Bo hit the marble tile floor hard, landing square on his ass. The world spun for a moment, the air knocked from his lungs. Just seconds ago, he was stumbling past some rusted dumpsters, the acrid scent of decay thick in his nose. Now, those dumpsters were behind him behind a tent, to be exact. But the tent was... gone?
No, not gone.
Transformed.
The canvas flaps dissolved before his eyes, rippling like water until they reshaped into something far beyond his comprehension a mansion. Glistening floors stretched beneath his feet, chandeliers shimmered above, casting gold across velvet walls, and polished marble statues lined the corridor like silent guards.
Bo scrambled back on his heels, ready to make a break for the exit. But as he turned, the door slammed shut behind him, sealing with a whisper that sounded like a heartbeat.
Before he could process the surreal shift, footsteps bare, soft, yet somehow thunderous in presence echoed down the halls. One by one, doors opened. And from each, a woman emerged.
Six in total.
Seven if you include the one who threw him inside.
Each more stunning, terrifying, and otherworldly than the last.
They moved with effortless grace, their eyes locked on him as if he'd just walked into the lioness's den wearing a raw steak. Their beauty was maddening. Their expressions curious, hungry, amused.
Bo froze.
"Oh hell no," he muttered.
If one woman had dragged him in here with the strength of a bulldozer, he didn't want to find out what seven could do.
He backed up slowly, hands raised. "Look, I don't know what kind of reality warping, fine-as-hell sorcery this is, but I'm not trying to be anybody's chew toy."
One of the women laughed a deep, musical sound that slid down his spine like honey and heat.
Another cocked her head. "He's cute when he's scared."
Bo's heart pounded. He had a gut feeling he was about to learn the meaning of temptation. The kind that didn't just test a man's will it shredded it.
"I wish I'd minded my own business." Bo thought the regret growing in his gut.
Bo's back hit the velvet lined wall with a thud. He hadn't realized he'd been backing up until there was nowhere left to go. His chest rose and fell with uneven breaths, his eyes locked on the woman closing in on him
"I'm Elio." Says the woman who threw bo around like luggage said.
She didn't need to touch him.
She just walked.
Each step sent waves of energy pulsing through the air, like the world itself shifted to make way for her. Her eyes, dark and amused, pinned him in place. And when she stopped just inches away, Bo's instincts screamed run, fight, something. But his body betrayed him, frozen, his heart hammering in his ears.
He could smell her now warm skin, sweet smoke, danger wrapped in silk.
"You scare easy," Elio said, her voice a purr as she leaned in slightly, just enough for the heat of her breath to graze his cheek.
Bo swallowed hard. "You threw me in here like a sack of laundry."
"I carried you with care."
"I hit the ground!" Bo barked, doing his best to keep calm.
She smirked, then turned her head slightly, giving the other six women a full view of him.
"That's enough. He's here now," sayaa said, Elio stepped back but never broke eye contact. "Let's see what he really wants."
The women moved like dancers-no, like elements of nature. Each one fluid, wild, deliberate. Together they formed a symphony of seduction, each playing a distinct note on Bo's frayed senses.
"Let me help by introducing my kin That's Alani." Elio stated
Alani drifted to the velvet chaise like mist on water. Stretched across the chaise like a sacred relic, her 5'10" Tongan physique commanded reverence.
The crimson dress clung to her hips and spilled off one shoulder, revealing the smooth, soft slope of her bronze skin like liquid, emphasizing the stretch marks that shimmered like pearl inlays across her hips the sacred kavei lau patterns of a woman who'd outgrown three mortal lifetimes.
Her body stretched long and languid across the cushions, one bare leg sliding over the other as she rolled onto her side. Her foot dangled just above the ground, toes pointed, arching her body like a bow. She rested her cheek on her knuckles, watching Bo with lazy hunger, like a lioness already full but still willing to play with her prey.
"To her right there Tiara" Elio replied, tiara smile happy give a little display.
