Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 208 --

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Chapter 208: Chapter-208

"So was the Emperor’s assassination by palace conspiracy," Elara replied. "So was discovering a Harem of enslaved women. So was the Crown Princess attempting regicide. This entire situation is unprecedented. We adapt or we collapse. Those are the options."

Minister Garen—one of the senior bureaucrats who’d worked with her closely—stood. "Your Highness, what you’re proposing is essentially permanent regency. That requires legal framework beyond existing protocols. We’d need to draft new imperial codes, ratify them through proper channels, establish succession contingencies if you become incapacitated—"

"Then draft them," Elara said. "Assemble a legal committee. Create the frameworks. Build the codes. But do it while I continue governing, not while we throw everything into chaos trying to crown someone who doesn’t exist."

She looked around the chamber.

"I’m not claiming the throne. I’m not demanding coronation. I’m offering to continue doing what I’m already doing—keeping the empire functional—while you figure out whether there’s a better alternative. If someone identifies a superior candidate with legitimate claim and proven capability, I’ll step aside. But until then, I govern. With your consultation. Under your oversight. Within frameworks we build together."

"And if we refuse?" Duke Harren asked quietly.

"Then you’ll need to remove me by force," Elara said flatly. "Which means deploying military assets against the acting regent, fracturing Beast Knight loyalty, destabilizing administrative structures, and probably triggering civil conflicts. Is that your preference, Duke Harren? Civil war over ceremonial titles?"

The Duke’s face went red. "Your Highness, I’m not suggesting—"

"Then what ’are’ you suggesting? Specifically. With actionable details. Not ’we should follow tradition’—give me an actual plan. Who governs starting tomorrow morning? Through what authority? With whose support? How do you prevent the three-month transition chaos that historically follows contested successions?"

No answer.

Because no one had a plan. They just had discomfort with a Fourth Princess effectively claiming power.

Elara waited.

Let the silence stretch.

Let them all sit with the reality that removing her was harder than accepting her.

Finally, Countess Verra spoke again. "If we accept this framework—permanent regency with council oversight—what prevents you from eventually claiming the throne anyway? What stops this from being a slow path to imperial coronation?"

"Nothing," Elara admitted. "Except that I don’t want the throne. The throne is ceremonial burden with minimal additional authority. I have more practical power as regent than I would as empress—regents govern, empresses perform. I’m not interested in performance."

"But—"

"If I wanted absolute power, Countess, I’d have claimed it already. The Beast Knights follow me. The military respects me. The administrative apparatus operates through me. I could declare myself Empress tomorrow and most of the empire would accept it out of pure inertia." Elara’s voice was calm. Clinical. "I’m not doing that because it’s strategically inefficient. The title creates targets. Creates expectations. Creates ceremonial obligations that waste time I’d rather spend governing."

She spread her hands slightly.

"So I’m offering you a deal: I do the actual work of running the empire. You maintain the fiction that this is temporary oversight until ’proper’ succession occurs. We build frameworks that prevent abuse of authority. Everyone gets what they actually need—functional government and political dignity—without forcing a crisis neither of us can afford."

The council chamber buzzed with quiet discussions. Nobles conferring with each other. Ministers calculating political angles. Religious officials trying to find doctrinal precedent.

Minister Garen stood again. "Your Highness, I move that we establish a committee to draft formal regency protocols as you’ve outlined. Six months to develop frameworks, with Your Highness continuing governance during that period. At the end of six months, we reconvene to evaluate the system and determine if modifications are needed."

"Seconded," Countess Verra said immediately.

"All in favor?" Garen called.

Hands rose throughout the chamber. Not all of them. Duke Harren’s remained firmly down. Several other conservative nobles abstained.

But enough hands rose to constitute majority approval.

"Motion carries," Minister Garen announced. "The regency continues under committee-developed frameworks. We reconvene in six months for evaluation."

Elara nodded once. "This council is adjourned. Committee assignments will be distributed by end of week. All current governance structures remain operational during framework development."

She stepped down from the podium and walked out with the same measured pace she’d entered, Beast Knights forming around her like a living shield.

Behind her, the chamber erupted in conversation—some angry, some relieved, all of it political maneuvering as nobles tried to position themselves within the new reality.

Elara didn’t look back.

Just kept walking until she reached the corridor, turned a corner, and stopped.

Leaned against the wall.

Closed her eyes.

"That was exhausting," she said quietly.

Ken appeared at her elbow. "You were magnificent, Your Highness. Completely outmaneuvered them."

"I backed them into a corner where accepting me was easier than fighting. That’s not maneuvering. That’s just eliminating alternatives until I’m the default option."

"Still impressive."

"It’s temporary." Elara opened her eyes. "Six months before they try again. Six months to consolidate enough support that the next challenge fails even harder. Six months to find a cure for the poison and eliminate my biggest vulnerability."

"And if you can’t find a cure?"

"Then I survive another six months through episodes and emergency protocols and whatever cost that requires." She pushed off the wall. "One crisis at a time. Right now, I’ve bought time. That’s victory enough."

They walked back toward her office, where approximately seven thousand documents waited for review.

The System materialized beside her, bobbing along at shoulder height.

"You basically just made yourself permanent ruler without officially claiming the throne," it observed. "That’s... actually kind of brilliant. Evil, but brilliant."

"Not evil. Efficient." Elara turned a corner. "They get to maintain their dignity. I get to maintain power. Everyone pretends this is temporary while I make it permanent through sheer operational necessity. Classic political engineering."

"The goddess is going to have ’opinions’."

"The goddess always has opinions." Elara reached her office, pushed open the door. "But she gave me a second life to use as I saw fit. If she didn’t want me consolidating power, she shouldn’t have dropped me into a palace full of assassins and conspirators."

She sat at her desk, pulled the first document toward her, and got back to work.

Because impossible girls didn’t celebrate victories.

They just moved to the next task.

Always.

Six months.

She had six months to make herself indispensable.

Six months to cure the poison.

Six months to build something that couldn’t be dismantled even if they tried.

She’d survived this long.

She could survive six months more.

Probably.

Maybe.

The pen moved across paper, making decisions, shaping policy, governing an empire that didn’t quite realize it had just accepted a permanent ruler who’d never officially claimed the throne.

Efficient.

Clean.

Perfect.

Just like she’d calculated.

**Location:** Elara’s Private Chambers, Late Evening After the Council

***

Elara made it through exactly four hours of document review before her hand started trembling.

Not fatigue trembling. Not the normal exhaustion that came from governing an empire while poisoned.

*Heat* trembling.

She set down her pen carefully, watching her fingers shake against the dark wood of her desk. The tremor was subtle but unmistakable—the same warning sign that had preceded the catastrophic episode two weeks ago.

[WARNING: MAGICAL PRESSURE RISING]

[PATTERN: IRREGULAR - UNPREDICTABLE SPIKE IMMINENT]

The System’s display flashed across her vision, red and urgent.