Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 169 --
Meanwhile, the five imperial consorts were having the worst weeks of their lives.
And the pregnancy scandal? That was just the cherry on top of an already towering disaster cake.
Of course they’d heard that Seraphina was pregnant. The entire palace had heard. Gossip spread through the servants’ quarters faster than wildfire, and by now even the horses probably knew about it.
The problem was—and this was a ’big’ problem—none of them knew whose child it was.
Actually, that wasn’t quite accurate.
The real problem was that ’any’ of them could potentially be the father, and they had absolutely no way of knowing for certain.
Because—and this was humiliating to even think about—a few days ago, right after Heena had announced that Larus would be her primary consort at that disastrous evening banquet, they’d all been furious. Angry. Humiliated.
So they’d done what any group of grown men having an emotional crisis would do: they’d gotten absolutely, catastrophically drunk.
Like, "wake up the next morning with no memory of the previous twelve hours" drunk.
And when they’d all regained consciousness—in various states of dishevelment and confusion—they’d discovered they’d somehow ended up at Lady Seraphina’s residence.
Together.
All five of them.
The details were... fuzzy. Very fuzzy. Alarmingly fuzzy.
Kieran vaguely remembered something about a toast "to solidarity" and "showing the Empress she couldn’t just replace them."
Adrian had a blurry memory of someone (possibly him?) suggesting they "take back their dignity."
Damien remembered absolutely nothing, which was concerning because he usually had excellent memory even when drunk.
Raphael had woken up clutching his prayer book and muttering apologies to various deities.
Lucian had discovered poetry he’d apparently written during the blackout that was so bad he’d immediately burned it.
And Seraphina had been there, looking equally confused and disheveled, insisting that they’d all just "talked" and "nothing happened."
But had something happened? Nobody knew. Nobody could remember clearly. And the timing was... suspicious.
Now, one of three scenarios was possible:
1. Nothing had actually happened, and Seraphina was lying about the pregnancy being one of theirs
2. Something had happened, but the child wasn’t any of theirs
3. Something had happened, and one of them was definitely the father
And here was the truly terrifying part: they couldn’t openly accept or deny responsibility.
Because if they ’accepted’ the child—if they went to the Empress and said "yes, it’s mine"—that was tantamount to admitting infidelity. Admitting they’d cheated on the Empress. Lied to her. Betrayed the imperial bloodline.
That was a ’death sentence’.
There was no wiggle room there. If you were the Emperor cheating on a consort? That was one thing—people looked the other way, made excuses about "imperial prerogative."
But if you were a ’consort’ cheating on the ’Empress’—the ruler of the empire, the sovereign, the literal embodiment of imperial authority?
Execution. Swift, public, and probably very creative in its brutality.
So they were stuck in this horrible limbo where:
- They couldn’t confirm paternity
- They couldn’t deny it completely (what if DNA tests later proved them wrong?)
- They couldn’t run away (too suspicious)
- They couldn’t openly support Seraphina (death)
- They couldn’t abandon her completely (would make them look guilty and cruel)
It was a nightmare with no good options.
And to make everything ’infinitely worse’, they were all drowning in work disasters that seemed to be multiplying by the hour.
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## Kieran’s Nightmare
The Knight Commander was dealing with an absolute catastrophe in his military territory.
That "police force" that Heena had established? The one she’d given oversight authority to, allowing them to "assist" with military investigations?
They were ’everywhere’.
Knights who’d been taking small bribes for years were suddenly being arrested. Officers who’d been skimming from military supply budgets were being audited. Soldiers who’d been abusing their authority over civilians were being charged with misconduct.
And the worst part? The police force was ’efficient’. They had evidence. Documentation. Witnesses.
Kieran couldn’t just dismiss the charges as "interfering with military authority" because Heena had given them explicit imperial authorization.
He was spending sixteen hours a day putting out fires, dealing with angry officers, trying to minimize the damage, and discovering just how much low-level corruption had infected his supposedly "honorable" military command.
He literally didn’t have time to eat, let alone worry about pregnancy scandals.
---
## Adrian’s Crisis
The merchant duke was having an even worse time.
Those new "traffic officers" that the Empress had authorized? They were ’ruthless’.
Trade caravans that had been using "unofficial" routes (read: smuggling paths) were being stopped and searched.
Merchant families that had been evading tariffs for generations were suddenly getting tax bills dating back ’years’.
Supply chains that had operated on handshake agreements and bribes were being forced to produce actual legal documentation.
Adrian’s entire economic network—the thing he’d spent years building, the source of his family’s wealth and influence—was being systematically dismantled by bureaucrats with badges and ledgers.
And he couldn’t fight back because technically everything they were doing was ’legal’. The Empress had signed all the authorizations. The laws were clear.
He was hemorrhaging money, influence, and political capital while frantically trying to restructure his entire operation to be... God forbid... ’actually legal’.
He didn’t have time to sleep, let alone deal with paternity drama.
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## Damien’s Disaster
The spymaster was discovering that his intelligence network had more holes than he’d realized.
Because somehow—’somehow’—the Empress had established this entire police and traffic enforcement system without him knowing about it in advance.
Which meant his information channels were compromised. His agents had missed critical policy changes. His surveillance of the Empress’s activities had failed spectacularly.
And if he’d missed ’this’, what else had he missed? 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚
So now he was running a complete audit of his entire intelligence apparatus while also trying to figure out how the hell the Empress had hidden such a massive administrative change from him.
It was humiliating. Exhausting. And deeply concerning.
He was working twenty-hour days and surviving on coffee and spite.
Pregnancy? What pregnancy? He had bigger problems.
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## Raphael’s Religious Crisis
The priest-consort was dealing with a different kind of disaster.
Because the church officials had heard about Seraphina’s pregnancy. And they’d heard the rumors that one of the consorts was the father.
And they wanted to know if it was ’Raphael’.
Because if it was, they had... opinions. Strong opinions. About a priest who’d taken vows of the imperial marriage having a child outside that marriage.
Some factions wanted to support him (the child could be "blessed," a "miracle").
Other factions wanted to condemn him (adultery, betrayal of vows, scandal).
The church was fracturing along political lines, and Raphael was spending all his time trying to keep the religious institution from splitting apart while also insisting he had "no memory" of anything happening.
He was praying approximately eighteen hours a day and having stress-induced religious visions.
Not great.
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## Lucian’s Academic Nightmare
The scholarly consort had his own special hell.
Because the academic community had heard about the scandal. And they had ’questions’.
Questions about ethics. About proper conduct. About whether a scholar of his standing should be involved in such... tawdry situations.
Several universities were threatening to revoke his honorary positions. His published papers were being "reevaluated" for "moral character concerns." Students were protesting.
And the worst part? Some of his academic rivals were using this scandal as ammunition to attack his research, his theories, his entire body of work.
He was spending all his time defending his reputation, fighting political battles in academic journals, and having existential crises about whether his life’s work would be destroyed by one drunken night he couldn’t even remember.
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