Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 48 --

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Chapter 48: Chapter-48

"You... You won’t get away with this," he forced out finally, clinging to the only weapon he had left—faith. "The gods—"

"—have been very quiet about you hiring assassins to butcher their anointed Empress in her bath," Heena cut in, voice suddenly flat. "Funny, that."

He flinched as if slapped.

She straightened, leaving the bedside and padding barefoot across the thick carpet to her desk. A stack of folders lay there, neatly tied with red string. She chose one, untied it, and began leafing through pages without hurry.

"Do you know what this is?" she asked.

Raphael said nothing.

Heena turned the first page toward him so he could see. Even upside down, the bold heading was unmistakable:

Report: Crimson Veil Contract — Client Chain Analysis.

His heart lurched.

"We pulled memories from the assassins’ dying souls," Heena said conversationally. "Little trick I picked up in childhood. Very illegal. Very effective." Her eyes remained on the pages, but he could feel her attention like a blade. "Normally, the Crimson Veil are very professional. No names. No faces. But even the best killers leave... traces."

She flipped another page. There, in faintly glowing ink, was a sigil Raphael knew too well: the private seal of the High Temple’s inner council.

His breath hitched.

"Temple funds," Heena went on. "Funneled through three shell donors, then to a borderland merchant, then laundered into an ’anonymous’ deposit with the Veil." Her finger tapped the seal. "Same pattern that shows up every time your sacred Order wants someone dead but clean."

Raphael’s stomach churned. "You’re lying."

"Am I?" She flicked to the final page. A sketch—soul‑imprint likeness—of the hooded figure who’d met the Veil’s agent in the shadowed alcove of a certain provincial shrine. The hood obscured the face, but the posture, the bone structure, the fall of pale hair...

And the ring on his hand. A very specific ring.

Raphael’s signet. The one he’d worn since ordination.

He went utterly still.

"High Priest Raphael of the Radiant Order," Heena quoted dryly from the margin notes. "Status: royal priest. Authority level: equal to imperial blood. Sin list: pending expansion." She dropped the file back onto the desk. "Tell me again how your gods will protect you from ’me’."

The chains above his head creaked as his arms trembled.

"Why?" she asked quietly, returning to the bed and sitting beside his hip. The mattress dipped, the movement sending a fresh, humiliating awareness through his nearly bare body. "Why go this far? Poison I could understand. Political exile. Character assassination. You had options. Instead you hired butchers and sent them into my bath."

He clenched his jaw.

"Answer me, Raphael." Her tone didn’t rise, but something in it made the air feel thinner. "This is your one chance to be... educational."

He turned his face away. "You’re a tyrant," he grated. "You stole husbands. Crushed dissent. You corrupt the empire from the throne itself. Lady Serafina is—"

"The saint," Heena finished for him, bored. "Yes, yes. I’ve read your little sermons." One fingertip traced idle circles on the sheet between them, not quite touching his skin. "Tell me, O pure one—when the drought hit the western provinces last year, who diverted temple grain to feed the border villages?"

"Serafina," Raphael shot back automatically. "She organized—"

"Wrong." Heena’s eyes hardened. "Serafina lent her face to the handouts. The grain came from the ’palace’ granaries. Signed off by Empress Celeste at two in the morning after three days with no sleep." [1]

He opened his mouth—closed it. Memory warred with indoctrination: ink on scrolls he’d never bothered to read himself, only summaries handed to him by Damien; smiling reports of the heroine’s charity; the Empress’s name absent, again and again.

"And when the river flooded near the southern shrines two years before that?" Heena continued relentlessly. "Who approved emergency funds to rebuild the temples, compensate refugees, and waive taxes for the next three harvests?"

He said nothing.

"Hint," she said softly. "It wasn’t your white lotus."

Raphael’s fingers curled into the sheets. "You’re twisting—"

"I’m quoting your own archives." She picked up another folder and tossed it; it landed beside his hip, pages fanning open to show imperial decrees with Celeste’s royal seal. "You pray in halls she paid to repair. You preach in cities she kept from starving. And when a shiny little heroine fluttered her lashes and wept about ’evil Empress Celeste,’ you helped turn the entire empire against the woman who fed it." [1]

Tears pricked his eyes, unbidden and unwanted.

"Yet ’I’m’ the monster," Heena went on, voice very soft now. "For finally chaining the traitor who ordered my death to my bed instead of having him publicly flayed."

Raphael squeezed his eyes shut. "If you were truly righteous, you would kill me," he whispered. "Not—humiliate me like this."

Heena stared at him for a long, silent moment.

Then she laughed. Not cruelly this time—just tiredly, bitterly.

"Righteousness is a luxury for people who don’t have entire worlds trying to erase them," she said. "I’m not here to prove I’m good, Raphael. I’m here to ’win’."

She leaned over him, bracing one hand on the headboard so her face hovered above his. He could see every detail of her expression from this close: the amusement, the fury, the old, old exhaustion that didn’t belong to a single lifetime.

"So here is what’s going to happen," she murmured.

His breath hitched.

"You will stay right here until I decide I’m done with you. You will eat when I allow it, sleep when I allow it, and wear what I put on you—if anything." Her gaze flicked deliberately to his near‑nakedness and back. "You will ’not’ pray for my death again, because you like breathing and I am in a generous mood."

He swallowed. The chains above him rattled.

"In public," Heena continued, "you will resume your role as High Priest. Smile. Bless the crowds. Assure everyone that the Empress and the Temple are in perfect harmony." A sharp little smile. "In private, whenever I call, you will come. Alone. No guards. No heroine. No gods."

Raphael’s heart pounded so loudly he could barely hear her next words.

"And if you disobey?" She lifted her hand. A small crystal sphere appeared between her fingers, faintly aglow. "Then I show the world a very pretty recording of their untouchable High Priest stripped to his undergarments, chained to my bed, begging me not to tell them what he tried to do." [1]

His gaze locked on the globe, horror flooding him.

"Your choice, Raphael." Heena set the orb down on the bedside table where he could see it, its surface catching the light. "Die as a martyr no one will believe... or live as my caged little saint and try to atone for the Empress you helped destroy."

He stared up at her, throat working, pride and terror and something rawer all tangled in his chest.

"You’re asking me," he rasped, "to betray Lady Serafina."

"I’m asking you," Heena corrected softly, "to stop betraying ’truth’."

Silence pressed in.

Slowly, painfully, Raphael turned his face toward her again. His eyes were red‑rimmed, lashes wet, but for the first time since waking he looked at her—not as a demon in human skin, not as a caricature drawn by temple gossip, but as a person.

"What... do you want me to do?" he whispered.

Heena’s smile this time was sharp, satisfied, and very, very dangerous.

"Now," she said, patting his chest once like a reward, "’that’ is the first sensible question you’ve asked since you got here."

She rose from the bed, smoothing her robe. "Rest, High Priest. You’ll need your strength. Tomorrow, you’re going to help me start dismantling a saint."