Samoan thunder in a 5'4" package, her obsidian gown strained against the full, round promise of her fale shaped hips. The malu tattoos peeking above her knees told stories of ocean voyages, the ink rippling as she shifted her weight.
hips swaying slowly as she twisted a long strand of jet-black hair between her fingers. Her other hand rested on her hip, her nails tracing the seam of her dress, drawing the eye downward to where it split at her thigh. When she smiled just slightly and bit her lower lip
she bit her lip when she smiled, the gold-capped tooth flashed a wink from the ancestors. Her jet black hair, coiled in a topknot secured by a whalebone.
it felt like a secret prayer being whispered directly to Bo's skin. Her eyes told him she was the storm that followed the calm, and she wanted him drenched.
"I'm Leilani" she spoke for herself looking like the Hawaiian golden hour made flesh.
Her body moved with the hypnotic sway of palm fronds, every curve a love letter to the concept of abundance at 5'7".
Her waist curved like poetry, She lifted her leg slowly, placing her foot on a low stool, and began dragging her hand up the inside of her thigh slow, deliberate, as if time bent for her pleasure. The stretch of her pā'ū skirt across her thighs hispered of fresh poi and taro harvests.
Her other hand ran over her chest, fingers grazing the edge of her low-cut bodice. When she touched herself, the faint scars from childhood hula implements gleamed along her fingertips a dancer's map of devotion.
The gardenia behind her ear perfumed the air with promises even gods couldn't keep. She didn't look at Bo she let him look at her. It was a gift. One she could take away at any moment.
Elio playfully roles her eyes and continues introducing her other sisters. "This is Sanaa!"
A 5'5 Fijian wildfire draped in sheer silk, Her skin was a deep onyx, glistening under the chandelier's light, revealing the Masi symbols inked along her ribs protection spells in indigo.
She circled Bo slowly, her heels clicking against the marble with deadly rhythm. The deliberate roll of her hips mimicked the undulations of an octopus in hunt, the seashell anklets chiming with each step.
Bo's body trembles become increasingly visible after each chiming rotation.
"Mmm you taste like whine!" He felt her hot breath as she whispered lips mere inches from his earlobe. Sending Goose bumps down his
Her afro, threaded with tiny cowrie shells, caught the light like a crown of miniature moons. When she laughed, the sound carried the metallic tang of saltwater.
When she finished toying with her pray, Bo watched as she stood next to sister as if prompting her sister to continue.
"To her right is the youngest Noelani." Elio says waving her hand to the smallest of the group, standing 5'4" with the most potent l storm.
The Tahitian paradox a delicate frame containing the fury of a thousand wave crashes.
She stood off to the side, her frame delicate but sculpted, like marble softened by centuries of touch.
Her dress barely held to her body, threatening to slip with every breath she took, it was woven from spider silk and dreams, clung to the sharp angles of her hips before dissolving into transparency at her thighs.
The kākau tattoos swirling up her spine pulsed like living things when she breathed.
But she was watching him studying him with a hunger that felt almost scientific. Her hands caressed the sides of her own neck, trailing down slowly between her breasts, as if imagining his fingers there instead. Her lips parted just enough for a sigh, and that sound alone nearly undid him.
"Then there's me! Amaya The best!" All her sister rolled there eyes, some choosing to scoff but she ignores them all.
Rapa Nui majesty at 5'6", her silhouette cut the air like a sacred moai.
She ran her fingers along her collarbone as she walked toward him, each hip sway hypnotic. She stopped a few feet away, lifted her dress ever so slightly to reveal the top of her thigh, then smirked.
The slit in her dress revealed legs that had outrun tsunami waves, the muscle definition softened by layers of kōpa fat. the shark teeth scars along her inner thigh gleamed battle trophies from a war fought in the shallows.
Her Hair cascading down her back like a waterfall at midnight, weighted with carved stone beads, swung with the gravitational pull of celestial bodies.
