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Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 182 --
Elara waited until the door shut behind the last person before saying, "Out."
The physician bowed himself backward, Ken hesitated half a heartbeat, then followed the others. The latch clicked. Silence dropped over the room like a curtain.
She crossed to the sofa and let herself sink into it, body folding in that careful, controlled way of someone who understood exactly how much give their muscles had left. When her back touched the cushions, every bruise and ache made itself known at once. Her fingers—still scraped from clutching sheets and stone during the earlier episode—twitched against the upholstery, nerves firing at random.
She closed her eyes. Just for a second.
For three heartbeats there was nothing but the faint ringing in her skull and the deep, rhythmic thud of her own tired heart.
"Well, you don’t look ’slightly’ tired."
The voice was light and bright, like a bell struck in a quiet room.
Elara’s eyes snapped open.
The room was empty. Sofa, table, discarded ceremonial coat on the armrest. Door closed. No sound of hinges, no footsteps, no flare of magic near the threshold.
This body might be fragile, she thought, but I am not hallucinating ’yet’.
She pressed two fingers to her forehead, more to steady the throb than anything else, and shut her eyes again.
"What are you rubbing your forehead for again? Do you want to become bald?"
Elara turned her head sharply toward the voice.
Something small hovered in the air near the bookshelf. A... mouse?
At least, that was her brain’s best classification. It was roughly mouse-shaped, but wrong in too many ways: too round, too fluffy, fur an indeterminate shade between white and grey that shimmered slightly as if lit from within. Its ears were ridiculously big, taking up half its face, and its eyes were massive—cartoonishly so, glossy and bright, staring back at her with unnerving focus. Tiny translucent wings buzzed at its sides, keeping it aloft.
It looked like a children’s toy had mated with an overenthusiastic sketch artist’s idea of "cute."
"You," Elara said flatly. "What the hell."
The creature beamed, revealing two tiny, gleaming front teeth. "Hello, Host! I am your System." It puffed its little chest out proudly, as if expecting applause.
Elara just stared. Then, very calmly, she asked, "What are you, and how did you enter my room without permission?"
The mouse-thing’s ears twitched. Its tail—too long, with a little tuft at the end—curled lazily. "Interesting," it murmured, starting to circle her in a slow, bobbing orbit, as if inspecting a specimen. "As my master said, you really do ’not’ feel emotion, huh? There isn’t even a bit of scared on your face. Hm. No fear. No happiness. Fascinating."
"What exactly do you mean by that?" Elara’s tone sharpened by a fraction. "Fear and happiness are chemical responses. I’m tired. That’s sufficient input."
"Well," the mouse said, stopping right in front of her nose, hanging there upside down like an over-caffeinated bat, "’normally’ when a strange being like me appears out of nowhere and starts talking, a human should be surprised, or scared, or maybe excited. Isn’t that what a normal reaction would be?"
"Possibly," Elara said. "I am not normal."
The mouse blinked. Once. Twice.
"No kidding," it muttered. Then, louder: "You’re taking this ’very’ calmly."
"There are three possibilities," Elara replied, ticking them off on her fingers. "One: I am hallucinating from exhaustion and residual poison. Two: you are some kind of external magical construct sent to spy on or manipulate me. Three: you are what you claim—an interface attached to my consciousness, presumably by the same entity that dragged me between worlds."
She met its oversized eyes without flinching. "In none of those scenarios is screaming productive. So I’m optimizing."
The mouse stared at her for a long moment, then burst into a high, chiming laugh.
"Oh, this is going to be ’fun’," it said. "She said you processed like this, but I thought she was exaggerating."
"She?" Elara repeated. "The... voice from the white space, I assume."
The mouse’s ears perked. "Oho. You ’remember’ her."
"I don’t tend to forget entities who threaten to downgrade my consciousness to insect level if I die carelessly," Elara said. "Now answer the question: what are you."
"I told you," it said cheerfully. "I’m your System."
"’System’ is a function, not a species."
"Then I’m both." It spread its tiny arms wide. "Think of me as a... management interface for your second life. Quests, rewards, guidance, occasional commentary on your terrible self-care habits. I process instructions from Above and translate them so your very stiff, very overclocked brain can understand them without melting."
"I understood her just fine," Elara said. "Once she stopped being dramatic."
The mouse choked. "’Dramatic?’ She showed you punitive reincarnation loops and you called them efficient."
"They were efficient," Elara said. "From a resource-management standpoint." 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮
The creature floated slightly closer, squinting at her. "You know, usually when people wake up from near-death, talk to a higher existence, and then meet their System spirit, they cry. Or swear eternal loyalty. Or at ’least’ have a minor existential crisis."
"Crying wastes water," Elara said. "Existential crises waste time."
The mouse paused, then nodded thoughtfully. "Alright, fair. Still creepy, but fair."
It drifted down until it was hovering just above her knees, tail-tip flicking idly. "Anyway. You’re not hallucinating. You’re not being spied on—well, not by ’me’, I have privacy protocols. And yes, this is the same ’System’ you argued with earlier, just... more portable. Think of me as the avatar she bolted onto your soul to nag you continuously instead of only in the white room."
"That sounds inefficient for her," Elara said. "But if it increases compliance with her desired behavioral adjustments, I suppose the overhead is justified."
"Do you ’ever’ hear yourself?" the mouse demanded.
"Yes. I make a habit of it. It reduces unforced errors."
It made an inarticulate squeaking noise that might have been the System equivalent of a groan, then flopped sideways in the air, one tiny paw over its face. "Okay. Okay. Right. Step one: emotional calibration clearly pointless. We’ll try another route."
"Emotional calibration was always going to be pointless," Elara agreed. "I told her that."
"Yeah, well, she’s sentimental," the mouse said. "Keeps hoping people will suddenly discover the joys of crying and hugging if she just traumatizes them artistically enough."
"Not a strategy I recommend," Elara said. "Now. Why appear ’now’? You could have done this the moment I transmigrated. Why wait until after poison, repeated magical overload, and social warfare?"
The mouse righted itself and shrugged midair. "Activation conditions. You didn’t meet the prerequisites before."
"Which were?"
A tiny translucent panel popped into existence beside it, lines of glowing script scrolling down too fast for a human eye to follow. Elara watched anyway.
"Let’s see..." The mouse dragged a paw down the list. "Soul transfer: complete. Baseline intelligence: off the charts, obviously. Emotional processing: broken, also obviously. Willingness to live: ...debated. Then the last one—ah." It tapped the air. "’Conscious decision to adjust self-preservation parameters.’ You only flagged that one green in the white space about five minutes ago."
As Elara observed the stranger’s system, she was overwhelmed by a strong temptation to touch its ears for the first time, yet she endeavored to remain calm.







