Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 132 --
The whispers started almost immediately, spreading through the crowd in overlapping waves:
’Both suits—’
’Is that the imperial processional—’
’Look at the jewelry on him—’
’She’s holding his hand, she’s ’holding his hand’—’
’What does this mean for the five—’
’He’s stunning, honestly—’
’This changes everything—’
Heena heard fragments of all of it and registered none of it. She kept her gaze on the dais ahead, her expression calm, her head up.
Beside her, Larus did the same. His face was composed, his walk was perfect. The only sign that he was experiencing anything at all was the slight, almost imperceptible increase of pressure in his grip as they passed the noisiest section of the crowd.
She squeezed back once. Brief, small.
His posture relaxed slightly.
They passed the front rows, where the highest-ranking nobles stood. Heena caught a glimpse of the Marquess who’d given her seventeen fraud cases looking like he might need to sit down. She caught her aunt’s face near the dais—the fan moving steadily, a tiny controlled smile at the corner of her mouth, a nod so small only someone looking for it would see it.
She caught the five consorts.
Kieran looked like he was trying to hold something together by sheer force of will and wasn’t entirely succeeding. His knuckles were white on the armrest. His jaw was a fixed line.
Adrian had gone very still in a way that was different from his usual controlled stillness—this was the stillness of someone recalibrating, reassessing, being forced to look at numbers that weren’t adding up the way he wanted them to.
Damien was watching everything with those sharp, cataloging eyes. Whatever conclusions he was drawing, he was keeping them entirely to himself.
Raphael’s prayer book sat beside him, abandoned. His hands were folded in his lap. His eyes were on their clasped hands.
Lucian was watching Larus with an expression that might, in another context, have looked like respect.
Heena filed all of it away and kept walking.
’’’
The ceremony itself was handled by the High Priest—an ancient man named Aldous, who had the kind of face that made you feel like he’d been there at the beginning of the empire and planned to be there at the end of it.
He waited for them at the base of the dais steps, his staff tapping softly on the marble, his embroidered robes so elaborate they seemed to glow with their own light.
He looked at Larus first with the slow, penetrating assessment of someone who had evaluated countless people and was making up his mind about one more.
Then he began.
"Your Imperial Majesty." A slight bow to Heena. "You have called this gathering to witness a binding. A pledge between persons and, through them, between peoples."
"I have," Heena said clearly.
The priest turned to Larus. "Prince Larus of the Marus Kingdom. Do you come here freely, without compulsion, to pledge yourself to Her Imperial Majesty?"
"I do," Larus said.
"Do you understand what this means? The responsibilities you take on, the position you step into?"
"Completely," Larus said. "And I accept them without reservation."
More whispers at ’primary consort’, spoken officially now, by the High Priest himself. The sound of something becoming real.
The priest turned back to Heena. "Your Imperial Majesty, do you accept this man as your chosen primary consort? Your partner in governance, in duty, in the leadership of this empire?"
"I do," Heena said.
The priest raised his staff.
"Then I declare this engagement recognized—"
"’’Wait.’’"
The word hit the hall like a stone hitting water.
Everyone turned.
Kieran had stood up.
Three hundred people held their breath simultaneously.
The silence was so complete that the sound of a candle guttering somewhere in the back of the hall was clearly audible.
Heena turned to face him. Her expression didn’t change. Her voice, when she spoke, was pleasant in the way that a very sharp thing is sometimes pleasant to look at before you understand what it is.
"Consort Kieran," she said. "This is an engagement ceremony."
"I understand, Your Majesty." His voice was controlled but the effort was visible. "But as your first consort, I believe I have the right to—"
"You have no rights here," she said.
The words were quiet. They were also absolute.
Several people in the front rows actually flinched.
"This is not a debate," Heena continued, in that same pleasant, devastating tone. "This is not a council session. This is my choice, freely made, and you will witness it in silence."
A pause.
"Or," she added, "you’ll leave. The doors are behind you. I’ll have the guards hold them open if you need a moment."
Three hundred people stared at Kieran.
The weight of it was immense—the Knight Commander, one of the most powerful men in the empire, being publicly given the option to leave his own wife’s engagement ceremony by the woman herself.
Ten seconds.
Twenty.
Thirty.
The muscle in his jaw jumped twice.
Then he sat down.
His face was white. His hands were rigid. But he sat.
"Thank you, Consort Kieran," Heena said warmly, as if he’d done her a small favor. "Your Holiness, please continue."
The old priest, who had been very still through all of this, cleared his throat and raised his staff again.
"By the authority of the church and the traditions of this empire," he said, his voice perhaps not quite as steady as before, "I declare this engagement formally recognized and blessed."
He produced a small velvet box from somewhere in his robes. Two rings—intertwined gold and platinum, set with small diamonds that caught the light with every movement.
Heena took one and turned to Larus.
He extended his left hand, steady and unhurried.
She slid the ring onto his finger.
It fit perfectly.
He took the second ring and placed it on hers, his touch careful and warm.
Their eyes met as he did it—just briefly, just for a moment—and something passed between them that was difficult to name and easy to feel.
"By these rings," the priest intoned, "let all who see them know that these two are pledged to one another."
He raised both hands.
"’’Her Imperial Majesty Empress Celeste, and her betrothed, Prince Larus Okmana—chosen consort and future Emperor Consort of the Eternal Empire!’’"
The hall erupted.
Applause crashed through the space—some of it enthusiastic, some of it polite, all of it loud enough to make the chandeliers vibrate. Foreign ambassadors clapped with diplomatic precision. The younger nobles actually cheered. Court officials applauded with practiced professional enthusiasm.
And the five consorts stood—because they had to, because three hundred people were watching—and bowed.
Kieran’s bow was small and stiff.
Adrian’s was technically correct and completely hollow.
Damien’s was smooth and gave nothing away.
Raphael’s was deeply formal, almost ritualistic, like he was performing a religious obligation.
Lucian’s was, somehow, the most genuine of the five—a real inclination of the head, as if he’d decided something.
The applause went on for almost a full minute, wave after wave filling the enormous hall.
Heena and Larus stood at the front of it all, hand in hand, and let it happen.
As it finally began to fade, Larus leaned slightly toward her. His voice was barely above a whisper.







