The marquis opened his mouth. She didn’t let him.
"High Priest Raphael’s tithes?" Heena continued relentlessly. "They rebuilt the orphanages your ’virtuous’ wife raided for fighters. And as for excess—tell , Marquis, when your people starve on pothole roads, where does your ’love’ go? To wine cellars? Silk wardrobes? Or perhaps to bribing inspectors who ’overlook’ those tournants?"
He flushed beet-red. "Lies! Slander! I demand a trial—"
"You demand?" Heena’s laugh was sharp, echoing off the walls. "In ’my’ study? On ’my’ authority?" She snapped her fingers. Two shadow guards materialized from alcoves—silent, hooded, hands on sword hilts. "Marquis Damon, you stand accused of tax evasion, illegal slavery, embezzlent, and now—insolence toward the crown."
The marquis paled, glancing at the guards. "Your Majesty, please. This is a misunderstanding. I’ll... adjust the figures. Lower the taxes. Donate to the roads—"
"Too late." Heena returned to her seat, casual as if discussing weather. "You’ll remit the excess rations’ value—triple, for your ’unique difficulties.’ Your wife’s tournants? Confiscated assets. And those carriages? Imperial property now."
He sputtered. "But—the people! My domain—"
"Will thrive without your ’love,’ I’m sure." Heena waved dismissively. "Guards. Escort the marquis out. He has ledgers to balance."
As they seized his arms—gently but firmly—the marquis twisted, face twisted in fury. "This isn’t over, Empress! The council will hear of this!"
Heena smiled serenely. "By all ans. Send them my regards. And the evidence dossiers."
The door slamd behind him.
System 427, who’d been watching invisibly, materialized with a low whistle. "Host, you shredded him."
Heena picked up her quill, already scanning the next report. "He asked for it. Next."
The door hadn’t even fully settled in its fra when it swung open again. Another noble swept in, this one robed in hunter green trimd with gold—Count Valerius of the eastern highlands. His boots clicked purposefully across the marble, chin held high like he owned the room.
Behind him trailed a nervous-looking secretary clutching scrolls.
Heena didn’t look up from the ledger she was reviewing. She dipped her quill, made a notation in the margin—’embezzlent, see treasury audit’—and let the silence stretch until it beca uncomfortable.
Count Valerius cleared his throat. Once. Then twice.
Finally, Heena set down her quill with deliberate care. She looked up, expression politely expectant. "Count Valerius. How unexpected. I don’t recall summoning you."
The count offered a practiced bow—shallow, the kind that technically showed respect while screaming arrogance. "Your Majesty. I ca as soon as I heard about the... ’unpleasantness’ with Marquis Damon." His lips curved into sothing ant to be a sympathetic smile. "Word travels quickly in the palace."
’Of course it does,’ Heena thought. ’The bastard probably sprinted here the mont the guards dragged Damon out.’
"How thoughtful," she said dryly. "And what brings you to my study with such urgency, Count? Surely not re concern for a colleague’s misfortune."
Valerius straightened, placing one hand over his heart in a gesture of sincerity. "Your Majesty, I felt it my duty to speak. The situation with Marquis Damon—while certainly... ’troubling’—is not unique. Many of us in the eastern territories face similar difficulties. Rising costs, supply shortages, uncooperative peasantry—"
"Uncooperative peasantry?" Heena’s eyebrow arched. "Interesting phrase. Do tell more about how your people are being ’uncooperative’."
The count waved his hand dismissively. "They grumble about taxes, naturally. Claim hardship. But what do they know of running a domain? The complexities of noble administration? We must make difficult decisions for the greater good."
System 427, invisible and floating near the ceiling, made a strangled sound. ’This idiot walked right into it.’
Heena folded her hands on the desk, smile pleasant and cold. "The greater good. How noble." She reached for another stack of docunts—thicker than the last, sealed with official stamps. "Count Valerius, since you’ve been so ’kind’ as to co forward, perhaps you can help understand sothing."
She cracked the seal and spread the pages out. "Your eastern highland domain reported crop yields this season at sixty percent of projected. Tragic, truly. Drought, I believe your steward claid?"
"Yes!" The count latched onto it eagerly. "Terrible drought. Barely any rain for months. The peasants did their best, but nature—"
"Nature is cruel, yes." Heena nodded sympathetically. Then her eyes sharpened. "Which makes it rather ’miraculous’ that your ’personal’ granaries reported being stocked to capacity. Full to bursting, according to the inspector. Grain, wheat, barley—enough to feed your domain twice over."
The color drained from Valerius’s face.
Heena continued, voice sweet as poisoned honey. "So either your domain has mastered the art of growing grain without rain—in which case, congratulations, please share your secrets with the empire—or..." She let the word hang. "The crop yields were perfectly fine, but sohow sixty percent of them ended up in ’your’ storehouses instead of being distributed to the people who grew them."
"I—Your Majesty—those reserves are for ergencies—"
"Ergencies like the three-day feast you hosted last month?" Heena flipped to another page. "Two hundred guests. Roasted peacock, imported wines, entertainnt lasting until dawn. Your steward’s expense reports are ’very’ detailed."
The count’s mouth opened and closed like a landed fish.
"And speaking of expenses," Heena went on, pulling out yet another docunt, "your son recently purchased a new estate in the capital. Curious timing, given the ’drought.’ The property cost... let see... ah yes. Exactly the amount your domain should have paid in imperial taxes this quarter."
Valerius’s face went from pale to red. "My son’s finances are separate from domain business—"
"Are they?" Heena’s voice cut like a whip. "When the down paynt ca directly from domain coffers? When your steward personally signed the transfer docunts?"
She slid the evidence across the desk. The count stared at his own steward’s signature, looking like he’d been struck.
"But perhaps," Heena said, leaning back in her chair, "we should discuss the ’real’ reason you ca here today. You wanted to gauge how far I’d push. Whether Marquis Damon’s downfall was an isolated incident or the start of sothing... broader."
Her smile was all teeth. "Let clarify: it’s broader."
Valerius straightened, desperation creeping into his voice. "Your Majesty, you cannot simply—these are complex matters of governance. The noble houses have operated this way for generations. If you disrupt the system—"
"The system is broken," Heena interrupted flatly. "It’s been broken since before I took the throne. And you, Count, are one of the cracks."
She stood, and the temperature in the room seed to drop. "Here’s what’s going to happen. You will open those granaries. Every sack of grain above your ’actual’ household needs will be distributed to your people at fair prices. Your son will return the estate—or pay for it with his own coin, not the domain’s. And you will submit to a full audit of the past five years."
"Five years?!" The count’s voice cracked. "That’s—"
"Generous?" Heena supplied. "I know. I was considering ten."
System 427 watched from above, equal parts awed and terrified. The other nobles in the palace had no idea what was coming for them.
Valerius sputtered, face cycling through emotions—shock, anger, calculation. Finally, he settled on indignation. "I refuse. This is tyranny. The Council of Lords will never stand for—"
"The Council," Heena said softly, dangerously, "serves at ’my’ pleasure. Not the other way around."
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