we?