Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 96 --
Another lady leaned in, voice dropping conspiratorially. "It must have been so frightening, what happened. We heard—well, there are rumors, of course, but no one knows the full story—" 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
"I don’t wish to speak of it," Seraphina said quickly, lowering her gaze to her lap. "It’s too painful. I only hope that in time, certain... misunderstandings... can be forgiven."
’Misunderstandings’.
Heena’s teacup paused halfway to her lips.
She set it down with a soft ’clink’ that somehow cut through all the ambient chatter like a knife.
"Misunderstandings," she repeated, voice perfectly pleasant, perfectly poisonous. "What an interesting choice of words."
Seraphina looked up, eyes widening as if surprised. "Your Majesty?"
Heena smiled, and it was the smile of a predator that had just spotted wounded prey.
"You entered my palace," she said conversationally, as if discussing the weather, "without permission. In the middle of the night. You occupied my guest chambers as if they were your personal property. You demanded information about the whereabouts of my husband—using his given name, as if he were your childhood friend rather than an imperial consort."
The garden had gone completely silent.
"I responded," Heena continued, tone never changing from that pleasant, conversational register, "by reminding you of proper conduct. Your father was demoted for failing to teach you basic imperial etiquette. Your family lost significant assets due to repeated violations of protocol."
She tilted her head, still smiling.
"Which part of that, exactly, would you characterize as a misunderstanding?"
Seraphina’s face had gone from artfully pale to genuinely white. "I—I only meant—Your Majesty, I never intended to imply—"
"You meant," Heena interrupted gently, "that if you played the victim convincingly enough, for long enough, people would forget what you actually ’did’. You thought that if you looked sad and spoke softly and implied you’d been wronged, the court would pressure me to forgive you."
She leaned forward slightly, elbows resting delicately on the table, chin on her interlaced fingers.
"But I remember, Lady Seraphina. I remember every word, every action, every boundary you crossed. And so does everyone else who was actually present."
Seraphina’s hands trembled around her teacup. "Your Majesty, I apologize if I gave offense—"
"You didn’t ’offend’ me," Heena corrected. "You disrespected the imperial throne. There’s a significant difference."
She sat back again, picking up her teacup as if the conversation were no more significant than discussing flower arrangements.
"But since you’re here," she continued, "let’s address another misunderstanding. You seem to believe—and please, correct me if I’m wrong—that you have some claim to the imperial consorts. That their time, their attention, their affection, their concern, belongs to you."
Seraphina’s breath caught audibly.
"It doesn’t," Heena said simply. "They are ’my’ husbands. Not your friends. Not your protectors. Not your confidants. They belong to me. Their names are mine to use. Their company is mine to grant or withhold. And if you continue to forget that fundamental fact, I will remind you in ways that make a slap seem gentle."
The threat hung in the warm afternoon air, delicate as spun sugar and absolute as stone.
Prince Larus, who had been watching the entire exchange with fascinated silence and increasingly wide eyes, finally spoke.
"Your Majesty," he said warmly, diplomatically, "perhaps we should move on to lighter topics? I’ve been meaning to ask about those remarkable roses in the eastern garden. The blue ones? I’ve never seen anything like them in any kingdom I’ve visited."
It was a lifeline—an expertly thrown diplomatic rope, a way to shift the conversation and diffuse the nuclear tension before it caused actual casualties.
Heena glanced at him, and her expression softened fractionally. "Of course, Prince Larus. They’re a hybrid breed developed by our royal botanist. Quite rare. I’d be happy to show you the greenhouses after we finish here, if you’re interested."
"I would be honored," Larus said, and the genuine warmth in his voice shifted the atmosphere just enough.
The conversation slowly, carefully resumed—talk of gardens, of rare plants, of safe, neutral topics.
Seraphina sat frozen at the far end of the table, face pale, hands shaking, that carefully constructed mask of gentle suffering cracked and crumbling.
And the most devastating part?
No one was looking at her anymore.
No one offered sympathy.
No one rushed to comfort her.
Because everyone at that table—every duchess, every lady, every person who had witnessed what just happened—understood now.
The line had been drawn.
The Empress had spoken.
And Seraphina was firmly, irrevocably, on the wrong side of it.
The days passed.
Dismantling corrupt systems, signing reformed decrees, meeting with secretaries, dealing with the endless, churning machinery of the empire—it all continued. Heena had fallen into a rhythm she hadn’t expected: wake up, study documents, issue rulings, eat properly, sleep for a reasonable amount of time, repeat.
Prince Larus was still in the palace, though his delegation’s work was nearly complete. In a few more days, he would leave.
And something about that fact sat in the air like a coming rain.
He still smiled. He still attended dinners, still charmed nobles, still managed to make even the stiffest ministers laugh with some well-placed remark. But the maids had started whispering about the way his eyes went distant sometimes, the way the smile didn’t always reach them, the way he’d stand on his balcony in the evenings staring at nothing in particular.
Even the servants could see it.
Prince Larus was sad.
***
Heena was in her office.
She had come to understand something in these past weeks: the office was not just a room. It was the real seat of power. The throne room was for spectacle—for declarations and audiences and the performance of authority. But *here*, surrounded by maps and ledgers and stacked documents that never seemed to fully shrink no matter how many she processed, this was where the empire was actually run.
She finally understood why every story she’d ever read always depicted powerful men—emperors, dukes, CEOs, ruthless villain bosses—in their offices. Not their bedrooms, not their throne rooms. Their *offices*. Because this was where the real work happened.
She was halfway through a particularly tedious border dispute report, pen scratching steadily, when System 427 floated close.
"Um... Host?"
"Uh-huh," she said, not looking up.
A pause.
"It’s been a while since you’ve... checked in on Estov. You haven’t asked about him at all. Are you not... curious?"
Heena kept writing.
"If you want to die," she said calmly, "go find him yourself."
The system trembled so hard he nearly flickered out of visibility.
Heena finally set down her pen and turned to look at him.
"Think about it," she said. "If a lion is not coming toward you, why would you walk in front of it and dance? You know his main lead is somewhere in this world. *That* person is already here. So tell me—why would I go waving a flag that says ’look, here’s your missing person’?"
System 427 shrank. "But... his main lead is just an NPC, right? Like... what could he actually do? You’re the experienced one. The strong one. Surely—"
Heena held up one hand.
"Sit down," she said.
The system floated down obediently.
Heena leaned back in her chair, folding her hands on the desk, studying him with the expression of someone about to explain something fundamental to a child who had been asking the wrong questions.
"System," she said, "tell me—what is the most dangerous person in this world?"







