Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 247 --

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Chapter 247: Chapter-247

Mahir looked at her steadily.

"I’ve read the Knight Collar Governance Charter from the original drafting period," Elara said. "Sections nine through seventeen specifically — the extraction protocol documentation, the consent frameworks, the oversight requirements." She paused. "The collars in their current configuration were never legally authorized under the Charter. The extraction function was added fourteen years ago under a discretionary amendment that bypassed the oversight committee. It was signed by the Empress Dowager’s office." Another pause. "It was never disclosed to the knights who wore them."

Mahir said nothing.

"That’s not a collar system," Elara said. "That’s a surveillance architecture designed to look like one." She looked at the document stack. "What you and every knight in this palace has been wearing — what you’ve been serving under — was constructed without your knowledge to function in a way you never agreed to."

Still nothing from Mahir. But something had shifted in his stillness.

"I can’t undo fourteen years," Elara said. "I can’t give back what was taken without consent. But I can end it, establish an independent audit of what was extracted and when, ensure the information is destroyed with documentation of destruction, and rebuild the collar framework from the original Charter specifications — which do not include extraction." She paused. "That’s what the review means. Not a technical adjustment. A full replacement with proper legal authorization and full disclosure to every knight involved."

Mahir looked at her for a long moment.

"You found this six days ago," he said. "When you found the amendment for the ninth prince."

"Four days ago," she said. "The connection between the amendment timeline and the collar extraction records."

"You’ve been carrying it for four days," he said.

"I needed to verify it before I said anything," she said. "Saying it without verification would have caused harm without offering resolution. That’s inefficient."

"Princess Elara," he said.

She looked at him.

He almost never used her name. Not without the title. She had noted it the first time he’d done it, and noted the circumstances — always when something had moved through him that was too large for formality to contain properly.

"I’m sorry," she said.

The words came out slightly more direct than she’d planned. She’d had a more structured version prepared — an acknowledgment of harm, a statement of systemic responsibility, a clear separation between personal culpability and institutional failure. Clinical. Complete.

Instead she’d said ’I’m sorry.’

Two words. Just that.

Mahir looked at her with an expression she didn’t have a complete category for. Something that had several things in it at once — acknowledgment and something older than that, something that had been living in a specific place for a long time and had just been seen for the first time.

"You didn’t build the system," he said.

"No," she said. "But I operate within it, and that creates responsibility for what I know about it." She paused. "You’ve been serving under those collars since you were inducted. Every knight here has. That’s not—" She stopped. Started again. "That’s not how it should work."

Mahir was quiet.

Outside the window the palace was dark, the courtyard below empty except for the night patrol’s distant torchlight.

"The knight who stood outside your door for three days," Mahir said. "Ken. He’s been wearing the collar for eleven years."

"I know," Elara said. "He’s first on the review list."

"He’ll—" Mahir paused. "He won’t show it. You know that. He’ll receive the information and he’ll say ’yes, Your Highness’ and he’ll look exactly the same as he always does."

"I know," Elara said.

"But it’ll matter to him," Mahir said. "Enormously."

"I know," she said again.

The lamp flickered once — a draft from the window — and steadied.

Mahir looked at his hands for a moment. Large hands, calloused, resting easy on his knees now rather than held at his sides.

"Twelve years," he said. "I’ve been wearing it for twelve years." A pause. "You find out something like that and it should feel — different. Angry. Violated." He was quiet. "I do feel those things. I want to be clear that I do."

"Yes," she said.

"But I also—" He stopped. Something crossed his expression that was private enough that she almost looked away to give it space. "The thing underneath the anger is that someone is fixing it. Not explaining it. Not filing it for later. Fixing it, today, before anything else happens." He looked up. "That’s not nothing."

Elara looked at him.

"No," she said. "It isn’t."

They sat in the quiet office for a moment — the lamp, the distant city, the working list with its seventeen items.

"The Empress Dowager," Mahir said. "How close are you."

"Close," Elara said. "I have the amendment documentation, the handwriting identification, the sixth consort’s testimony, the physician’s testimony, and Dimitri’s cross-referenced archive records. I have the network structure partial-mapped." She paused. "What I don’t have yet is a direct evidentiary line connecting her specifically to the collar extraction program rather than just the amendment authorization. That’s the gap."

"The secretary," Mahir said.

"If she reports to the Empress Dowager tonight — which Liam is watching for — and if that communication is intercepted with legal standing, that closes it." She paused. "Or tomorrow’s consorts may have it directly. One of them may have been told something explicit."

"And if none of them do," Mahir said.

"Then I work with what I have," Elara said. "A case built from circumstantial documentation at the highest standard of completeness I can reach is still a case." She paused. "It just takes longer in the council chamber."

Mahir was quiet for a moment. "She’s going to fight it."

"Of course," Elara said. "She’ll call it political persecution. She’ll invoke succession precedent. She’ll attempt to redirect attention to my governance methods, my medical condition, my personal conduct — anything that shifts the question from what she did to who I am." Elara looked at the document stack. "That’s why the documentation has to be complete enough that the question can’t be shifted. Every piece verified. Every connection explicit. Nothing that requires the council to trust my word over hers."

"You’ve been building it that way from the beginning," Mahir said.

"Yes," she said.

He looked at her with that expression again — the one she was still calibrating a category for.

"You knew she’d fight it," he said. "Before you even started. You knew exactly what she’d do and you built the entire thing to make it not matter."

"I made predictions," Elara said. "Based on behavioral patterns and available information. I could be wrong."

"You’re not wrong," Mahir said.

"Possibly," she said. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎

The corner of his mouth moved. Just slightly.

"Possibly," he said.

Elara looked at the working list again. Back to the documents. Then, with the directness she applied to everything: "You should sleep. Properly. Not on the waiting sofa."

Mahir looked at her. Something warm moved through his expression. "You noticed that."

"You were moving carefully all day," she said. "The sofa angle added lumbar stress on top of existing physical impact." She paused. "Go sleep in your quarters. I need you functional tomorrow."

"Is that the only reason," Mahir said. Quiet, careful.

Elara looked at him.

"No," she said. Which surprised her slightly as it came out.

Mahir held her gaze for a moment.