©Novel Buddy
Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 54 --
She gestured, and shadow guards emerged once again—silent specters with cold eyes. "Escort Count Valerius to a holding chamber. Comfortable accommodations, of course. We wouldn’t want him to feel... ’persecuted’."
As the guards flanked him, Valerius’s composure finally shattered. "You can’t do this! I have rights! Allies!"
Heena picked up her quill again, already turning back to her documents. "Then they’re welcome to join you. Next."
The door slammed shut. The secretary he’d brought stood frozen, scrolls still clutched to his chest, looking like he wanted to sink into the floor.
Heena glanced at him. "You. What’s your name?" 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
The young man squeaked. "T-Tobias, Your Majesty."
"Tobias. Those scrolls—are they Count Valerius’s financial records?"
"Y-yes, Your Majesty."
"Leave them. You’re dismissed."
Tobias practically threw the scrolls onto the desk and fled.
System 427 materialized beside her, shaking his head. "Host, at this rate you’ll have half the nobility in custody by week’s end."
Heena made another notation—’granary seizure, eastern highlands’—without looking up. "Good. Maybe the other half will learn faster."
A soft knock came at the door. A clerk peeked in nervously. "Your Majesty? Duchess Carlisle has arrived. She’s requesting an audience."
Heena’s quill paused mid-stroke. Then she smiled—sharp, anticipatory. "Send her in."
The clerk paled. "Y-yes, Your Majesty."
System 427 groaned. "Another one? Don’t you ever get tired?"
"Tired?" Heena’s eyes gleamed. "I’m just getting started. These corrupt bastards have been bleeding this empire for decades. Let’s see how they like bleeding for a change."
The door opened, and Duchess Carlisle swept in—silver-haired, imperious, dripping in jewels worth more than most villages’ annual income.
She took one look at Heena’s smile and hesitated.
Too late.
The door closed behind her with a decisive ’click’.
"Duchess," Heena greeted pleasantly. "Please, have a seat. We have ’so’ much to discuss."
Duchess Carlisle settled into the chair with the practiced grace of someone who’d spent decades attending court functions. Unlike the previous two nobles, she didn’t bluster or posture. She simply arranged her skirts, folded her jeweled hands in her lap, and met Hina’s gaze with cool, calculating eyes.
*This one’s different,* Hina thought. *Smarter. Dangerous.*
"Your Majesty," the duchess began, her voice cultured and smooth as aged wine. "I appreciate you seeing me on such short notice. Though I confess, the... *commotion* in the hallways made scheduling somewhat easier." A slight smile touched her lips. "Marquis Damon looked rather agitated as he was escorted past my carriage."
Hina returned the smile with equal measure. "Agitated. Yes, I suppose discovering one’s embezzlement has consequences tends to have that effect."
"Indeed." Carlisle didn’t flinch. "Though I must say, Your Majesty, your sudden interest in financial audits is causing quite the stir among the nobility. One might almost think you were... cleaning house."
"One might think correctly."
The duchess inclined her head slightly, acknowledging the point. "Then I shall be direct, as I suspect we’re both too busy for games. I did not come to make excuses or plead ignorance like poor Valerius—yes, I saw him being ’escorted’ as well." She paused, choosing her words carefully. "I came to negotiate."
Hina’s quill stilled. *Now this is interesting.* "Negotiate. Bold."
"Practical," Carlisle corrected smoothly. "Your Majesty is clearly purging corrupt nobles. Admirable. Long overdue, frankly. But you and I both know that arresting half the Council will create a power vacuum. Empty seats. Unstable domains. And while you consolidate control..." Her eyes glinted. "Other forces will move to fill that void."
She didn’t say Seraphina’s name. She didn’t have to.
Hina leaned back in her chair, studying the older woman with renewed interest. "You’re suggesting you’re one of the ’clean’ ones?"
"I’m suggesting," Carlisle said carefully, "that I’m one of the *pragmatic* ones. I take my share, yes—what noble doesn’t? But I also ensure my lands are prosperous, my people fed, and my taxes paid in full to the imperial coffers." She gestured at the stacks of documents on Hina’s desk. "Check my records if you wish. You’ll find no slave tournaments. No hidden granaries. No mysteriously purchased estates."
System 427 floated closer, suspicious. *She’s too calm. Too prepared. This feels like a trap.*
Hina tapped her fingers on the armrest. "And in exchange for your... cleanliness... you want what, exactly?"
"Assurance," Carlisle replied immediately. "That when this purge is over, those of us who’ve played by the rules—or at least kept our corruption within acceptable limits—will still have our seats at the table." She leaned forward slightly. "And perhaps... preferential consideration when redistributing the confiscated domains."
*There it is,* Hina thought. *The real agenda.*
"You want Damon’s territory," she stated flatly.
"I want to *manage* Damon’s territory," Carlisle corrected. "Temporarily. Until a suitable replacement can be appointed. His lands border mine—consolidating administration would increase efficiency, stabilize the region, and ensure tax revenue continues flowing to the crown." She smiled thinly. "Unlike leaving it in the hands of his incompetent son, who will undoubtedly run it into the ground within a year."
Hina had to admit—the logic was sound. Annoyingly sound.
"And what makes you think I won’t simply appoint an imperial governor? Cut the nobility out entirely?"
Carlisle’s expression didn’t waver. "Because governors are expensive, Your Majesty. They require salaries, guards, administrative staff—all paid from the imperial treasury. Whereas I already have the infrastructure in place. I’d take a modest fee, naturally, but far less than a governor would cost." She paused. "And I have no illusions about challenging your authority. Unlike some of my... less pragmatic peers."
The room fell silent except for the scratch of distant quills from the outer offices.
System 427 whispered urgently, "Host, she’s too smooth. This smells like a setup."
Hina ignored him, gaze locked on the duchess. "You’re not here just for Damon’s lands. What else?"
A flicker of approval crossed Carlisle’s face—respect for recognizing the deeper game. "I want protection. Not for myself—I’m clean enough to withstand an audit. But my son..." She hesitated, the first crack in her perfect composure. "He’s young. Stupid. He’s been... associated with certain circles. Lady Seraphina’s charitable foundation, specifically."
*Ah. There it is.*
Hina’s smile sharpened. "Your son is one of Seraphina’s admirers."
"One of her *donors*," Carlisle corrected, distaste creeping into her tone. "That woman has half the young nobles enchanted with her ’purity’ and ’kindness.’ My son emptied a portion of his inheritance funding her orphanages." She met Hina’s eyes squarely. "I need assurance that when you move against her—and we both know you will—my son’s foolishness won’t drag my house down with him."
Heena considered. The duchess was offering intelligence, administrative capability, and political support in exchange for protection and profit. A reasonable deal. Almost too reasonable.
"Why should I trust you?" Heena asked bluntly. "For all I know, you’re one of SerapHeena’s backers yourself. This could be a ploy to get close, gather information."
Carlisle’s laugh was sharp and bitter. "Your Majesty, that girl is a disaster waiting to happen. She has no real political acumen—just a pretty face, syrupy words, and an unsettling ability to make grown men act like lovesick fools." Her expression hardened. "I’ve survived three emperors by being ’smart’, not sentimental. SerapHina is a tool—useful to some, perhaps, but ultimately unstable. I’d rather stand with the devil I can negotiate with than the saint I can’t predict."







