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Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 133 --
"That was the most terrifying thing I’ve ever willingly participated in."
"Get used to it," she murmured back. "This is your life now."
"I wouldn’t change it," he said, and the way he said it was honest in the way that simple things are honest, without decoration or performance.
Something shifted in Heena’s chest—small and quick, like a door opening a crack before she pushed it firmly shut.
’Strategic partnership,’ she reminded herself. ’Political alliance. Investment in the empire’s future.’
But as they walked back down the aisle together, still hand in hand, the crowd parting around them, the applause following them like a tide—
System 427’s voice appeared quietly in her mind, tentative and careful:
’Host... are you catching feelings?’
She ignored him with great determination.
She had a reception to get through.
Five consorts to manage.
An empire to run.
She was absolutely, completely fine.
The ring was warm on her finger.
She was ’fine’.
# The Reception
The banquet hall was smaller than the ceremonial hall—which still meant it could comfortably fit two hundred people and a small orchestra.
Someone had outdone themselves with the decorations. Every table was dressed in white and gold, with centerpieces of fresh flowers that Heena suspected had been imported at considerable expense. Candles everywhere. Wine flowing before anyone had even taken their seats. The kind of spread that communicated, very clearly, ’this empire has money and would like you to remember that’.
Heena walked in and immediately wanted to leave.
Not because it wasn’t beautiful. It was.
It was because the moment she stepped through the door, the room reorganized itself around her presence the way iron filings rearrange around a magnet. Every conversation paused. Every head turned. Every face rearranged itself into the particular expression that people in this empire wore when they were trying to get something from her and wanted to seem like they weren’t.
Three hundred people, all of them suddenly very interested in talking to her.
She smiled serenely at the room.
’Wonderful’, she thought. ’Absolutely wonderful.’
Beside her, Larus assessed the situation with the calm of someone who had attended enough royal functions to recognize a feeding frenzy when he saw one.
"They’re going to descend on us," he murmured.
"In approximately thirty seconds," Heena agreed.
"Strategy?"
"Stay close. If someone corners you about trade agreements, look interested and tell them to contact my secretary. If someone asks about your family’s military history, look modest. If a noble lady asks if you’re truly committed to this engagement—"
"I tell them yes and change the subject."
"You’re learning," she said approvingly.
The thirty seconds ended.
They descended.
’’’
The first wave was the ambassadors, which was actually the easier wave. Ambassadors were professionals. They asked professional questions, made professional observations, and shook hands with professional warmth that everyone understood meant nothing personal.
The ambassador from the Southern Kingdoms was a tall, angular woman named Selve who had the alert eyes of someone who had survived seventeen years of diplomatic postings by being the smartest person in every room she entered.
She bowed to Heena, then turned to Larus with undisguised curiosity.
"Prince Larus. I’ll be honest with you—your kingdom’s decision to pursue this alliance surprised many of us."
"Did it?" Larus said pleasantly.
"The Marus Kingdom has historically maintained neutrality in imperial politics. Your father has declined three previous invitations to formalize relations with this empire." She tilted her head. "And yet here you are. One might wonder what changed."
Larus smiled with great serenity. "One might also observe that three previous invitations came from previous administrations. Things change."
Selve’s eyes moved to Heena, then back to Larus. "Indeed they do." A small, genuine smile. "Congratulations, Your Highness. I suspect you know exactly what you’ve walked into."
"I suspect I do," Larus said cheerfully.
Selve moved on, apparently satisfied.
The Northern Alliance’s ambassador—a compact, broad-shouldered man who had not stopped taking mental notes since the moment the ceremony began—appeared next and spent approximately four minutes asking very precise questions about the spice route implications of this marriage alliance. Larus answered each one with the ease of someone who had been managing his kingdom’s trade interests since he was old enough to sit through a meeting.
Heena watched him do it and felt a quiet satisfaction.
’Useful’, she had thought when she’d first considered him. She had not been wrong.
The foreign ambassadors cleared within twenty minutes. Then came the nobles.
’’’
The noble wave was less professional and significantly more personal.
They came in clusters, organized by the invisible social hierarchies that governed every gathering in this empire. The highest-ranking houses first, who had enough confidence to approach without working themselves up to it. Then the mid-tier houses, who came in slightly larger groups for moral support. Then the minor nobility, who mostly hovered at the edges and observed.
The elderly Duke Harren—one of the oldest noble heads in the empire, a man who had been at court through two previous rulers and seemed to view his own survival as proof of personal virtue—bowed to Heena and then fixed Larus with a long, evaluating stare.
"Young man," he said, dispensing with titles entirely in the way that very old, very powerful people sometimes did, "I’ve been at this court for forty years. I’ve seen eight different consorts come through those doors." He paused. "Most of them thought they knew what they were getting into."
"And did they?" Larus asked.
"No," Duke Harren said simply. "She has a way of being more than people expect."
He said it looking at Heena, not Larus. And the way he said it wasn’t quite a criticism and wasn’t quite a compliment—it was something more honest than either.
Heena inclined her head slightly.
Duke Harren made a sound that might have been approval, then moved on.
Lady Mira—young, sharp, from a minor house that had recently risen in prominence through extraordinarily good investment decisions—appeared next and didn’t even pretend she was there for official reasons.
"Your Highness," she said to Larus, with the directness of someone who had decided that straightforwardness was a competitive advantage, "you are extraordinarily well-dressed."
Larus blinked. "Thank you."
"I’m not saying it to flatter you. I’m saying it because at least four noble houses are currently having a crisis about the jewelry choice, two of them are taking notes for their own tailors, and one marchioness is quite literally crying about it in the corridor."
"Crying?" Larus looked concerned. "Is she alright?"
"Happy crying," Lady Mira said. "Apparently she loves gold-amber work and hasn’t seen it done well in years." She smiled. "I thought you should know you’ve made someone’s evening purely through your wardrobe choices. Good evening, Your Highness."
She moved on.
Larus turned to Heena. "Did she come over just to tell me that?"
"She came over to see what you were like up close," Heena said. "She’s deciding whether to support you politically. The marchioness story was an excuse to have a natural conversation."
"And?"
"She liked your answer about the marchioness more than anything else you could have said." Heena took a glass of wine from a passing servant. "The fact that your first response was concern rather than flattery. She’s been watching for that."
Larus processed this. "Court politics are exhausting."
"You get used to it," Heena said. "Or you don’t, and it crushes you. Those are the two options."







