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Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 202 --
"She won’t. She thinks she’s safe. Thinks Lian succeeded or failed in isolation. She doesn’t know we have a confession yet." Elara walked toward the door. "We use that ignorance. Let her believe she’s gotten away with it. Then we close the trap completely."
Ken followed her to the door. "The Emperor... if he actually does wake during all this..."
"Then we adapt," Elara said simply. "But for now, he’s useful exactly where he is—unconscious and providing perfect bait for traitors who think he’s vulnerable."
She paused at the threshold, looking back at the bed where the Emperor lay breathing steadily, unaware that his own secret lover had just tried to murder him while framing his daughter.
"He made this mess," Elara said quietly. "Keeping secrets. Playing favorites. Treating people like disposable toys. It’s fitting that his games became the weapon used against him."
"Your Highness," Demerti said carefully. "You sound almost... satisfied."
"Not satisfied. Just noting the irony." Elara’s expression didn’t change. "The Emperor built a system based on manipulation and hidden alliances. Now someone’s using that same system to try to kill him. That’s not satisfaction. That’s just... symmetry."
She walked out, Demerti and Ken following.
Behind them, the Emperor slept on.
Unaware that his daughter had just saved his life.
Unaware that she’d done it not out of love, but out of cold strategic necessity.
Unaware that the impossible girl he’d barely noticed was now the only thing standing between him and death.
And somewhere in the Fifth Concubine’s chambers, a woman waited for news that would never come.
The trap had sprung.
Now all that remained was counting the casualties.
---
Elara stopped at the doorway.
Her hand reached out, palm flat against the ornate wood frame.
"Mahir," she said quietly.
The wolf-eared knight stepped closer. "Your Highness?"
"Your sword. Give it to me."
Silence crashed through the corridor like a physical force.
Mahir’s hand went instinctively to his weapon’s hilt—not defensive, just automatic response to an unexpected request. His ears flattened slightly. "Your Highness?"
"Your sword," Elara repeated. Same flat tone. Same empty expression. "Now."
Ken moved fractionally closer. "Your Highness, what are you—"
"Everyone out." Elara’s voice didn’t rise. Didn’t change. Just stated fact. "Leave the chambers. Seal the doors. No one enters until I give permission."
Demerti’s face went pale. "Your Highness, if you’re planning to—"
"I said out."
The Beast Knights exchanged glances. Ken’s golden eyes were wide, comprehension dawning with visible horror. Marcus’s tail had gone completely rigid. Even Demerti, usually unflappable, looked genuinely shaken.
But Elara just stood there.
Waiting.
Hand extended.
Mahir’s internal struggle played out across his face—duty versus instinct, orders versus morality, loyalty versus... whatever this was. His fingers tightened on the sword hilt until his knuckles went white.
"Your Highness," he said carefully. "I cannot—"
"Yes, you can." Elara’s eyes met his. Empty. Cold. Absolutely certain. "I am Fourth Princess Elara Blackwood, acting regent of this empire, and I am giving you a direct order. Your sword. Now."
The magical leash connecting his collar to her authority *flared*.
Not painful. Just... present. Reminding him what he was. What she was. What the hierarchy demanded.
Mahir’s jaw clenched so hard a muscle jumped in his cheek.
Then, slowly—hands shaking slightly—he drew his sword and reversed it, offering her the hilt.
Elara took it. The weapon was heavier than she’d expected, balanced for someone with Mahir’s build and strength. She adjusted her grip, testing the weight.
"Out," she said again. "All of you. Seal the door. Let no one through."
"Your Highness—" Ken started.
"That’s an order."
They looked at each other. Some unspoken communication passing between them—desperation, horror, the awful awareness that they were being commanded to facilitate something catastrophic.
But the collars hummed.
And Beast Knights, in the end, followed orders.
One by one, they filed out. Demerti went last, looking back with an expression of absolute devastation. His mouth opened—to argue, to plead, to reason—
Elara stared at him.
He closed his mouth. Bowed. Left.
The door swung shut with a heavy, final sound.
The lock engaged.
And Elara stood alone in the Emperor’s chambers, holding a sword, looking at the unconscious man who’d barely acknowledged her existence.
The System materialized beside her, tiny face stricken.
"Host," it said. Voice small. Frightened. "Host, what are you doing?"
Elara didn’t answer.
She walked slowly toward the bed. Each step measured. Deliberate. The sword’s point dragged slightly against the floor, making a soft scraping sound that seemed impossibly loud in the silence.
"Host, *please*—"
"Be quiet."
The System flinched but obeyed.
Elara stopped at the bedside. Looked down at the Emperor.
He looked... small. Diminished. Not the towering figure of authority she’d faced in her first audience. Just a man. Unconscious. Vulnerable. Completely at her mercy.
She could see his chest rising and falling with mechanical regularity. The monitoring crystals pulsed gently, tracking vitals that remained stable despite everything. His face was peaceful. Almost serene.
He had no idea she was here.
No idea what she was holding.
No idea that his daughter—the one he’d dismissed, ignored, barely remembered existed—was standing over him with a weapon.
Elara raised the sword.
Positioned the point directly over his chest.
Felt the weight of it. Calculated trajectory. Angle. Force required to pierce through sternum and into the heart beneath.
"Host, *stop*—" The System’s voice cracked. "You can’t—if you do this—the goddess said—"
"I know what she said." Elara’s voice was absolutely flat. "Every action has consequences. Every harm caused must be balanced. Murder earns time in hell proportional to suffering inflicted."
"Then why—"
"Because some fates are worse than death."
Her hands were steady. Completely steady. Not a tremor. Not a shake.
Elara didn’t explain.
Didn’t hesitate.
Didn’t waste time on philosophy or moral calculations or the weight of consequences she couldn’t feel.
She just walked to the bed where the Emperor lay breathing steadily, raised Mahir’s sword with both hands, positioned the point directly over his chest, and ’thrust’ downward with all her strength.
The blade met resistance immediately.
Not flesh. ’Bone.’
The ribcage.
Elara’s arms jarred with the impact, the sword point catching on the curved surface of a rib and skidding slightly to the side. The angle was wrong. She adjusted, repositioned, and pushed harder—putting her full body weight behind it, leaning into the strike like she was trying to drive a stake through hardwood.
The blade scraped against bone with a sound that made her teeth ache.
Then—finally—it punched through.
The resistance gave way suddenly and the sword sank deep, sliding between ribs with a wet, horrible sound. Warm blood welled up around the blade, soaking into the Emperor’s sleeping robes, spreading across white fabric in a dark stain.
Elara took two steps back, breathing hard.
Not from exertion—her body was in shock, adrenaline flooding her system even though her mind stayed cold and clear. Her hands were shaking slightly. Aftershock from the physical impact, from driving metal through human tissue, from doing something her biology recognized as deeply, fundamentally wrong even if her consciousness didn’t.
’So that’s why executioners prefer beheading,’ she thought distantly. ’Thrusting through the ribcage requires significant force. Inefficient. Messy.’
The Emperor’s body jerked once—pure reflex, nervous system responding to catastrophic damage. Then went still.







