©Novel Buddy
Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 69 --
it paused, struggling in a way that systems were not supposed to struggle, "—it is like looking at something and being able to see every surface of it clearly and still being unable to understand what the thing ’is’. What it is ’made of’. Like every analytical framework I have for reading people runs up against it and comes back with nothing."
Seraphina swallowed. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
She hoped it didn’t show on her face.
It showed on her face.
Heena said nothing. She didn’t need to. She watched Seraphina struggle to reassemble herself — the visible swallow, the slight unfocus of eyes turned inward, the tremble still finding the edges of locked hands — with the patient attention of someone observing a process and not inclined to interrupt it.
The silence did everything.
---
And then Heena spoke.
"First," she said.
Her voice was cold. Not raised — it didn’t need to be raised — but cold the way deep water is cold, not at the surface but underneath, where the temperature is a fact rather than a feeling.
"Perhaps you have forgotten," she said, "that you are speaking about ’my consort’."
A pause that had edges to it.
"My ’husband’."
She looked at Seraphina with eyes that had gone from sharp to glacial, the difference between a blade and the temperature at which things simply stop moving.
"And I don’t recall," she said, each word enunciated with a calm so complete it was its own kind of violence, "ever giving you the right to call him by name."
Seraphina’s breath caught.
"Second." Heena tilted her head, and the motion was almost polite, almost conversational, and contained nothing that was either of those things. "How dare a noble lady come, in the middle of the night, into someone’s home — and begin asking questions about their ’husband’?"
She let the sentence sit in the air between them.
"Think about it," she said softly. "Does that sound proper to you, Lady Seraphina? Does that sound like something a woman of your station does? A woman of ’any’ station?"
The color that rose in Seraphina’s face was not entirely from the marks on her cheeks.
"I did not come to ’someone’s home’, Your Majesty," she said, and the words were out before she could stop them, the defensive instinct overriding caution for one unguarded second. "I came to the imperial palace. This is not the same—"
"’Pfft.’"
Heena laughed.
It was not a warm laugh. It was not a cruel laugh, not in the theatrical sense. It was the laugh of someone who has been presented with something that genuinely surprised them — not pleasantly — and couldn’t quite believe what they were looking at. She covered her mouth with the back of her hand, her shoulders moving once in a short, silent, incredulous exhale, and then she dropped her hand and looked directly at Seraphina with an expression that had all the softness of a clean blade.
"I really did overestimate you," she said. The lightness in her voice made it worse. Not contemptuous — almost disappointed, in the way one is disappointed by a calculation that turned out to be wrong. "I didn’t think you were brilliant. I didn’t think you were a genius. But I genuinely believed you had at least a ’small’ brain. Enough to understand one simple, elementary fact."
She spread her arms slightly — the same gesture she had been wearing since she sat down, open and easy and completely terrifying.
"The imperial palace does not belong to ’no one’," she said. "It belongs to the emperor. And right now, ’I’ am that emperor." A pause. "In that sense — in every sense — this ’is’ my house. You entered it without my permission. You made yourself comfortable within it without my permission. You asked about Priest Raphael—" her voice didn’t change, but something in it did, "—who is, as I have just told you, ’my husband’ — and you dare to sit there and suggest that you have done nothing that requires my forgiveness?"
She looked at Seraphina the way certain people look at arithmetic errors — not angry, simply registering the mistake in its full extent.
"Lady Seraphina," she said, and the title landed with the precision of something placed deliberately rather than naturally, "do you really believe that what you have just demonstrated is not the most basic common sense? The kind that even a child understands? The kind that is taught not in academies or by tutors, but simply by existing in a world with other people and paying attention?"
Her eyes went the specific cold that stops being cold and starts being something with no temperature at all.
"It appears," she continued, almost conversationally, "that you don’t even have that." Another pause, shorter this time. "Should I ask your father about it? Perhaps he’ll know where it went."
"Your Majesty, I was only—"
Heena turned toward the door.
"Come in," she said.
---
The door opened immediately.
The premonition hit Seraphina in the sternum before the door had swung wide enough to show her what was on the other side of it — a cold, slamming certainty, the kind that the body knows before the mind catches up. Her hands tightened at her sides.
And then it came true.
Her father stepped across the threshold.
Lord Whitmore — Marquis, possessor of whatever additional titles the empire had seen fit to stack upon the family name over the generations, Heena had neither the interest nor the patience to memorize the full inventory of honorifics the nobility collected like decorative objects — stepped into the room in his house clothes, his hair not entirely ordered, the look of a man who had been summoned in the middle of the night and had understood the weight of the summons completely. His face was arranged into the expression of someone who had been preparing themselves on the walk down the corridor for something they did not want to see.
He looked at his daughter.
He took in her face — both cheeks, the redness that was already beginning to settle into something that would be visible for days, the particular quality of her eyes that he had not seen since she was a very small child and had been caught doing something she had convinced herself was justified.
He looked at the Empress.
He looked at the handkerchief on the floor.
He looked back at his daughter.
Seraphina had never, not once in her life, seen her father look at her the way he was looking at her now. Not when she was reckless. Not when she made choices he disagreed with. Not even in the moments when she had felt his disappointment like a hand pressed to the back of her neck. This was something different — not disappointment, exactly, but a kind of grim, devastated recognition, the look of a man who has just seen the full shape of a thing he had been hoping was smaller.
"So, Lord Whitmore," Heena said, in the pleasant tone she used when pleasantness was the most dangerous available register, "what do you think of the little lesson we’ve just been reviewing? About your daughter’s understanding of — what shall we call it — basic conduct?"
Lord Whitmore trembled.
’Please no...no’







