Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 131 --
It was, by any measure, an extraordinary room.
And today it was packed.
Three hundred people had crammed themselves in, dressed in every color imaginable, draped in enough jewelry to fund a small war. Nobles, ambassadors, military commanders, clergy, court officials—everyone who mattered in the empire and several people from outside it who’d traveled weeks just to witness whatever today was going to be.
Nobody was entirely sure what today was going to be.
That was, in itself, unusual. Imperial ceremonies were typically so rigidly scripted that you could predict the next hour of events down to the minute. People came, watched the expected thing happen, applauded at the correct moments, went home.
But something about today felt different.
The whispers started the moment people arrived. Quiet at first, then louder as more guests filtered in and realized they all had the same questions and none of the answers.
’Both of them wearing suits?’
’Did you hear about the music she requested?’
’A primary consort? What does that even mean for the other five?’
’Who exactly is this Marus prince, anyway?’
On the raised dais at the far end of the hall, five chairs sat beside the imperial throne. The five consorts occupied them, dressed impeccably, looking collectively like five different paintings of the same subject: men who were handling something badly.
Kieran sat with his spine perfectly straight in his navy military uniform, every medal catching the light. If you didn’t know him, you might think he looked composed. If you did know him, you’d notice that his jaw was so tight it looked painful.
Adrian had chosen severe black robes, the kind that said ’I am taking this seriously and you should too’. He sat completely still, but his fingers were drumming a slow, private rhythm on the armrest, the only sign that he was working very hard to look unbothered.
Damien wore deep gray and purple—understated, expensive, deliberate. His eyes moved constantly, cataloging every face in the hall, every whispered conversation, every nervous gesture. He was building a picture of this moment the way a painter builds a portrait, one careful observation at a time.
Raphael had his ceremonial white and gold, and a small prayer book in both hands. He wasn’t reading it. He was just holding it the way some people hold things when they need something to hold.
Lucian, in dark emerald green, sat somewhat apart from the others. His expression was harder to read than the rest—less rigid, more watchful, like someone genuinely trying to figure out what they thought about all this.
They were all waiting.
The whole hall was waiting.
’’’
Outside the ceremonial doors, in the marble corridor that connected the entrance to the palace’s interior, Heena stood and checked her reflection in a decorative mirror someone had helpfully positioned near the entrance.
The suit was perfect.
Crimson and gold, cut sharp enough to make a statement and comfortable enough to breathe in. The gold embroidery caught every flicker of torchlight from the corridor sconces. The imperial crown—a delicate circlet of gold and rubies—sat on her head with the settled weight of something that belonged there.
She looked like exactly what she was.
System 427 floated nervously at her elbow. "Host, everyone’s already looking at the doors. Can you hear them? There are ’three hundred people’ in there just staring at—"
"I’m aware, System."
"What if something goes wrong? What if—"
"System." She turned to look at him with the measured patience of someone approaching the end of that patience. "If you ask me one more nervous question before we walk through those doors, I’m canceling your snack allowance for a month."
The system went completely silent.
Her aunt materialized from somewhere behind her, fan moving in that slow, deliberate rhythm that meant she was managing something internally.
"He’s coming," the Duchess said quietly. "East corridor."
Footsteps.
Confident. Measured. Getting closer.
Heena turned toward the sound.
Larus appeared at the end of the corridor, and she genuinely forgot what she’d been thinking about for a moment.
He looked ’extraordinary’.
The suit she’d commissioned had come together even better than she’d imagined when sketching the concept from memory—the ivory and black fabric catching and scattering light with every step, the gold and amber jewelry worked directly into the garment itself rather than pinned on as an afterthought. The dramatic collar at his shoulders made him look like he’d stepped out of an old painting of warrior-kings. His golden hair was swept back from his face, leaving those vivid blue eyes with nowhere to hide.
He moved the way he always moved—with that easy, unhurried confidence of someone completely comfortable in their own body—except that today everything about him was amplified. More deliberate. More ’present’.
He saw her and smiled, and it was the real one, not the diplomatic one.
"Your Majesty," he said, stopping in front of her and bowing. The movement made his jewelry chime softly, like small bells. "You look magnificent."
"So do you," she said, and meant it without any calculation. "Does the suit fit well?"
"It’s perfect." He touched the lapel, his expression shifting into something that was trying to be casual and not quite managing it. "It’s exactly what I would have chosen. How did you know?"
"I pay attention," she said simply.
He stepped up beside her and looked at the ceremonial doors—fifteen feet of carved imperial history, gold leaf glinting in the torchlight, currently separating them from three hundred opinions.
"Are you ready?" she asked.
He considered the doors for a moment, then looked at her. "Are ’you’? Once we walk through, that’s it. Everyone knows. Everything changes."
"Good," she said. "Let them know."
She extended her hand—palm up, flat, the gesture of someone offering a partnership rather than asking for one.
Larus looked at her hand for a brief moment with an expression she couldn’t entirely read. Then something settled in his face, and he took it. His grip was warm and steady.
"Together," he said.
"Together," she agreed.
She nodded to the guards at the doors.
They straightened, drew breath, and announced:
"’’HER IMPERIAL MAJESTY, EMPRESS CELESTE, SOVEREIGN RULER OF THE ETERNAL EMPIRE!’’"
A pause.
"’’HIS HIGHNESS, PRINCE LARUS OKMANA OF THE MARUS KINGDOM, CHOSEN CONSORT AND BETROTHED TO HER IMPERIAL MAJESTY!’’"
The doors began to open.
’’’
Light poured out.
Then silence poured in.
Three hundred people stopped everything they were doing at exactly the same moment. Conversations mid-sentence. Wine glasses halfway raised. Fans mid-flutter. All of it just... stopped.
Heena and Larus walked into that silence together.
From the crowd’s perspective, the effect was striking in a way that was difficult to articulate afterward. Both in suits—’both in suits’, that was somehow the detail everyone kept coming back to—holding hands with the easy grip of people who’d decided something and weren’t asking permission about it. Walking to the imperial processional music, which was supposed to be reserved for the most serious state occasions, which was a choice that communicated volumes without a single word being spoken.
The jewelry on Larus’s suit caught the chandelier light and scattered it in small bursts of brilliance that followed him down the aisle like he was trailing stars.







