Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 239 --
"I have two," the Third Consort said. "From my family’s household. They’ve been with me since before I came here."
"Go tonight," Elara said. "Come back with whatever he tells you and anything he has in writing." She paused. "And come back before the third bell tomorrow afternoon."
The Third Consort looked at her steadily. "The Third Princess."
"She requested a meeting," Elara said. "I want everything assembled before I walk into it."
A silence.
"She knows more than she has shown," the Third Consort said carefully. "The Third Princess. She has been — quiet, for someone with her capabilities. That kind of quiet is not neutral."
"No," Elara agreed. "It isn’t."
"Be careful with her," the Third Consort said. Not a warning exactly. More like the specific caution of someone who had watched a particular chess player for years and had opinions about their style. "She is not cruel. She is not reckless. She is the most patient person I have encountered in seventeen years of this palace, which is the most dangerous thing a person in her position can be."
Elara thought about the colonnade. The public witness. The specific phrasing — *before they become complicated.*
"I know," she said.
The Third Consort nodded once. She looked, Elara thought, like someone who had set down something heavy and was still adjusting to the change in balance.
"I’ll go tonight," she said.
"I’ll have the document sent to your quarters within the hour," Elara said. "Discreetly."
The Third Consort inclined her head. Then she turned and walked back down the corridor the way she’d come, unhurried, the grey of her clothes absorbing the dim light until she rounded the corner and was gone.
Elara stood where she was.
Mahir appeared beside her without announcement — he’d moved so quietly she registered his presence by proximity rather than sound.
"The document," she said.
"I heard," he said. "I’ll draft it. Your seal or the regent’s formal stamp?"
"Formal stamp," Elara said. "Formal means anyone checking it will spend time on verification rather than content."
"Done." A pause. "She’s credible."
"Yes."
"You believed her."
"I believed the parts that were verifiable against what I already have," Elara said. "Which is most of it." She paused. "The rest I’ll verify when she comes back."
"If she comes back," Mahir said. Not pessimism — just accuracy, which she appreciated.
"If she comes back," Elara agreed. She started walking toward the exit. "Which is why I need Ken and Caius back before tonight. And Mira’s cross-references. And Dimitri’s amendment records." She paused. "And probably more tea."
"Strong," Mahir said, falling into step.
"Very," she said.
They walked out of the archive building and into the afternoon light, which had turned gold while they were inside, the kind of late-afternoon gold that made the palace look like it was made of something warmer than it was.
Elara didn’t find it particularly beautiful. She found it useful — it meant the day was ending, which meant the timeline was advancing, which meant she had approximately eighteen hours to assemble everything before a meeting that was going to determine the shape of the next several months.
Eighteen hours.
She had worked with less.
She walked faster.
.
.
.
Three hours later....
Ken and Caius returned at the sixth bell.
Elara heard them before she saw them — not because they were loud, but because she had learned the specific sound of her household returning from something that had not gone entirely as planned. Slightly faster footsteps. The particular quality of quiet that meant people were holding information they hadn’t processed yet.
She set down her pen.
They came through the door in the order they always came through doors — Ken first, assessing the room before his body fully committed to entering it, Caius behind with the careful posture of someone who had spent an hour deciding how to present what he was about to present.
"Report," Elara said.
Ken sat. Caius sat. Ken looked at Caius, which meant the information was Caius’s to deliver.
Caius placed a folded document on the desk.
"She had it already copied," he said. "She’s been carrying it for two months waiting for someone to ask the right questions." He paused. "She was very frightened."
"Is she safe," Elara said.
"She left the capital this afternoon. Her family is eastern province. She had the travel already arranged — she’s been planning to leave for weeks. She was only waiting to give this to someone she trusted." He looked at Ken. "Ken convinced her."
Ken said nothing, which meant there was a story there that wasn’t relevant to the current conversation and would probably be mildly interesting later.
Elara unfolded the document.
The physician’s records. Not the official ones — the secondary physician’s, handwritten, the kind of notes a careful person made for themselves when they understood what they were participating in and wanted a record that existed outside the official channels. Dates, dosages, observations. The precise clinical language of someone who had been trained to document accurately even when accuracy was dangerous.
She read it through once.
Set it down.
Picked it up and read it again.
When she finished the second time she placed it on the desk beside the three copied archive documents, beside Mira’s budget cross-references which had arrived an hour ago, beside Dimitri’s amendment records which had arrived forty minutes after that, and looked at the full arrangement.
Seven documents. One manifest. Three shipment records.
Everything assembled.
The picture was complete.
She sat with it for a moment — not from sentiment, not from drama, but because complete pictures required a final assessment before action, and she was precise about assessment.
"Get everyone," she said. "Full household. I want Mira, Dimitri, Ken, Caius, Mahir. Anyone else who has been working on any piece of this." She paused. "Now."
---
They assembled in eight minutes.
The office was not built for seven people plus the fox knight who took his position by the door without being directed to it. It was slightly crowded. Nobody mentioned it.
Elara stood at the desk. She did not sit. Standing was for when she needed the room to be paying a specific quality of attention, and she needed that now.
She looked at the assembled faces.
Mira, who had been the first person she’d hired and who had not disappointed once. Dimitri, ink-stained and careful and better at finding things that didn’t want to be found than anyone she’d employed. Ken, steady and sharp and entirely committed to outcomes in a way that had nothing to do with obligation. Caius, who was sitting in his chair with the expression of a man who suspected the conversation was about to move in a direction that concerned him personally. The fox knight by the door, ears forward, professional and present.
And Mahir, standing slightly behind her left shoulder, exactly where he always stood.
"I’m going to tell you what we have," Elara said. "All of it. No edited version, no partial picture. You’ve each been working on pieces. You need the whole." She paused. "After I’m done, I need strategy. Not reactions. Strategy."
She told them. 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦
It took twenty-three minutes.
She covered the manifest, the shipments, the amendment structure, the seventh prince, the sealed record, the Third Consort’s corridor appearance, the secondary physician’s notes. She covered the name she hadn’t put in writing anywhere. She covered what the succession magic had been used for, what it had done to specific bloodline markers, what the physician’s notes confirmed about the Emperor’s final months.







