Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 234 --

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Chapter 234: Chapter-234

He was also fairly certain he didn’t need to. Understanding wasn’t the point.

A smile crossed his face — slow, private, not meant for anyone. The particular smile of someone sitting with something they didn’t have a name for yet but recognized as significant.

He had served in three noble households before this one. Had been valued, fed, clothed, assigned rotations. Had done his work correctly and been acknowledged for it correctly and felt, at the end of every day, more or less the same as he’d felt at the beginning.

He had not felt like this.

This specific quality — the settled thing, the strange peace, the sense of fitting into a space that had been the exact shape of him all along without him knowing — he had not felt this before. Not once. Not in thirty-two years of living or twelve years of service.

He looked at her sleeping face.

His bottom ached. His thighs burned. His spine was sending steady unhappy reports upward. He had slept on a waiting sofa at an angle designed for sitting, not sleeping, and his neck had opinions about that.

He was, by most objective measures, not comfortable.

He was also — and this was the part he couldn’t quite account for — more content than he had been in years.

Maybe ever.

The dawn light was strengthening, grey turning gold at the window edges. He could hear the first distant sounds of the palace waking up — the kitchen beginning its morning routines far below, boots on stone in some far corridor, a door opening somewhere.

He had maybe twenty minutes before the outer office door would show the first servant or clerk.

He looked at Elara.

She needed the sleep. That much was obvious — she’d been running at an unsustainable pace since the regency began, paper-thin sleep and impossible workloads and the poison management and the political maneuvering. She needed every minute she could get.

He also knew, with complete certainty, that she would want to be awake and composed before any staff member arrived. That she would be furious with herself — not with him, not dramatically, just that cold internal recalibration — if she was found asleep in her office chair by anyone.

Fifteen minutes, he decided. He’d let her have fifteen more minutes.

He stayed on his knees in front of the chair, keeping watch. Fox ears rotated slowly, tracking the sounds of the palace waking around them, monitoring for anything that moved toward this corridor.

The morning light crept across the floor.

He looked at her.

The smile came back without his permission.

He really liked this person.

He hadn’t planned on that. It wasn’t in the contract. It wasn’t protocol. It wasn’t something the collar enforced or the bond required.

It had just — happened. Quietly. The way the important things apparently did with her, whether she chose them or not.

Thirteen minutes.

He watched the door.

Let her sleep.

Outside, the palace woke into its ordinary enormous life, completely unaware that one of its knights was kneeling on a wrecked office floor in the early morning light, managing pain he didn’t mind, keeping watch for a master he didn’t understand and wasn’t sure he needed to, wearing an expression he had absolutely no category for.

Twelve minutes.

He could wait.

.

.

.

Elara woke at the note.

Not at the light, which had progressed from grey to gold while she slept. Not at the sounds of the palace beginning its morning routines beyond the door. Not even at the specific ache in her neck that announced itself the moment she lifted her head.

At the note.

Her eyes opened and found it immediately, exactly where it had been placed to be found, and she was awake in the complete way she always woke — no gradual surfacing, no blurred edges — and she read it once.

*Documents complete. East column first.*

She looked at it for a moment.

Then she looked at the sofa, which was empty and neatly straightened, the cushions returned to their original positions with a precision that suggested military habit rather than household staff.

She looked at the coat over her shoulders.

She took it off, folded it with the same precision, and set it on the corner of the desk. Then she picked up the pen still in her hand — she’d apparently held onto it through several hours of sleep, which said something about her — capped it, and set it down beside the note.

She rolled her neck once. Winced. Filed it.

Then she pulled the east column toward her and began.

---

By the time the first proper knock came — two hours later, sharp and official — she had worked through three of the seven columns, started a secondary document connecting the manifest dates to Caius’s timeline, and consumed two cups of tea that someone had left outside her door at some point without disturbing her.

She suspected Mahir.

She didn’t remark on it.

"Enter," she said.

The door opened. Ken came in first, then Dimitri with his perpetual ink-stained fingers and cautious posture, then Mira, then Caius — who had clearly slept, changed into fresh clothes, and was watching the room with those careful eyes that had stopped performing anything and simply observed.

And then Mahir.

He looked entirely normal. Composed, professional, the specific quality of stillness he carried everywhere. He took his position near the door without being directed to it, which was habit, and his expression was the one he wore in operational settings — attentive, neutral, present.

The only evidence of anything was the very slight adjustment in how he stood. A fractional favouring of his weight, almost invisible. She would not have noticed it three months ago.

She noticed it now.

She said nothing about it.

"Sit," she said, to the room in general.

They arranged themselves. Dimitri and Mira at the table with their notes. Caius in the chair that had become, apparently, his designated chair in the two days he’d been in this wing. Ken beside him. Mahir remained standing by the door, which was his preference in working sessions — he said he thought better on his feet, which she suspected was true and also an excuse to remain positioned between her and the exit.

She stood at the desk and turned the manifest so it faced the room.

"This came out of a Valen-controlled port three months ago," she said. "Original manifest, amended before customs cleared it. The amendment removed the listed cargo. What was actually being transported is on that page."

Silence as they read.

Mira’s face went carefully neutral in the way that meant she’d understood the implications and was deciding how alarmed to be. Dimitri read it twice, which he always did before reacting to anything. Ken looked up after approximately four seconds, which told her he’d identified the relevant section immediately.

Caius already knew. He watched the others reading instead.

"Succession magic," Ken said.

"Yes."

"The old classification. Pre-fourth dynasty restriction."

"Yes."

"That’s—" Dimitri started, then stopped, reorganising his words. "That’s not just illegal. That’s the kind of illegal that gets an entire house executed and removed from imperial records."

"Yes," Elara said. "Which tells us two things. First, whoever ordered this shipment is confident they won’t be caught. Second, they are either planning to use it soon, or they’ve already used a portion of it and are acquiring more."