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Now reading: Chapter 92 --92 from Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads, a Fantasy novel by K1ERA.

His power wasn’t obvious. Wasn’t tied to a specific institution or resource.

Heena was still figuring him out.

But she’d get there.

---

Most people hadn’t noticed yet.

The changes were small. Incrental. Easy to miss if you weren’t paying attention.

But they were adding up.

And her consorts—distracted by her increasingly public closeness with Larus, focused on their own jealousy and wounded pride—hadn’t seen the slow collapse happening beneath their feet.

By the ti they did, it would be too late.

Heena sat in her office, reviewing reports, a cup of Larus’s milk tea cooling on her desk.

System 427 floated nearby, watching her work.

"Host," he said quietly, "you’re really good at this."

Heena didn’t look up. "At what?"

"Destroying people without them noticing."

She smiled faintly. "Thank you."

The system hesitated. "...That wasn’t entirely a complint."

"I know," Heena said.

She turned another page and kept reading.

’’The Council eting ’’

It was three weeks after Prince Larus’s arrival when the first of her consorts finally noticed sothing was wrong.

The Imperial Council t twice a month in the eastern wing of the palace—a long room with tall windows, a table that could seat thirty, and the kind of formal atmosphere that made even breathing feel like a political statent.

Heena sat at the head of the table, fingers steepled, listening as her ministers delivered reports.

Her five consorts were present, as always. Positioned at intervals down the table, each representing their respective domains. Kieran in his military dress. Adrian with a stack of ledgers at his elbow. Damien leaning back with deceptive casualness. Raphael in pristine white. Lucian silent and watchful at the far end.

Prince Larus was there too, now—seated to Heena’s right, officially present as the Marus delegation’s representative. Unofficially, because Heena had invited him and no one had the authority to tell her no.

The Finance Minister was midway through a presentation about tax revenue when Adrian interrupted.

"Excuse , Minister Torvald," he said, voice crisp and precise. He adjusted his glasses, the movent sharp. "You ntioned a discrepancy in the northern tariff collections. Could you clarify which routes those numbers represent?"

The Finance Minister glanced at his notes. "The new coastal routes, Lord Adrian. The ones established through the recent trade agreents with—"

"The agreents I wasn’t consulted on," Adrian cut in. His tone was still polite, but there was an edge now. "The ones that apparently bypassed the rchant Council entirely."

Heena didn’t look at him. "The rchant Council was inford."

"Inford is not the sa as consulted, Your Majesty," Adrian said. "These routes affect tariff structures I’ve been managing for years. Changing them without coordination creates inefficiencies—"

"Or," Heena interrupted calmly, "it creates competition. Which is healthy for the economy."

Adrian’s jaw tightened. "Competition implies multiple parties operating on equal footing. What you’ve created is a separate system that undermines existing infrastructure."

"Existing infrastructure that’s been stagnant for a decade," Heena said. She finally looked at him, expression neutral. "I’m not interested in maintaining systems just because they’re familiar. I’m interested in systems that work."

Silence.

Adrian stared at her, clearly trying to decide whether to push further.

Before he could, Damien spoke up from across the table.

"While we’re discussing things that weren’t coordinated," he said, voice smooth and deceptively light, "perhaps Your Majesty could explain the police force."

Heena raised an eyebrow. "What about it?"

"Well," Damien said, leaning forward slightly, "it’s an entire new military branch operating independently of the Knight Order. With arrest authority. With jurisdiction that overlaps—quite aggressively—with my command structure." His smile didn’t reach his eyes. "I’m curious when that decision was made. And why I wasn’t consulted."

"You were inford," Heena said.

"Again with the informing," Damien murmured. "Your Majesty, the Knight Order has maintained law and order in this empire for three centuries. Creating a separate force without coordinating with existing command is—"

"Necessary," Heena finished. "The Knight Order is stretched too thin. Response tis were abysmal. Cri rates were climbing. The police force addresses those problems."

"By fragnting authority," Damien said. "By creating competing jurisdictions that are already causing conflicts in the field. Just last week, there was an incident in the rchant district where police arrested soone the knights had under surveillance—"

"And?" Heena asked. "The person was guilty. They were arrested. The system worked."

"The system caused a breakdown in an ongoing investigation," Damien countered. "Because the police don’t coordinate with us. Because they operate independently. Because soone—" his eyes locked on hers, "—decided that was preferable."

Another silence, heavier this ti.

Kieran cleared his throat. "If we’re listing concerns, I have one as well."

Heena looked at him. "Go ahead."

"The treaty negotiations with the Northern Kingdoms," Kieran said. His voice was level, controlled, but there was tension in his shoulders. "I’ve heard rumors that we’re close to a finalized agreent."

"We are," Heena confird.

"From whom?" Kieran asked. "Because I command the northern forces. I’ve been managing that border for six years. And I haven’t been briefed on any treaty terms."

"The negotiations are being handled through diplomatic channels," Heena said. "Military input will be incorporated when appropriate."

Kieran’s expression hardened. "Your Majesty, with respect, I ’am’ the military input for the northern territories. Any treaty that affects troop deploynt, border security, or regional stability falls under my jurisdiction. I should have been involved from the beginning."

"You’re being involved now," Heena said.

"Now that it’s almost finished," Kieran said, voice tight. "Now that the terms are already set and my input is functionally irrelevant."

"Your input has been considered," Heena said calmly. "Through the reports you’ve submitted over the years. The intelligence assessnts. The strategic evaluations. All of that inford the negotiations."

"That’s not the sa as being ’at the table’," Kieran said.

"No," Heena agreed. "It’s not."

She let that sit.

Kieran stared at her, sothing shifting behind his eyes—a realization, perhaps, that this wasn’t an oversight. That she had ’deliberately’ excluded him.

Across the table, Raphael had gone very still.

"Your Majesty," he said quietly, "may I ask a question?"

Heena looked at him. His face was serene as always, but there was sothing careful in the way he was holding himself.

"Of course."

"The social programs," Raphael said. "The orphanages. The shelters. The food distribution centers. They’re all excellent initiatives. Truly. But I’ve noticed that temple funding has decreased significantly over the past month."

"Has it?" Heena asked mildly.

"Yes," Raphael said. "By nearly forty percent. And yet, I don’t recall any council vote to redirect that funding. I don’t recall any discussion about budget reallocation."

"Because there wasn’t one," Heena said. "Temple funding hasn’t been cut. It’s the sa as it was last year."

Raphael blinked. "But the programs—"

"Are privately funded," Heena finished. "By independent nobles and rchant houses. The palace isn’t paying for them."

Raphael’s expression didn’t change, but his knuckles went white where his hands rested on the table.

"I see," he said softly. "And these independent nobles—they all decided to launch competing social programs at the sa ti, purely by coincidence?"

"People respond to need," Heena said. "The need was there. They responded."

"With remarkable coordination," Raphael said. "Almost as though soone had organized them."

Heena smiled faintly. "I’m sure I don’t know what you an."

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