My Taboo Harem!-Chapter 346: Formal Recogntion
He let that hang—long enough for the crowd to feel the weight of it.
"A new group emerged. A group that challenged the social hierarchy we’ve all accepted as gospel. A group that made the old guard very, very nervous."
Paige and Brielle were suddenly very interested in the floor.
"See, here’s how it works at Ashford Elite. Everyone knows the pecking order. At the top, you’ve got Marcus’s Angels—the fan club, the devoted followers, the girls who’d do anything for their prince."
The screen showed a quick cut of Marcus’s fans in the crowd—signs, jerseys, the whole devoted-follower aesthetic, some of them already crying pre-emptively.
"And who leads Marcus’s Angels? Who runs the biggest, most influential group in the Academy?"
He gestured toward the cheerleader section—slow, mocking.
"The same girls who lead the cheerleading squad. Funny how that works, right? Brielle and Paige Heavenchild. Shocking. Who could have predicted."
More laughter. The twins continued their intense study of the hardwood floor—Paige’s jaw tightening so hard you could see the muscle jump, Brielle’s smile frozen in place like it had been superglued.
"Below Marcus’s Angels, you’ve got the Danton Babes."
The crowd laughed louder—
"Yes, that’s their actual name. No, I didn’t make it up. And yes—" David grinned, sharp and filthy "—Danton absolutely has a fan group and ranking in second! Don’t doubt the dude for a second. He’s got game."
Somewhere Danton Maxton was probably choking on his own ego.
"So that’s your hierarchy. Marcus’s Angels at the top. Danton Babes below. Then a bunch of other groups nobody cares about. Standard Paradise politics. Nothing changes, nothing evolves, everyone knows their place."
David paused.
Turned slowly toward a different tunnel.
"Until two weeks ago."
The stadium went quiet—anticipation so thick you could choke on it. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
"A new group emerged. A group that didn’t ask permission. A group that didn’t care about bloodlines or bank accounts. A group that looked at the old order... a group that looked at the entire social structure of Ashford Elite Academy and said ’Nah.’"
The crowd buzzed—low at first, then rising, rising, until it felt like the stadium itself was breathing heavy with anticipation.
David paced center court—slow, predatory, mic in one hand, the other gesturing like he was conducting chaos.
"This group—and I cannot stress this enough—is the reason we’re all here today. The reason this stadium is open. The reason outsiders are allowed in Paradise in such number and on Academy grounds. The reason twenty thousand people are watching a high-school basketball challenge like it’s the goddamn SummerBowl."
He spread his arms wide—slow, theatrical, soaking in the roar.
"No group in Academy history has ever done what they did. No group has ever mobilized this fast, organized this well, or dreamed this big. They took a ’nobody’ and turned him into a phenomenon. They took a challenge and turned it into an event."
The energy in the stadium shifted—anticipation building, curiosity peaking, the kind of hunger that made people lean forward in their seats like they were about to witness a public execution.
"So it is my humble honor—my genuine, unironic, completely sincere honor—to introduce..."
The tunnel lit up.
Music shifted—something new, something triumphant, bass-heavy with a dark, pulsing undercurrent that made hearts race and blood run hot.
"Led by Emily Hartwell, the founder, the visionary, the absolute madwoman who made all of this possible..."
Nine figures emerged.
"THE PHEICRUSH SIMPS!"
The name should have gotten laughs.
It was ridiculous. Self-deprecating. A joke name that admitted exactly what it was without shame or apology.
But the stadium didn’t laugh.
The stadium cheered.
Because walking onto that court were nine girls who had earned every decibel of that roar.
Emily Hartwell led them—confident, commanding, her usual quiet efficiency transformed into something fiercer under the stadium lights. Long dark hair pulled into a high ponytail, eyes sharp enough to cut glass, body moving with the kind of predatory grace that said she’d spent years learning how to command attention without trying.
Behind her, eight other girls followed in perfect formation—each one radiating the particular energy of someone who’d helped build something from nothing and wasn’t about to let anyone forget it.
Their uniforms were similar to the official cheerleaders—crop tops, tiny skirts, the whole fantasy-fuel package—but in different colors. Blue and white instead of red and gold. Sleek, modern, striking. And across every chest, in bold letters that could be read from the nosebleed sections:
PHEICRUSH SIMPS
Not hidden. Not apologized for. Worn like a badge of honor.
Their crop tops were white with blue accents, featuring a star emblem at the center—tight, showing midriff, showing curves, showing exactly why these girls had made it onto a cheerleading squad even if it wasn’t the official one.
Their pleated skirts were blue and white, swishing with every step, every bit as short and scandalous as their rivals’.
White knee-high boots. Blue and white pom-poms. Perfect makeup. Perfect hair. Perfect confidence.
They moved like they belonged there.
Because they did.
Emily stopped at center court, the other eight fanning out behind her in formation—hips cocked, pom-poms raised, bodies radiating the kind of energy that said they’d fought for this spot and weren’t about to let anyone take it from them.
The screen zoomed on Emily’s face—determined, proud, the look of someone who’d taken a crazy idea and made it reality through sheer force of will and zero fucks given.
The Academy students cheered louder—recognizing what they were seeing, understanding the significance.
Two weeks ago, these girls were just students with a shared obsession. Now they were standing on the same court as the official cheerleading squad, being introduced to a global audience, having built something that rivaled institutions decades older.
The outsiders cheered too—finally understanding who to thank for their presence here. Without the PheiCrush Simps, there would be no tickets. No streams. No access to this world they’d only ever glimpsed from outside the gates on social media.
Paige and Brielle watched from the sideline.
Their expressions were carefully neutral.
Their pom-poms hung at their sides.
David let the moment build—the cheers washing over Emily and her squad, the cameras capturing every angle, the world watching two groups of beautiful girls face off in a battle that had nothing to do with choreography and everything to do with power.
Then he raised the mic one final time—voice dropping low, almost intimate, but still carrying through every speaker in the building.
"Ladies and gentlemen..."
The cheerleaders tensed.
The Phei Simps straightened.
"Let the cheerleader competition BEGIN!"







