©WebNovelPub
Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 183 - -
"You mean when she explained that repeated careless death would regress my consciousness," Elara said.
"Bingo. Before that, you were in ’high-functioning self-destruct’ mode. We don’t waste full system support on people determined to throw themselves into metaphysical recycling bins."
"I wasn’t determined to die," Elara said. "I was indifferent to the risk. There’s a difference."
"In practice?" The mouse snorted. "Not enough of one. But now—" It pointed a tiny paw at her. "—you have officially agreed not to treat your life like disposable office equipment. Congrats. You unlocked me."
Elara leaned her head back against the sofa and closed her eyes briefly. The ache behind them receded a millimeter.
"So," she said. "You’re here to... what. Give me missions? Scold me about sleep? Hand out gold stars if I don’t get murdered in the next three months?"
"Oh, I ’like’ you," the mouse said. "Sarcastic ’and’ accurate. Yes, roughly. I monitor your status, offer guidance, occasionally intervene if you’re about to do something cosmically stupid. Think of me as your... project manager."
"I’m the project," Elara said. "You’re the tool."
The mouse’s wings stuttered. "You did ’not’ just call me a tool."
"You’re a process bridge between designer and product," Elara said calmly. "That’s what a tool is. That’s not an insult."
It squinted at her for a long beat. "You’re lucky she likes you, you know that?"
"I’m aware she’s invested in my continued existence," Elara said. "She made that extremely clear."
"Good. Then let’s get something ’else’ extremely clear." The mouse floated up until it was at eye level again, ears flaring wide. "You terrify people."
Elara blinked once. "Clarify."
"You sit in rooms full of guards and physicians and princes and talk like a walking, talking audit spreadsheet." Its tail lashed once. "You order mutilations with the same tone you use to ask for tea. You reorganize entire palace wings because the resource allocation offends you. And you almost ’died’ twice in the past two days and treated it like a minor scheduling inconvenience."
"I survived," Elara said. "Therefore it ’was’ a minor inconvenience."
"That," the mouse said flatly, "is exactly what I’m talking about."
They stared at each other.
"You’re trying to induce guilt," Elara observed after a moment. "It won’t work."
"I know," it said. "I was there when she ran the diagnostics on your previous brain. ’Alexithymic to the point of structural limitation,’ remember?"
"Yes." Elara folded her hands loosely in her lap. "So what ’is’ your goal right now?"
The mouse took a deep breath—purely performative, since it clearly didn’t have lungs. "Goal one: keep you alive. Goal two: keep you sane enough that she doesn’t have to rebuild you from microscopic soul fragments later. Goal three: nudge you toward choices that don’t light this entire empire on fire prematurely."
"’Prematurely’ implies there’s a scheduled acceptable window for arson," Elara said.
"You’re not wrong," the mouse said darkly. "Just... not ’now’."
It flicked its tail again, then brightened. "Anyway. We can talk grand destiny later. For now, micro-level. You’re exhausted. Your magic channels are frayed. You’re carrying a foreign poison that will spike again in approximately—" it glanced at an invisible counter "—sixty-one hours, give or take. You’ve just declared war on half your household and accidentally raised your value in your father’s political calculus. And your first response to all of that was to sit down and consider working more."
"I have outstanding audits," Elara said. "Three days of clean cognition before the next crisis. It’s inefficient to waste them."
The mouse floated closer and smacked her lightly on the forehead with its tiny paw.
"Stop," it said.
Elara stared at it. "Did you just ’hit’ me."
"You’ll live," it said. "That wasn’t damage, that was emphasis. You promised her you’d adjust your self-preservation. That doesn’t just mean not throwing yourself in front of literal knives. It also means not grinding this body into dust between poison cycles because you’re bored when not working."
"I’m not bored," Elara said. "I’m productive."
"Same problem," the mouse shot back. "Different label. Listen: if you burn out this vessel, you ’still’ regress. You heard the part about cumulative soul damage, right?"
"Yes."
"Then rest. Eat. Sleep when your body demands it instead of waiting until it collapses. Accept help from the people literally falling over themselves to keep you breathing. You don’t have to ’like’ it. You just have to do it."
Elara was quiet for a moment.
"This guidance is almost identical to what my Earth therapist attempted," she said eventually. "Basic self-care. Delegation. Accepting support. It didn’t work then."
"Your therapist wasn’t allowed to show you customized hell loops," the mouse said sweetly. "I am. And we both know you respond to effective threats."
"That’s blackmail."
"That’s ’leverage’." Its tiny smile showed too many small, sharp teeth for something supposedly cute. "So. New rule, Host: for every six hours of work, you rest at least one. For every poison episode, you give yourself a full day afterward where you don’t touch palace politics. You delegate. You let Ken and the others handle enforcement. You do not sprint back into war the second you can see straight."
"And if I don’t?" Elara asked.
"I begin issuing penalties," the mouse said. "Headaches. Channel locking. Interference with your fine motor skills at strategic moments. All technically within my operational capacity." It shrugged. "She gave me broad discretion."
"You’re threatening to sabotage me to keep me alive," Elara said.
"Yes."
"That’s logically inconsistent."
"Welcome to working with entities who ’feel things’," the mouse said. "We’re full of contradictions."
They regarded each other again. Elara’s headache had faded to a dull, manageable throb. Fatigue weighed heavy on her limbs, but her mind still ticked clean.
"Fine," she said at last. "I’ll add your conditions to my schedule. One day off after each episode. Rest blocks between tasks. Contingent on urgent crisis exceptions."
"No more than two crisis exceptions per month," the mouse said instantly. "And I’m counting."
Elara considered, then inclined her head. "Acceptable."
The mouse’s ears perked up, surprised. "You agreed that fast?"
"You presented enforceable constraints," Elara said. "I adapt to constraints. That’s what systems are for."
For the first time, the little creature smiled in a way that wasn’t exasperated or manic—small, satisfied, almost relieved.
"Good," it said softly. "Then we might actually make something of this life."
It zipped backward toward the ceiling, then paused. "Oh, and Host?"
"Yes?"
"Next time someone appears in your room without using the door," it said, "you’re allowed to at least ’pretend’ to be surprised. For the sake of our cover story."
Elara leaned her head back against the sofa and closed her eyes again.
"I’ll consider it," she said.
"That’s probably the best I’ll get," the System sighed, and faded from sight—leaving behind only a faint shimmer in the air and a hovering, translucent countdown Elara could just make out at the edge of her vision:
[Poison Cycle 2 — 60:53:17]
She watched the numbers tick down for a few seconds.
Then, very deliberately, she stood, walked to the bed, lay down, and—for once—not because her body forced her to, but because she’d decided it was the optimal move—she went to sleep.