Her confidence didn't scream-it whispered, promising pleasures Bo wasn't sure he could survive.
Each woman was different.
Each a force of nature.
And each one was looking at him like he was the answer to a thirst they hadn't quenched since the pandemic started.
Bo's heart slammed against his ribs.
He didn't know what to say, what to think. He was trapped between fear and desire, between instinct and temptation.
And just when he thought he couldn't take anymore, Sanaa leaned in close enough that her lips almost touched his ear.
"Tell us what you like, Bo," she whispered, her breath sweet and hot. "We can be anything."
Bo couldn't breathe.
He couldn't run.
He couldn't lie.
Because deep down, he didn't know what he liked anymore.
He only knew he wasn't ready.
He was just a man. A man cornered in a mansion that bloomed out of thin air, surrounded by seven supernatural Polynesian supermodels who wanted him to want them.
Noelani shyly leaned in close enough for her voice to cut through the tension. "Tell us what you like, Bo. We can be anything."
Bo's mouth opened, but no sound came out. His brain was screaming, his body betraying him with goosebumps and heat.
He didn't know what kind of hell this was but if it was hell, it smelled sweet and looked like paradise.
Bo's eyes flicked from face to face, from curve to curve, from whispered invitation to open temptation. His mind was a whirlwind of thoughts, each louder than the last.
Any of them.
Tell them off.
Run.
RUN!!
But no part of him moved.
His jaw clenched. He could feel heat rising in his neck, his body reacting in ways his heart wasn't ready for. They were beautiful, yes. But this wasn't beauty it was pressure. A storm wrapped in silk.
And then he broke.
His voice cracked like a boy's, quiet, raw, and full of something none of them expected.
"All I want..." he breathed, "is to go home."
Silence.
The air changed. The flirtation wavered. Some of the women stilled, the spell of seduction bending under the weight of something real.
Elio's smirk didn't fade, but it twitched-just a little. Like a mask tugging at its edges.
Bo's fists clenched at his sides. "I don't have a home," he said, eyes still locked on Elio. "But I've got a car. A backseat with a busted heater. And right now... that feels safer than this place."
There it was.
The ache beneath the bravado. The grief behind the muscle.
Bo had lost everything his girl, his pride, his bed. And now he stood, cornered by seven fantasies made flesh, and all he wanted was the familiar stink of his worn out car.
A home with no walls still beat a palace built on confusion and danger.
He slid down the wall, sinking to the floor, his head resting against his knees. "I just want peace. Not promises."
For a long, heavy second, no one moved.
The silence lingered longer than it should have, thick and stretching. The kind of silence that didn't just fill a room it revealed it.
Bo's words didn't echo. They settled.
And in that settling, something shattered.
The women, once poised like predators, felt the shift inside them like a tremor under their skin. For centuries, they had played this game. Seduction, power, lust. It was the only rhythm they remembered. A curse wrapped in silk, replayed with every new soul thrown into their den.
But this one... this man hadn't begged, or bragged, or tried to earn their favor. He didn't posture or play along.
He asked to go home.
And every single one of them knew exactly what he meant.
Home wasn't a house. It was a breath of freedom. A break from pretending. A moment of peace. Something they hadn't tasted in generations.
Noelani and sanaa turned there faces away, swallowing hard.
Tiara's arms fell to her sides, limp.
And then Elio... broke.
The softest sound slipped from her lips a sniff she couldn't hide fast enough. A single tear rolled down her cheek, and she didn't bother to wipe it away.
She knelt beside him, no longer a siren of desire, but a woman undone.
Her hand reached for his shoulder, gentle, trembling. She didn't say anything. She didn't have to.
That one act just one undid Bo completely.
His breath hitched.
And then he cried.
Not loud. Not showy. But broken. Quiet. Deep. The kind of crying that happens when someone finally feels safe enough to fall apart.
Elio pulled him into her arms, and he didn't fight it.
For the first time in what felt like forever, neither of them was pretending.
They just were.