©Novel Buddy
Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 66 --
"Exactly," she said. "The halo is the excuse they use afterward, when they need to explain why they did what they wanted to do anyway." A pause. "I’m just here to remind them that excuses don’t work on me."
---
Some people in the corridor glanced up at her face as she passed.
They looked back down immediately. Every one of them.
Not in the way that people look down because protocol demands it — but in the way that people look down because looking up costs something they’re not sure they can afford right now. She was not shouting. She was not performing. That was the thing about her fury that made it different from other people’s fury: it was quiet, and it was organized, and it knew exactly where it was going.
System 427 settled in the back of her mind and watched her.
He had been assigned to many hosts over the years — bright ones, strategic ones, kind ones, ruthless ones, hosts who treated these worlds as levels to be cleared and laughed about the mechanics, hosts who wept every time they died and came back. He had seen every shape that a person’s approach to this work could take.
He had never, before Heena, been assigned to one who specifically and deliberately selected the worst worlds. Not the most dangerous ones — danger was a different category. The ’worst’ ones. The ones so twisted in their design, so cruel in what they asked their inhabitants to endure, so elaborate in their mechanisms of suffering, that other hosts scrolled past them without looking twice. The ones that had been available for decades because no one had ever claimed them.
Heena claimed them. Every time.
He had thought, when he’d first understood this, that it was a kind of punishment she was inflicting on herself — some guilt, some need to suffer that he should gently redirect. But he had come to understand, over time, that it was the opposite. It was because she took them ’seriously’. It was because she was constitutionally incapable of treating them as anything less than real. And if they were real — if the people in them were real, if the pain was real — then the callousness of those worlds disgusted her in a way that no other reaction was adequate to. You couldn’t be mildly bothered by something that genuinely offended you. You couldn’t proceed with polite patience when the thing in front of you was wrong in a way that had no polite word for it.
Her disgust had slipped its leash this morning.
He could feel it, the whole surface of her, vibrating with a cold, controlled revulsion that was nothing like anger because anger burned and this didn’t burn — it cut.
He pressed smaller into the space behind her thoughts and said nothing more.
The corridor stretched ahead, moonlit and pillared and very, very still.
Servants and guards lined the walls as she passed, pressing themselves back as if the architecture itself had decided to give her more room. Heads bowed so low their foreheads approached the level of their chests. Not one pair of eyes rose to meet her. The thing coming off her wasn’t the visible heat of a temper — it was the specific, particulate, metallic chill of a battlefield in the moment before something decisive happens. The air before the order is given. Every living body in that corridor had the same instinct, and the instinct was: ’be small, be still, be somewhere she is not looking.’
Some distance ahead, two knights stood flanking the door of the guest room. Armor polished to a high shine. Spears held upright. They had been stationed there with an obvious care that was meant to communicate seriousness, propriety, ’we are doing our jobs’. They straightened sharply when they saw her coming, the practiced snap of trained soldiers.
"Your Majesty—"
One of them reached for the door handle, already beginning to open it.
Heena didn’t slow down.
She drove her heel directly into the door.
The heavy wood slammed inward with a crack like a branch breaking, the sound enormous in the stillness of the corridor, the door rebounding off the inner wall hard enough that the frame shuddered. Both knights flinched back in pure instinct, their composure shattering for one unguarded second. Somewhere down the hall, a maid carrying a breakfast tray startled so badly that the whole thing hit the floor — ceramic and silver making their own small cacophony against stone.
No one in the palace’s long institutional memory had ever seen the Empress enter a room that way. There was not a precedent. There was not a protocol. There was just the image of it: the cape settling, the door still swinging, and the absolute lack of hesitation on her face that made the violence of it feel less like a temper and more like a statement.
Inside the room, Seraphina had been sitting on the edge of a cushioned chair with the precise, attentive posture of a woman who had been expecting company and had arranged herself accordingly — back straight, hands folded, expression composed into the particular gentle softness that was, for her, something between personality and armor. The crack of the door made her jerk, the composure fracturing for a split second before she caught herself, rising to her feet with trained grace, smoothing her expression back into something demure and correct.
Her eyes found Heena’s face.
Something moved in them — a quick, instinctive read, the way a clever person looks at a situation and recalculates — but she had been schooled well, and she arranged her features into something soft, something appealing, something that communicated without words: ’I am not a threat, I am here in good faith, please see me as I want to be seen.’ 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
"I—I greet Your Majesty—"
The rest of the sentence was slapped out of her mouth.
Heena’s palm connected with her cheek in a single, clean arc — not a wild blow, not an explosion of emotion, but a precise and deliberate impact that snapped Serafina’s head to the side and rang out in the quiet room like a period at the end of a very short sentence. The sound of it echoed. It seemed too loud for what it was. It seemed exactly as loud as it needed to be.
System 427, for one long second, went entirely still.
’She actually hit her.’
He had known, intellectually, that his host did not operate by conventional social protocols. He had seen her do many things. This, somehow, still landed with the weight of the unexpected.
The silence in the room lasted long enough to have a texture.
A bright, blooming red handprint spread across Serafina’s pale cheek — vivid and precise, the exact negative of Heena’s palm. The girl stood with her head still angled to the side, eyes wide, not with tears yet but with the specific blankness of someone whose mind has not yet caught up to what the body just experienced. As if some part of her couldn’t fully process that ’someone’ — that ’anyone’ — had done this. That the ordinary rules she had always moved through the world by, the rules that said ’people like me are not treated like this’, had simply not applied.







