Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 238 --

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Chapter 238: Chapter-238

"I came to this palace seventeen years ago," she said. "I was told the usual things — political alliance, bloodline compatibility, the honour of the position. All of it true and none of it the real reason." She paused. "The real reason was that my family had information. About the sealed record. About the child. And the Emperor — your father — wanted that information where he could watch it."

"Your family knew about Caius," Elara said.

"My family’s estate borders the eastern reach," the Third Consort said. "When a child of significant bloodline is placed with a minor house and constructed histories are filed, word moves through certain channels. My grandfather knew within five years." She paused. "He kept the knowledge as insurance. My father kept it the same way. When the Emperor’s people came looking for what we knew, the negotiation resulted in my presence here."

"A hostage," Elara said.

"A consultant," the Third Consort said, with the faintest shift in her expression that wasn’t quite dry amusement but was adjacent to it. "With limited mobility and no independent correspondence."

Elara looked at her. "For seventeen years."

"The Emperor was thorough," the Third Consort said. It was not said with bitterness. Just accuracy. "He wanted the knowledge contained. My family kept their silence. I kept mine. It was an arrangement." She paused. "A workable one, until eight months before he died." 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

"When someone else found out," Elara said.

"When someone else found out," the Third Consort confirmed. "I don’t know how. I have theories. But something changed — the Emperor became — different. More controlled in certain ways. Less in others. He began making small adjustments I didn’t understand at the time." She paused. "I understand them now."

"He was trying to move first," Elara said.

"He was trying to neutralise the advantage before someone used it," the Third Consort said. "But he ran out of time."

Elara thought about this for a moment. The corridor was very quiet. Mahir had not moved.

"The illness," Elara said.

The Third Consort was silent for three seconds.

"I cannot prove it," she said. "I want to be precise about that. I cannot prove it was deliberate. What I can tell you is that the Emperor was not a fragile man, and what happened to him over those final months did not look like natural decline." She paused. "It looked like something that had been introduced and managed carefully enough to produce a specific timeline."

"Long enough to destabilise succession," Elara said. "Not long enough to allow him to act on what he knew."

"Yes," the Third Consort said quietly.

They stood with that for a moment.

Elara thought about the manifest. The three shipments. The amendments to bloodline records. The seventh prince, dead fourteen months ago of a magical deficiency documented eight months before it killed him.

She thought about a name she had burned over a lamp flame.

She thought about the Third Princess standing at a colonnade this morning, calling her name across a public courtyard in front of witnesses.

Pieces, arranging themselves.

"Why me," Elara said. "You’ve been in this palace for seventeen years. You have had seventeen years of emperors and politics and people with power. Why now, and why me."

The Third Consort looked at her directly.

"Because you went into the archive," she said. "In your first month of regency. And you found what you found without anyone pointing you toward it." She paused. "And because you are the only person in this palace who I believe will do something with the information rather than use it as currency."

"Everyone uses information as currency," Elara said.

"No," the Third Consort said. "Most people use it as currency. You use it as architecture." A pause. "I have been watching you since you woke up. Since the first morning, when you sent those knights out of your courtyard and gave a single nod to a fox-eared guard who had never been nodded to by anyone." She paused. "That is not someone who uses information as currency. That is someone building something."

Elara looked at her.

She did not feel things the way other people felt things. She had established this, accepted this, built functional systems around it across two lifetimes.

But there was something in the way the Third Consort said *building something* — direct, clear, without flattery or agenda visible in it — that landed differently than the usual assessments people made of her.

"What do you want," Elara said. "From this conversation. From whatever happens next."

The Third Consort was quiet for a moment.

"I want him to know what he is," she said. "Before the people who already know use it to destroy him or use him to destroy someone else." She paused. "I want seventeen years of silence to have been worth something." Another pause, shorter. "And I want to stop carrying this alone."

The last sentence was delivered in exactly the same tone as everything preceding it. Level, controlled, precise.

But it was different from everything preceding it.

Elara recognised the difference. The same way she recognised micro-expressions and weight-shifts and the specific quality of stillness that meant something was being held under pressure. She had learned to recognise the shape of things people carried without showing.

Seventeen years.

She looked at the Third Consort, who was standing in a corridor she had found specifically because it was unobserved, who had been waiting eleven days for this conversation, who had kept a secret across two emperors and three political crises and one orchestrated death that she couldn’t prove.

"All right," Elara said.

The Third Consort looked at her. "All right?"

"You’re not carrying it alone anymore," Elara said. Simply. Factually. "I have the record. I have the manifest. I have the amendment structure. I have most of the picture." She paused. "What I need from you is what you know about the mechanism. Specifically how the succession magic was administered and by whom, because without that piece the rest is inference."

The Third Consort was quiet for a moment.

Something moved through her expression — not relief exactly. Something more controlled than relief but in the same family. The particular quality of a weight being shared that had been held alone long enough to stop feeling like a weight and start feeling like a structural feature.

"I know the physician," she said. "The secondary one. Not the Emperor’s personal physician — the one brought in during the final four months under the cover of a second opinion." She paused. "I know his name and I know where he is now."

"Is he alive," Elara said.

"As of three weeks ago, yes. Living outside the capital. He believes he has been forgotten." A pause. "He has not been forgotten. He has been left in place intentionally, which means he is still useful to someone and therefore still reachable."

"Can you get to him without it being traced," Elara said.

"If I move quickly," the Third Consort said. "Before whoever is watching my movements updates their observation schedule." She paused. "I would need to leave tonight."

Elara thought for three seconds.

"I’ll arrange a document," she said. "Regent’s travel authorisation, standard format, nothing that marks the destination as significant. It will show a visit to a northern estate — close enough to the actual route to be believable if checked." She paused. "Take two people you trust completely. Not palace staff."