"There’s the optimism I need." She smiled slightly. "Now help prepare. We have until dawn, and I need every advantage you can give before you go."
System 427 floated closer to the desk, already compiling data, strategies, contingencies. His usual efficiency returning despite his fear. "Physical docunts only. Nothing digital or magical that could be traced. I’ll organize by priority and likely scenario..."
They worked through the night, Empress and System, preparing for a separation neither wanted but both knew was necessary. As dawn approached and golden light began filtering through the windows, System 427’s form seed sohow smaller, more vulnerable.
"I’ll co back," he promised quietly. "The mont it’s safe, I’ll be here."
"I know you will." Heena touched the stack of carefully prepared docunts—his gift to her, his way of protecting her even in absence. "Thank you, 427. For everything."
"Don’t thank until you survive this," he said, trying for his usual sardonic tone and almost managing it. "And Heena? The lotus blooms in darkness. Rember that."
"I will."
As the sun crested the horizon, System 427’s golden glow began to fade—not dimming for stealth, but truly disappearing. Logging out completely, severing his connection to this world, leaving his host alone.
The last thing Heena heard was his voice, barely a whisper: "Don’t die on , partner."
Then he was gone.
The mont System 427’s presence vanished completely, Heena felt it.
A searing pain ripped through her chest like claws tearing from the inside out. She gasped, her hand flying to her sternum as sothing fundantal inside her shifted—broke—collapsed. The protective barrier that had been cushioning her from the worst of the cosmic backlash, the subtle support that had been keeping her functional despite her injuries, the invisible armor that System 427’s presence had provided—
Gone.
All of it, gone in an instant.
Blood filled her mouth. Hot, copper-tasting, undeniable. She barely managed to grab the waste bin beside her desk before she coughed violently, crimson spattering against the tal bottom. Once. Twice. Three tis, each convulsion tearing through her ribs like broken glass.
When the fit finally subsided, she slumped back in her chair, breathing in shallow gasps. Her vision swam. The dawn light seed too bright, too sharp, like it was cutting into her eyes.
"Fuck," she whispered, wiping her mouth with a trembling hand. The silk ca away red.
This was worse than she’d anticipated. She’d known System 427’s presence provided passive protection—all systems did for their hosts, preventing the worst effects of cosmic backlash, stabilizing their physical forms in worlds that rejected their foreign souls. But she hadn’t realized how much she’d been leaning on that support until it disappeared.
Her ankle wasn’t just throbbing anymore—it was screaming. The dull ache in her spine had beco sharp spikes of agony with every breath. Her hands shook uncontrollably. And the blood... the blood ant internal damage. Significant internal damage.
Another cough wracked her body. More blood.
"Three days," she muttered to herself, gripping the desk edge to stay upright. "Just three days. I can survive three days."
But even as she said it, she knew the truth: without system protection, the cosmic backlash would accelerate. The world itself was rejecting her—a foreign soul piloting a native body, breaking narrative rules, torturing protagonists who should be untouchable. Every hour System 427 was gone, the pressure would increase. The damage would compound.
By the ti the tournant arrived, she might be too weak to even stand.
Her eyes fell on the docunts scattered across her desk—military reports, financial statents, intelligence briefings. And there, partially hidden beneath a trade agreent, five portrait sketches she’d commissioned from the imperial artist weeks ago.
The five royal consorts.
She pulled the sketches out slowly, laying them in a row before her. Her hand left a small bloodstain on the corner of Kieran’s portrait.
Prince Kieran with his ice-blue eyes and silver hair, radiating warrior pride. Duke Adrian with his scholarly glasses and calculating golden gaze. General Lucian with his scarred face and military bearing. Lord Damien with his pretty features and spymaster’s knowing smile. High Priest Raphael with his ethereal beauty and violet eyes.
Five male leads. Five protagonists with plot armor that made them nearly unkillable, that bent reality itself to ensure their survival and eventual triumph.
The very armor she’d just lost.
Heena stared at the portraits, her mind working through the brutal calculus despite the pain fogging her thoughts. She needed protection. Real protection. The kind that ca from narrative structure itself, from being aligned with rather than opposed to the story’s chosen heroes.
She needed male lead armor.
Which ant she needed to genuinely get at least one of them on her side. Not through torture—that had been about breaking their united front, about establishing dominance and buying ti. But actual alliance. Genuine loyalty. Or sothing close enough that the world’s narrative structure would start seeing her as an ally rather than an antagonist.
If she could turn even one male lead into a true supporter, his protagonist halo might extend to cover her. Partially. Just enough to blunt the worst of the cosmic backlash. Just enough to survive the next three days.
Her fingers traced over each portrait, weighing options with the cold logic of soone who’d survived twelve impossible worlds.
Kieran? No. The warrior prince was too proud, too rigid in his sense of honor. Even broken, he’d see submission as weakness and alliance as betrayal of his cause. He’d rather die defiant than genuinely submit.
Lucian? Similar problem. Military n didn’t bend—they broke or held firm. And she’d pushed him too far, too fast. Any alliance would be forced, fake, useless for gaining narrative protection.
Adrian? The duke was brilliant, capable of strategic thinking that might allow him to see the value in genuine cooperation. But he was also the most calculating—any alliance would be purely transactional, devoid of the emotional connection that really activated protagonist protection protocols.
Damien? Too dangerous. The spymaster’s mind never stopped working, never stopped plotting. Give him an inch and he’d take everything. She couldn’t trust that he wouldn’t use any alliance as a stepping stone to destroy her more effectively.
That left...
Her fingers stopped on the fifth portrait.
High Priest Raphael.
The weakest of the five physically. The most broken after three days of torture. The one who’d cried, who’d trembled, who’d co closest to genuine submission rather than forced compliance.
Also the most emotionally driven. The one who operated on faith and feeling rather than cold calculation. If she could reach him—genuinely reach him, not through torture but through sothing else—he might actually shift his loyalty. Not fake it. Not pretend. But truly change sides.
And he was still a male lead. Still carried protagonist armor. If she could convert him...
Heena coughed again, more blood. Her vision blurred. The pain was getting worse.
She didn’t have ti for subtle manipulation. Didn’t have weeks to slowly turn him. She had three days before the tournant, and maybe less before her body gave out entirely.
Which ant she needed to gamble. Take a risk that would either save her or doom her completely.
Give him a reason to choose her side that wasn’t based on fear but submission strong loyal submission and if you cannot win heart then win body.
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