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Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 38 --
As everyone began taking their places one by one, the usual seating order unfolded almost on instinct. The seat nearest to the Empress had always been reserved for the *true* emperor consort—the one recognized as the "father of the kingdom."
Only, in this empire, that seat was empty.
The original Celeste had been viciously smart. She had given these five men the title of consort, yes, but never the real position of husband. No emperor consort, no official "main" partner. The seat beside her might look like a privilege, but in the records it belonged to no one. It was a throne’s *trap*, not a reward.
Still, in practice, hierarchy filled the gap.
As there was no emperor consort, Kieran—as crown prince, northern commander, and the man with the highest status—naturally took the place at Heena’s right. On her left, Duke Adrian settled in, shuffling papers even now, while Lucian, Raphael, and Damien filled in according to rank down the table.
It was all so familiar that Kieran did not even think about it. He stepped toward the chair at her side, hand already on the backrest to pull it out, muscles moving on habit alone.
"Heel."
The word was soft, amused. It cut through the hall like a blade.
Kieran froze. Slowly, he looked up at Heena.
She was smiling.
"Sweetheart," she said warmly, crimson lips curving as if she were praising a loyal dog, "empty the seat."
For a heartbeat, his mind refused to process the order. Then his fingers tightened on the chair.
"...What?" His voice came out rougher than he meant. "Your Majesty, is there something wrong with—"
He didn’t get to finish.
Heena lifted her hand, silencing him in the middle of his protest. Her smile didn’t fade, but the line of her eyes sharpened.
"Oh, come on, you all," she said lightly, turning her gaze to the watching nobles and consorts alike. "Today is such a big celebration."
The reminder settled over the hall—the Grand Tournament, the Crimson Hunt, fifty thousand people chanting for blood and glory. The Empress victorious. The empire watching.
Heena’s gaze slid toward the lower table where Ashton sat, still not quite comfortable among ministers and nobles, fingers resting awkwardly on the stem of his goblet.
"And," she continued, voice softening, "the champion who won this match is also my dearest friend—someone I’ve finally met again after so long." Her eyes shone with genuine warmth as she looked at him. "I really want to talk to him right now."
She turned back to Kieran, smiling sweetly.
"So how about you, honey," she said, every syllable sugar-coated, "change your seat with Ash?"
Chairs scraped softly. Conversations died.
Prince Ashton Ravencourt immediately pushed back his chair and stood, grey eyes widening in flustered alarm. He bowed slightly, one hand over his heart.
"Your Majesty, it is not right," he said gently. "This seat still belongs to His Highness the Consort. It would not be proper for someone like me to—"
He glanced at Kieran, apology written all over his face, as if *he* were the one committing the offense.
"It is not good for me to take his place," Ashton finished quietly, looking almost pitiful, like a loyal hound afraid of being kicked for overstepping.
The hall’s attention swung back to Kieran.
Heena’s smile didn’t move. Her eyes did.
"Consort."
The single word cut his title down to its bones.
Her expression shifted—no longer playful, no longer coaxing. Calm. Cold. Imperial.
"Do I," she asked, voice perfectly mild, "need to explain myself all the time to you five?"
The air tightened. Even Lucian’s hand paused halfway to his goblet. Adrian’s golden eyes flickered behind his glasses. Raphael’s prayer stopped on his tongue. Damien’s fingers stilled around his wine stem.
Heena didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t have to.
"If I tell you to empty the seat," she said, gaze never leaving Kieran’s, "then you empty the seat."
Silence. The whole hall watched.
Kieran’s jaw clenched. For three years, that place at her right hand had been a habit, a given, an unspoken acknowledgment of his status. Now he could feel fifty thousand invisible eyes on his back, weighing his reaction.
He had a choice: defy the Empress in public... or move.
Slowly, every muscle in his body protesting, Kieran removed his hand from the chair. He stepped back, then sideways, the movement controlled, almost stiff. His pride scraped along the marble with every inch.
"As Your Majesty commands," he said at last, voice stripped of everything but formality.
Only then did Heena turn away from him, her irritation evaporating like mist in sunlight as she looked back at Ashton, smile blooming bright and warm again.
"Ashton," she said, voice fond, "come sit beside me."
Ashton settled into the seat that had belonged to Kieran moments before, the hall exhaling as if released from a held breath. Heena leaned toward him immediately, her shoulder brushing his as she gestured to the feast spread below. "Try the stormstag pie," she murmured, voice warm and conspiratorial. "It’s the only thing worth eating after a hunt like that."
Ashton hesitated, grey eyes flickering downward in that perfect blend of humility and reluctance, as if sharing the memory pained him. "Your Majesty, it was nothing," he said softly, voice pitched just loud enough for the high table to hear, but not so bold it carried to the hall. "I was only a boy then, and you... you were already so kind to someone like me."
Heena’s smile deepened, her fingers lingering on his arm a moment longer. "Nothing? You pulled me from those assassins’ blades. Don’t be modest now, Ash. Tell them."
A soft murmur of interest rippled from the nearby nobles—*assassins? The Empress’s past?*—but Ashton only ducked his head further, silver-streaked hair falling forward to shadow his face. He looked almost embarrassed, fingers twisting the napkin in his lap like a nervous youth at his first feast.
"I... I only did what anyone would," he murmured, peeking up at her through his lashes, grey eyes wide and earnest. "You were so brave even then, facing those shadows alone. I just... didn’t want you hurt." His voice cracked faintly on the last word, as if the memory overwhelmed him.
Heena laughed again, delighted, and squeezed his shoulder. "See? My hero."
Ashton, sensing the moment, lifted his goblet toward Heena with trembling fingers. "To Your Majesty," he said, voice thick with emotion, "who remembers even a nobody like me."
The toast spread. Heena beamed. The hall cheered.
Behind them, the consorts took their adjusted places.
Kieran now sat one chair further down, the gap between him and Heena as wide as a chasm. His ice-blue eyes fixed on the table, jaw locked so tight the muscle jumped. Three years of standing at her right, three years of *being* her right hand in every council, every war council, every public procession—and now a western nobody occupied it because she called him "dearest friend." The word burned worse than any poison. He gripped his goblet until the stem creaked, forcing a polite smile as a lord toasted his "northern valor" from across the table.
Adrian shifted into the seat Kieran had vacated, but the victory felt hollow







