Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 134 --
"How encouraging."
"I have always been honest with you."
’’’
About forty minutes into the reception, Heena became aware of a specific quality of silence forming near the eastern end of the room.
She didn’t look immediately. She filed it away, continued her conversation with a minister about agricultural reform in the northern provinces, and waited.
The silence spread slightly.
She excused herself from the minister.
The five consorts had arranged themselves in a loose configuration near one of the windows—not exactly a group, not exactly apart, but occupying the same space in a way that was clearly deliberate. Several nobles nearby had quietly migrated away, leaving them a small clear pocket in the otherwise crowded room.
They weren’t doing anything overtly problematic.
They were just ’there’, and they were doing it loudly enough that people had noticed.
Heena handed her wine glass to System 427—who was invisible and therefore startled several nearby nobles when the glass seemed to float away on its own—and walked over.
The five of them noticed her coming and, by some silent agreement, all turned at the same moment.
"You seem isolated," Heena said pleasantly. "Is the food not to your liking?"
"The food is excellent," Kieran said, his voice carefully neutral. He’d been doing that since the ceremony—keeping everything carefully neutral, like a man making sure he didn’t knock over a table that was very close to the edge.
"Good." Heena looked at each of them in turn. "You’re all going to mingle properly, yes? Not stand in a corner being silently menacing. People notice."
"We weren’t—" Adrian started.
"You were," Heena said. "You’re doing the thing where you stand together in a pointed arrangement and radiate collective displeasure. Half the room is watching you do it."
A small pause.
"Where is he?" Lucian asked. He said it quietly, with none of the edge the others had been carrying all evening. Just a question.
Heena glanced toward the other end of the room, where Larus had been gently intercepted by a group of older nobles who had, from their expressions, just realized he could talk intelligently about irrigation systems.
He was listening to someone describe a drainage problem with the same attentive expression he gave everything, nodding at what seemed to be the right moments, occasionally asking a question that made the speaker light up with the pleasure of being genuinely heard.
"He’s being helpful," Heena said.
Lucian watched him for a moment. Something moved in his expression—complex and unresolved.
"He’s good at it," Lucian said. Not bitterly. Just as an observation.
"Yes," Heena agreed. "He is."
Raphael had been quiet the entire time, holding a small glass he hadn’t drunk from. Now he said, without looking up, "The High Priest is watching you."
Heena didn’t react visibly. "The High Priest watches everyone. It’s his job."
"He wasn’t pleased," Raphael said. "With the ceremony. The framing."
"The framing was accurate," Heena said simply. "If it displeased him, that’s informative."
Raphael finally looked up. His violet eyes were troubled in a way that went deeper than the usual political calculation. "Heena." He used her actual name, which he almost never did. "What are you doing? Not the ceremony, not the consort position—the whole picture. What is the actual plan?"
The other four went very still.
It was the most honest question anyone had asked her all day.
Heena looked at Raphael for a moment. "Do you actually want the answer?"
He held her gaze. "Yes."
"Then have tea with me tomorrow morning," she said. "Properly. Sit down, no posturing, no audience. I’ll tell you what I can." She looked at the rest of them. "The invitation is open to all of you."
Nobody said anything.
"Think about it," she said. "And in the meantime—please go eat something and talk to people. You’re making the furniture look better-socialized than you."
She walked back into the crowd.
’’’
She found Larus again near the dessert table, finally free of the irrigation nobles and holding a small plate with the expression of someone who had been polite for a long time and was currently rewarding himself.
"How are you surviving?" she asked.
"The pastries are extraordinary," he said, offering her one. "Also, I’ve learned more about northern drainage systems than I ever expected to know. Apparently it’s a significant regional concern."
"It is," Heena said, taking the pastry. "I’ve been trying to fund a proper survey for two years. The relevant minister keeps losing the proposal in committee."
Larus turned to look at her. "Lord Ferren mentioned the same thing. He was the third person from the northern provinces who brought it up tonight."
"I know."
"You planned this," Larus said, not accusingly—just realizing. "You put me in circulation at this reception knowing exactly which nobles would seek me out. You knew the northern province issue would come up."
"I knew the right people would find you interesting," Heena said. "And I knew you’d actually listen to them, which most people in this hall don’t bother to do."
He was quiet for a moment. "And now you have three northern lords who think I’m personally invested in their drainage problem."
"Are you?"
He considered. "Actually, yes. It sounds genuinely solvable with the right engineering approach."
Heena smiled. "Then that’s not manipulation. That’s just introduction."
Larus shook his head slowly, but he was smiling too. They stood together at the edge of the room, watching the reception flow around them—the conversations, the calculations, the carefully managed social performances of three hundred people who all wanted something from this evening.
"It’s strange," Larus said quietly after a moment. "Being here. Being... this." He gestured at the ring on his finger without quite looking at it.
"Strange how?" Heena asked.
He seemed to search for the right word. "Unexpectedly comfortable," he said finally. "I expected this to feel like a performance. Like something I was doing, rather than something I was... in."
Heena didn’t respond immediately.
"You’re going to be good at this," she said after a moment.
"I hope so," he said. And then, after a pause: "I want to be."
The sincerity of it was very quiet and very genuine, and it landed somewhere it shouldn’t have.
Heena looked down at her own ring.
’Strategic partnership,’ she thought, firmly.
’Political alliance.’
’Investment.’
The ring caught the candlelight and glowed warm gold against her finger.
System 427’s voice appeared in her mind, soft as a whisper:
’Host.’
’Shut up’, she replied.
’I didn’t even say anything yet.’
’You were going to.’
A pause.
’...Yes,’ the system admitted. ’I was.’
From across the room, Raphael was watching them with those troubled violet eyes, turning something over in his mind.
Near the window, Lucian had finally moved away from the others and was speaking—quietly, carefully—to Lady Mira, who was listening with that sharp evaluating attention of hers.
Kieran stood near the entrance, speaking with a military commander, his expression back under control but his eyes still tracking the room.
Damien was nowhere visible, which meant he was everywhere that mattered.
Adrian had found someone to discuss trade policy with and had disappeared entirely into the conversation, which was probably the most genuinely contented she’d seen him all evening.
The empire’s pieces were moving.
The game was shifting.







