©Novel Buddy
Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 68 --
She smoothed her expression.
"I am truly grateful to Her Majesty," she said, each word placed down with the deliberate care of someone navigating stones across a river, "for teaching me proper manners."
The silence that followed had a particular quality.
Heena nodded, slowly, the way someone nods when the answer they received was technically correct and both people in the room know it was extracted under duress.
"Of course," she said warmly. "Of course."
She let the moment breathe — just a moment, just long enough to let Seraphina think, perhaps, that the hard part was over.
Then:
"So." Heena’s expression didn’t change, but something in her eyes sharpened by a degree that had no name attached to it. "What nonsense—" a small, almost apologetic pause, "—I ’mean’, what ’work’ is it, exactly, that brings you to my palace in the middle of the night?"
---
Seraphina breathed in through her nose.
She had prepared for this question. She had known it was coming — had known it was the entire reason she was here, had rehearsed in her head the shape of it, how to present it, how to frame her concern in a way that sounded reasonable and not presumptuous and—
"Your Majesty," she began, keeping her voice low, keeping it measured, "Priest Raphael has not been at his workplace. He has been absent for some time now, and no one has been able to locate him. I wanted to ask whether—"
She was watching Heena’s face as she spoke. She was watching it the way you watch a sky that you’re not sure about, checking for signs. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎
She saw the change.
She wasn’t even sure, afterward, that she could have described what changed — whether it was the angle of the eyes or the set of the jaw or something more subtle, something in the quality of the silence that Heena generated around herself, something in the way the air in the room seemed to cool and compress. But it stopped her mid-sentence, stopped her the way a foot stops when the ground beneath it gives a warning sound, some instinct overriding intention—
She paused.
Heena was looking at her.
The smile was still there. That was the worst part — the smile had not moved, not a fraction, and yet the face it was sitting on had become something entirely different. Something that made the smile look the way a lamp looks in a burning building: technically still a lamp, technically still doing what a lamp does, completely beside the point.
Seraphina had read stories. She had grown up on them — the old kind, the ones with gods and judgment and figures that stood at the edges of mortal affairs and watched with eyes that contained entire weights of knowing. She had always thought those stories were about power, about divinity, about the grandeur of the inexplicable.
She understood now, standing in this room, that they were about something simpler.
They were about the specific, bone-deep recognition that you were being ’seen’ — not observed, not regarded, not assessed in the way that people assess each other as a matter of social navigation — but ’seen’, all the way through, the way light goes through glass, and that whatever was doing the seeing was not impressed by the glass and had no particular investment in pretending otherwise.
It was full, that expression.
Like staring at a death god who had not yet decided whether today was interesting enough to be worth its time.
Heena looked at her.
And said, with the terrifying gentleness of someone who is asking a question they already know the answer to:
"Lady Seraphina."
A pause.
"Did I give you too much face," she asked, "that you’ve forgotten your position?"
---
The words were quiet.
They were not cruel, exactly. They were not loud, not heated, not the words of someone who had lost control of their temper. They were the words of someone who was asking a genuine question about how a situation had arrived at its current state, and the genuine quality of it was somehow the most frightening thing about them.
Seraphina felt the tremor move through her before she could stop it.
It started in her hands and traveled upward. She locked her knees. She locked her expression. She was good at locking her expression — she had been doing it since she was twelve years old and the world began to watch her — but the tremble found the edges of it anyway, the way cold finds the gaps in a coat.
’System. System.’
She screamed it inward, the way people scream when they can’t make any sound, her mental voice pitched high and frantic and stripped of all the composure she was currently deploying every scrap of herself to maintain on the outside.
A shimmer of light beside her — invisible to everyone in the room but her — and then her system materialized in that space beside her consciousness, in the narrow interiority that was hers alone.
"Yes, Host," it said.
It appeared in its usual form. It took one look at Heena.
Then it made a very small and undignified sound.
"Why," Seraphina demanded, in the privacy of her own mind, voice shaking in a way it would never be allowed to shake out loud, "’why’ is this NPC’s aura like this? Why — every time I look at her — why does it feel like I’m looking directly at ’death’? Why does my entire body want to—" she struggled for the word, the right word, the word that fit the specific texture of what was happening inside her chest, "—’flee’?"
Her system did not respond immediately.
She looked at it.
It was trembling.
Her ’system’ was trembling. The entity she had believed — had been given every reason to believe — was a higher-order intelligence that existed outside the rules governing beings like the people around her. The entity that was supposed to guide her, steady her, provide analysis and strategy and the cold clarity of a perspective unburdened by human anxiety.
It was vibrating slightly, the light of it flickering in a way she had never seen it do before.
"I," the system started.
Stopped.
Started again.
"I don’t know, Host," it said, and the admission came out with the stunned quality of something being said for the first time — not practiced, not retrieved from a database, just ’admitted’. "I genuinely do not know."
A pause in which both of them, woman and system, stared at the figure sitting cross-legged on the sofa with her arms spread along the back, smiling pleasantly at a point just below Seraphina’s eyes.
"Her expression," the system continued, slowly, the way something proceeds when it’s constructing the sentence as it goes rather than recalling it, "and her aura — they are—"
It searched.
"Strange," it finally said. The word landed flat and insufficient, like throwing a pebble into the dark and hearing no echo back. "There is something in there that doesn’t fit. Something that doesn’t — read correctly. It is like looking at something and being able to see every feature of it clearly and still being unable to understand what it ’is’."
Seraphina grumbled inside with anger, "What use are you even if you cannot detect anything wrong from her?"







