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Return of Black Lotus system:Taming Cheating Male Leads-Chapter 67 --
Slowly, she turned her head back.
Her eyes focused on Heena’s face.
"How dare you," Heena said.
Not loud. Conversational, almost. Precise as a surgical tool.
Something moved behind Seraphina’s eyes — the blankness giving way to something hotter and more familiar, color rising in her face beyond the handprint, real anger threading up through the humiliation, something that had lived in her a long time and didn’t like being touched. Her lips parted. Her chin lifted. She drew breath to speak—
’CRACK.’
The second slap hit the other cheek and knocked her head the other way, faster and harder, and when the echo died, the room was more silent than it had been before.
Heena regarded her steadily. Her expression had not changed.
"That one," she said, in the same even tone she might use to explain which dish was which at a formal dinner, "is on behalf of your father. So that perhaps you’ll remember that a noblewoman — whatever else she may be, whatever extraordinary circumstances she may believe herself to be navigating — does ’not’ wander the capital unescorted and barge into the imperial palace in the middle of the night like some street rat who has decided the walls don’t apply to her."
---
Seraphina stood very still.
Both her cheeks burned — one with impact, one with what would soon be impact, both of them red, her eyes glassing over with tears that she didn’t seem entirely aware of, the involuntary kind that had nothing to do with choice. Her fists had curled at her sides. There was a tremble in her that she was working very hard to control — working hard enough that the effort was visible. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
She was used to being looked at. She was used to being seen. She had been navigating the particular kind of visibility that attached itself to her since she was old enough to understand that people responded to her in a certain way, and she had learned, over time, how to use it — when to be soft, when to be still, when to let the tears well up in precisely the way that made people want to protect her.
Heena looked down at her without a single trace of pity. Not cruelty, exactly — cruelty would have required some satisfaction in the pain. This was something different. This was the expression of someone who had looked at the situation, made a calculation, and followed it to its conclusion without sentiment getting in the way.
"What?" Heena asked calmly. "Did I do something wrong, Lady Seraphina?"
The silence stretched.
hina’s throat worked. The anger was still there — she hadn’t swallowed it, she was too honest for that — but it had run up against something it didn’t know how to overcome, and the result was a young woman standing with clenched fists and burning cheeks and tears she couldn’t quite stop, looking at a face that gave her absolutely nothing to push against.
"...N-No, Your Majesty," she managed. The words came out thin and scraped raw, like something that had been dragged through a narrow space.
Heena held her gaze for a moment. Then she lifted her own hand — the one that had struck — and looked at her palm with mild, impersonal interest. The skin had reddened. There would be some ache there later. She reached into her sleeve and produced a small handkerchief, delicately embroidered at the edges in pale thread, and began to wipe her hand with the slow, careful attention of someone cleaning a tool after use.
Then she let the handkerchief fall.
It dropped between them, small and white and pointed, and landed directly at Seraphina’s feet. Right there. Undeniable.
"So," Heena said, tilting her head just slightly, the smile still in place, "are you not going to thank me?"
hina blinked. The question moved through her expression like something dropped into still water — ripples of confusion disrupting the carefully maintained surface. "Th— thank you?"
She didn’t understand. The words sounded wrong even coming out of her own mouth.
Heena’s smile didn’t waver. "I ’taught’ you," she said pleasantly, "in your father’s place. Didn’t I? Proper conduct for a noble lady. Proper hours for calling on the imperial residence. Proper awareness of the distance between one’s own station and others’, and what that distance requires of one’s behavior."
She leaned in — not far, just slightly, just enough that Seraphina would feel the shift in proximity — and the smile stayed fixed, warm and terrible, the kind of warm that a flame is warm when you’ve already leaned too close.
"Or," Heena continued, voice dropping to something quieter and considerably more pointed, "do you only like calling yourself ’Lady Seraphina’ when the title earns you sympathy and opens doors that should stay closed to you?" A pause. One beat. "And forget it entirely the moment it should actually ’restrain’ you?"
The handkerchief lay between them on the floor.
Neither of them looked at it.
Seraphina’s teeth ground together behind her closed lips.
She held herself still — back straight, chin level, hands folded at her waist with the practiced grace of a woman who had spent years learning how to look composed while feeling anything but. The handkerchief still lay on the floor between them. She did not look at it. Looking at it would be acknowledging it, and acknowledging it would be losing something.
"I don’t mean that, Your Majesty," she said. Her voice came out smoother than she expected — she was grateful for that, at least. "I am truly thankful."
Heena looked at her.
Then, without particular hurry, she moved to the sofa along the wall — the long, upholstered one positioned beneath the window — and sat down in a way that was, technically, perfectly relaxed and somehow conveyed the exact opposite of softness. She crossed one leg over the other. She spread her arms along the back of the frame, both of them, easy and open, like a person who had decided to own every inch of the space they were occupying.
She looked like someone who had been given a room and had quietly converted it into a throne.
She tilted her head at Seraphina and smiled.
"And what," she said pleasantly, "are you thankful ’for’?"
Seraphina’s jaw tightened.
"You know, Lady Seraphina," Heena continued, her tone the warm and unhurried kind that a tutor uses when they already know the student hasn’t done the reading, "if you want to thank someone, you do actually need to say the ’word’. The whole of it. Not just ’I am thankful’ — that tells me nothing. Thankful for what? Thankful ’why’?" Her smile curved a degree further. "Say it clearly. I’m listening."
The room was very quiet.
A muscle in Seraphina’s cheek jumped — the unmarked one, by coincidence, which somehow made it more visible.
She pressed her molars together until the ache of it traveled up into her temples. Inside her chest, something hot and humiliated was coiling tighter and tighter, looking for somewhere to go and finding no exit. She was a guest. She was a ’lady’. She had come here with a purpose, a legitimate purpose, and instead she was standing in a room with handprint-warm cheeks being made to— to ’perform’ gratitude like a child reciting a lesson in front of the class—







