Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 35 --

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Chapter 35: Chapter-35

"That’s—that’s insane!" His glow flared bright with distress. "Heena, if I log out, I can’t protect you! I can’t warn you of dangers, can’t provide strategic analysis, can’t—"

"Can’t be detected by Seraphina’s system," Heena finished quietly.

System 427 went still. "You think..."

"I think her system is hunting for you. Scanning for foreign signatures, looking for proof that another system is active in this world." Heena leaned back in her chair, wincing at the pain in her spine. "Today proved she’s suspicious. Her system probably has detection protocols running constantly, trying to find the anomaly."

"But I’ve been careful! My stealth protocols—"

"Are good, but not perfect." Heena’s voice was gentle but firm. "You said yourself you couldn’t fully scan her system because it’s so well hidden. What if hers is better at detection than yours is at stealth? What if every second you stay connected, you’re leaving traces she’s collecting?"

System 427’s form dimmed with unhappy acceptance. "That’s... possible. If her system has advanced detection capabilities and enough time to analyze patterns..."

"Then eventually she finds proof. And once she has proof, she can expose us to higher system administration or exploit the knowledge somehow." Heena picked up her pen again, twirling it absently. "I can’t let that happen. Not when we’re this close to the tournament, this close to making it through."

"But three days?" His voice was small, frightened. "Heena, that’s the tournament. That’s when everything comes to a head. You’ll be completely alone, facing five weakened but furious male leads, a white lotus heroine with a perfect record, political intrigue, and potential system interference—all without backup!"

"I know." She said it so calmly he wanted to shake her. "But it’s the only way. If you disconnect completely—not just stealth mode, but full logout—her system will have nothing to detect. The anomaly disappears. She’ll think she imagined it or that I’m just naturally skilled."

"Or she’ll assume you’re hiding something and attack even harder!"

"Maybe." Heena shrugged, though the movement cost her. "But at least she won’t have confirmation. Doubt is better than proof."

System 427 floated closer, his distress evident in every flicker of his glow. "This is because you care about me. You’re trying to protect me from being detected and potentially deleted by system administration."

"Partially," Heena admitted. "I don’t want you erased because of my choices. You’re my partner, 427. You’ve kept me alive through twelve impossible worlds. The least I can do is protect you when I can."

"By sending me away when you need me most?" His voice cracked. "That’s not protection, that’s suicide!"

"It’s strategy." She met his eyes—or where eyes would be if he had a face. "And you know I’m right. You’ve been worried about detection since we first suspected her system exists. This eliminates that variable entirely."

"But the other variables!" He was nearly shouting now, his usual calm professionalism shattered by genuine fear. "Heena, you’re injured. The consorts will be released in two days. Prince Ashton is an unknown quantity. Seraphina is actively plotting against you. Duke Robbiston is still suspicious. Your ankle is barely functional and the cosmic backlash is getting worse—I can see it even if you pretend I can’t!"

"I’ll manage."

"You’ll DIE!"

The word hung between them, raw and terrible.

Heena was quiet for a long moment. Then she smiled—tired, sad, but genuine. "Maybe. Probably not, but maybe. But 427, if her system detects you and reports you to administration, what happens?"

"I... I’d be investigated. Possibly deleted if found in violation of operating protocols."

"And what happens to me when my system is forcibly removed mid-mission?"

System 427 went silent. They both knew the answer. Forced system removal usually killed the host—the sudden disconnection from system support caused catastrophic shock to someone who’d integrated with system assistance for years.

"So my options are: risk you staying and both of us getting caught, or send you away safely and handle three days alone." Heena’s voice was matter-of-fact. "Mathematically, the choice is obvious."

"Mathematically maybe. But emotionally—" His glow pulsed with anguish. "Heena, I can’t just leave you. Not like this. Not when you’re hurt and surrounded by enemies."

"You’re not leaving me. I’m ordering you to complete a tactical withdrawal for both our safety." She reached out, her hand passing through his incorporeal form in what would have been a comforting touch. "Three days. That’s all. Once the tournament ends and things settle, you log back in. We regroup, assess the situation, and continue."

"And if you don’t survive those three days?"

"Then you find a new host and try again in another world." Her voice was calm, accepting. "That’s how this works. We both knew the risks."

"I don’t WANT a new host!" The confession burst out of him. "I don’t want to go through another three failures! I don’t want to watch someone else die because I wasn’t good enough!" His form was flickering wildly now. "You’re the best host I’ve ever had! The longest I’ve kept someone alive! I can’t lose you too!"

Heena’s expression softened. "Hey. Look at me."

He did, his chaotic flickering slowing slightly.

"I’m not planning to die," she said gently. "I’m planning to survive. I’ve done it before without system support—remember World Four, when you had to go offline for emergency repairs? I managed two weeks alone. I can manage three days."

"You were stronger then. Healthier. Not facing someone with a system of their own."

"True. But I’m also smarter now. More experienced. And I have advantages she doesn’t know about—the shadow guards, Prince Ashton arriving, the blackmail material on the consorts." Heena counted on her fingers. "I’m not helpless just because you’re not here."

System 427 was quiet, processing. His processors ran through scenarios, calculating survival probabilities with and without his presence. The numbers weren’t good either way, but...

"If I stay and get detected, both our chances drop to near zero," he admitted quietly.

"Exactly. If you leave, my chances drop but stay viable. It’s the better play." Heena returned to her documents, though her hands trembled slightly. "So here’s what’s going to happen: You’ll log out completely at dawn tomorrow. That gives you tonight to prepare any information I might need—write it down physically, since I won’t have system access. Emergency protocols, contingencies, anything you think I should know."

"Heena—"

"Then you stay offline for exactly three days. No monitoring, no checking in, nothing that could create a detectable signature. After the tournament concludes and the immediate crisis passes, you log back in. We’ll use a safe phrase so I know it’s really you—how about ’the lotus blooms in darkness’?"

"That’s... actually a good protocol." He sounded miserable but was clearly accepting the inevitable. "Three days. Dawn tomorrow until..."

"Until dawn the day after the tournament. Four days total, to be safe. Give Seraphina’s system time to stop looking for foreign signatures."

System 427 dimmed his glow to barely a flicker. "I hate this plan."

"I know."

"I think you’re being recklessly brave."

"I know."

"I think there’s a good chance this goes terribly wrong."

"I know." Heena looked at him again, her exhaustion evident. "But I also think it’s our best shot. And I trust you to come back for me if I somehow survive."

"When you survive," he corrected firmly. "You’ve beaten worse odds before."