Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 65 --

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Chapter 65: Chapter-65

System 427 had been with many hosts. He had seen many expressions. He had developed, he liked to think, a reasonably sophisticated ability to read a face. In this particular moment, Heena’s face was reading as ’do you really want to continue that sentence’ in a way that bypassed his linguistic processing and went straight to something more primal.

"System," she said calmly, "what do you think a protagonist halo ’is’?"

System 427 blinked. Several times. He scrambled to organize his thoughts. "Isn’t it... you know... that thing that makes everything go their way? People like them more, they get lucky, the plot bends so they don’t die—"

Heena exhaled through her nose.

"A protagonist halo," she said, resuming her pace, "is like a lucky charm. If you’re about to fall into a river, sometimes, when you step out, you’ll just happen to land on a floating log instead of drowning." Her eyes fixed ahead of her, but their focus was somewhere beyond the corridor walls. "But that doesn’t mean it gives you the power to ’control’ the river. It doesn’t part the water for you. It doesn’t drain the river dry. It finds you a log, if you’re lucky, and it finds you a log because the universe bends slightly at the edges around people like her." Her voice went flatter. "It does not bend the people."

System 427 tilted his head, following her in his small, careful way, ears angled forward now in genuine processing rather than just distress. He was listening.

Heena continued. "hina has a halo and a system. Fine. That’s her circumstance. But if the knights were truly loyal, if the Commander had actually treated the Empress’s word as law — not performance, not habit, but ’genuine’ belief — do you really think ’anyone’ could have just walked into my residence without my permission?"

The system opened his mouth.

Closed it.

"A locked door stays locked," Heena said, "when the person holding the key actually believes it should be locked." She glanced at him sideways. "Just because we ’like’ someone doesn’t give them the right to overrule another person’s life. Liking someone is a feeling. Duty is a choice. And the two have never been the same thing, no matter how much people want to pretend otherwise."

The corridor was long and softly lit by the last of the moon through high windows, the pale light catching the edges of pillars and the gleam of polished armor as they passed more guards who pressed themselves back and bowed low, eyes immediately cast to the floor.

"Same here," Heena went on, the words coming with the evenness of someone who had thought through this long before this morning, who had filed it into place and was simply articulating what was already organized. "If that Knight Commander really understood his place — really understood it, not just recited it — then no matter how favorably he felt toward Serafina, no matter how strong her halo pulled at his instincts, there would have been one correct action available to him."

She stopped walking.

She faced the lion directly, and her voice lost its flatness just slightly — not to warmth, exactly, but to something more deliberate.

"He should have come to me first. That’s it. That’s the whole of it. He should have come to me and said, ’Your Majesty, Lady hina is at the gate and requests entry. Do you permit it?’ Four seconds. Ten words. Then whatever I said, he follows it. That’s loyalty. That’s what the uniform was ’for’." Her gaze sharpened. "Instead, he decided on his own that she was acceptable. He decided on his own that his judgment outweighed mine. And then, when pressed, his excuse was the halo."

The contempt in her voice was not hot. It was cold, and old, and very tired.

"She walked into the palace. She sat in a guest room in the middle of the night. She was warm and comfortable and probably had tea brought to her, because whoever served her thought, ’well, she seems nice enough’." Heena snorted softly. "And after all of that, the Commander stands in my courtyard and says it’s not his fault. The halo made him do it."

System 427’s ears drooped, pressing closer to his skull. He wasn’t arguing anymore.

"A halo is like a cushion," Heena said. "It might soften how hard someone hits the ground. That doesn’t mean it stops the fall itself. It doesn’t prevent the fall from ’happening’. It simply makes it more survivable. And the cushion is not an excuse for the person who pushed her."

She resumed walking.

"Do you remember World Six?" she asked, after a moment, her tone shifting by a fraction — not softer, but less weaponized, like the difference between a sword being held and a sword being sheathed. "Those NPCs who broke their roles and started living their own lives?"

System 427 brightened, almost involuntarily. "Yeah. They stopped following the script. They refused to die the way they were supposed to — they started making their own choices, even though the plot kept trying to pull them back—"

"Do you think that happened just because we hosts possessed their bodies?" Heena asked.

The lion paused. "I... I mean, that was part of it—"

"It was the trigger," she agreed. "But triggers don’t fire themselves. Those people had something underneath — a will, a self, a core of ’I want to live’ that was strong enough to push against the current of the plot. We didn’t put that in them. We gave them a reason to reach for what was already there." She glanced at him. "When the will is strong enough, it resists. When it isn’t, it bends. That’s true with plot. That’s true with halos. That’s true with anything."

She stopped again. Turned her head toward the courtyard they’d come from, though it was out of sight now — just a direction, a memory of ringing medals and gray ash and bare feet on stone.

"Those servants and knights," she said quietly, almost to herself, "if any of them had a will that genuinely, truly believed that the Empress’s word was the only word that mattered in this palace — the halo couldn’t have touched them. They would have held that line. They would have blocked her at the gate. They would have said ’I’m sorry, my lady, but I cannot admit you without permission, please wait here while I send word’, and no amount of protagonist luck would have found them a floating log if they’d already chosen not to step into the river."

A long pause.

"They failed," she said, "because when it came down to it — when the halo nudged them, when the girl’s face was soft and her story sounded sympathetic and the night was cold and it seemed like such a ’small’ thing — they chose convenience over loyalty. They chose the feeling over the duty. And the halo became their cover story."

System 427 was very quiet.

"...So you’re saying," he said at last, voice smaller than usual, "the halo nudges people. But it doesn’t — it doesn’t ’excuse’ them. They still had to let it work."

Heena’s smile returned.

Thin. Knowing. Sharp at the edges the way something is sharp when it’s been that way so long it’s forgotten what dull felt like.