Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 215 --

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Chapter 215: Chapter-215

"I’m okay with survival." Elara walked slowly toward the bed, each step obviously painful. "Mahir consented because he values my survival more than his temporary discomfort. That’s his choice. I accepted his offer because the alternative was death. That’s my choice. Both choices were informed. Both were documented. Both were legal."

She sat on the bed carefully.

"If you want to judge the ethics of a system where Beast Knights serve with such absolute loyalty that they’ll consent to physical harm to save their masters, fine. Judge the system. But don’t accuse me of violating consent when I followed every legal protocol specifically to ’avoid’ that violation."

The System floated silently for a long moment.

"The goddess isn’t going to care about legal protocols," it said finally. "She’s going to care that you hurt someone. That you treated him like a tool."

"He ’is’ a tool. A willing one. Who volunteered." Elara lay back down, exhausted. "The goddess can express her opinions when I die. Until then, I survive using whatever resources are legally and consensually available. Including Beast Knights who explicitly agree to be used that way."

"You really don’t see the problem."

"I see a problem with a system that makes people so loyal they’ll consent to harm. I don’t see a problem with utilizing that system once it exists. I didn’t create it. I’m just working within it."

The System stared at her. "You’re impossible." 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮

"I’ve been told." Elara closed her eyes. "Now either help me or leave. I need rest and your moral outrage isn’t useful."

The System faded from view, unable to continue the conversation.

And Elara lay alone, body aching, conscience clear, having followed every rule precisely to get exactly what she needed.

Legal. Documented. Consensual within the parameters of this world’s systems.

Monstrous in outcome. Perfect in execution.

Just like everything else she did.

The document lay on the floor where the System had dropped it.

Evidence that Elara had planned this.

Evidence that she’d gotten consent.

Evidence that she was exactly as ruthless and calculating as everyone feared.

But also evidence that she wasn’t a criminal.

Just someone willing to use every legal option to survive.

No matter how much it hurt the people who served her.

No matter how much it revealed about what she’d become.

She’d survived.

That was all that mattered.

Wasn’t it?

.

.

.

The walk to her office took three times longer than usual.

Elara moved through the palace corridors at a pace that would have embarrassed her two weeks ago—slow, deliberate, one hand occasionally brushing the wall when her legs threatened to buckle. Every step pulled at muscles that had been pushed far past their limits. Every staircase required planning.

She ignored the pain. Pain was data. Inconvenient data, but manageable.

The System floated beside her in loaded silence, still clutching the contract document, occasionally opening its mouth and closing it again like a fish that kept reconsidering whether to bite the hook.

"He’s in the medical wing," it tried eventually, voice subdued. "Cullens estimated thirty-six hours minimum recovery time—"

"I know where he is," Elara said flatly. "Ken sent a report at dawn."

"And you’re not—"

"Concern is an emotion," Elara said. "I don’t process those correctly. I’m aware of his status. Recovery proceeding within expected parameters. No permanent damage confirmed. That’s the relevant data."

The System made a sound that was not quite a sigh and not quite a groan but contained elements of both.

They walked in silence for another corridor length before Elara stopped.

Not by choice.

Because Mahir was standing outside her office door.

Full ceremonial armor, polished to the kind of mirror finish that took hours and genuine care to achieve. Back straight. Shoulders squared. Fox ears alert, upright, tracking the corridor with professional attention. Tail held with quiet, composed dignity.

And his face—

Elara stopped completely.

She had catalogued Mahir’s expressions systematically over months of daily proximity. Professional composure during duty. Focused intensity during combat drills. The controlled blankness of a trained knight suppressing reactions he wasn’t permitted to show. Occasional carefully suppressed flickers of emotion—quickly buried, quickly professional again.

She had never seen him look like *this.*

He looked like someone had reached inside him and removed something heavy that had been lodged there so long he’d forgotten what breathing without it felt like. Like a room that had been shut for years and finally had its windows thrown open. The military precision of his posture was identical to always—but the *quality* of it was different. He wasn’t holding himself rigid to maintain the shape. He was simply standing, and the shape happened naturally.

His amber eyes caught the morning light differently. Clearer. Warmer. Like the quality of the light itself had changed rather than anything in the room.

He saw her coming and bowed immediately, perfectly formal. "Your Highness."

"Mahir." Elara stopped several feet away, studying him with systematic assessment. No visible physical impairment in stance. Movement fluid when he bowed—no guarding of injury sites, no compensating weight distribution. Amber eyes tracking her with sharp, alert focus rather than pain-fogged glaze. "You were scheduled to remain in the medical wing until tomorrow at minimum."

"Master Cullens cleared me ahead of projected timeline this morning, Your Highness." His voice was steady, composed, completely professional. But underneath the professional tone was something she had no prior recording of—a settled quality, like a deep note that had been struck and was still resonating. "Beast physiology recovers faster than human baseline. I wanted to resume my post."

"You *wanted* to," Elara said. Not quite a question. Not quite anything she had a category for.

"Yes, Your Highness."

She held his gaze for a moment. Something in his expression resisted clean classification. Not the desperate, overwhelmed quality she’d witnessed during three days of intensive service. Not the blank professional mask of normal duty. Something precisely between—something that looked, if she forced herself to name it with the vocabulary she had available, almost exactly like *peace.*

She filed the data point.

"Open the door," she said.

He did, stepping aside with perfect efficiency. She walked past him into her office.

The System mouse zipped through the doorway behind her and immediately planted itself in front of her face, pointing emphatically back at the door.

"Did you *see* that?" it whispered, voice pitching up with barely suppressed something. "Did you look at his *face*?"

"Yes," Elara said, moving to her desk and sitting down with careful, controlled movements that minimized the visibility of how much everything ached.

"He looked—he genuinely looked *happy*. Not ’relieved’ happy or ’duty completed’ happy but actually—"

"I noticed," Elara said.

"But you said it was purely clinical! Medical protocol! Transactional! No emotion—"

"My emotional state during the procedure was irrelevant to his," Elara said, pulling the first document stack toward her. "Whatever he’s processing is his own neurological response to events. I don’t control that."

"That doesn’t—doesn’t that mean *something* to you?"

"It means the procedure produced no adverse psychological outcomes, which improves protocol sustainability," Elara said. "That’s relevant data."

The System hovered in place, wings buzzing with agitation at a frequency she recognized as ’deeply frustrated but uncertain how to articulate why.’ It landed on the corner of her desk with a thump that was too deliberate to be accidental and sat with its small arms folded.