©WebNovelPub
Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 22 --
Eight more minutes brought Elara to the Emperor’s court entrance. Two beast knights flanked the massive doors—different faces from the ones at her wing, but the same red uniforms, the same disciplined stillness. They bowed as she approached.
Elara nodded once in acknowledgment.
The gesture told her something useful: these guards bowed to bloodline, not rank. It didn’t matter that she was the Fourth Princess, the forgotten one, the daughter with the wrong surname. Royal blood was royal blood. Their loyalty wasn’t personal—it was structural. That made them predictable, which made them valuable.
She waited while one guard stepped inside to announce her. A moment later, he returned and pulled the doors open.
"Her Highness, Fourth Princess Elara Lian of House Blackwood."
The full name. Public and formal. No shortcuts.
Elara stepped through.
The throne room was enormous—high vaulted ceilings, columns thick enough that three men couldn’t wrap their arms around them, floors polished to a mirror shine. Two hundred people could stand here comfortably, maybe more. At the far end, elevated on a dais of black stone, sat the throne itself: carved from a single piece of dark wood, inlaid with gold that caught the light from massive chandeliers overhead.
The Emperor sat in it, one hand resting on the armrest, his gaze fixed on her as she crossed the empty floor.
No courtiers today. No ministers. Just guards along the walls and the two of them in a space built for crowds.
Elara stopped at the appropriate distance—ten paces from the base of the dais—and bowed. Her body knew the motion without her asking it to: one foot back, torso bent at the exact angle, right hand pressed flat over her heart. Muscle memory from a life she didn’t remember.
"May the sun rise above your head forever, Your Majesty," she said, voice steady and formal.
The Emperor didn’t tell her to rise immediately. He let her stay bent for a few extra seconds—not long enough to be an insult, just long enough to remind her who controlled the room.
Then: "You may stand."
Elara straightened.
The Emperor looked at her with the same unreadable expression he’d worn in her chambers days before. His eyes tracked over the white suit, the short hair, the butterfly pin, and gave away nothing.
"I’ve been hearing some very interesting reports today," he said. His voice was calm, conversational, but it carried through the massive space without effort. "What do you have to say, daughter?"
Elara kept her hands at her sides, file held loosely in one. "I wish to speak with Father about exactly that," she said. "It seems this daughter has caused quite a disruption."
The Emperor’s expression didn’t change, but something flickered in his eyes—amusement, maybe, or curiosity. "Disruption. An interesting choice of word." He leaned forward slightly. "Some might call sending armed soldiers into the Crown Princess’s wing an act of aggression. Others might call locking down an entire palace and interrogating thirty staff members an overreach of authority."
He paused.
"What would you call it?"
Elara met his gaze without hesitation. "Cleaning house, Your Majesty."
The silence that followed was the kind you could measure in heartbeats. Somewhere along the walls, a guard shifted weight. The sound of boot on stone echoed.
The Emperor sat back. "Elaborate."
Elara opened the file and held it out. A guard stepped forward, took it, and carried it up the dais steps. The Emperor accepted it, flipped it open, and began to read.
While he did, Elara spoke.
"Thirty-two employees registered to my household were working in other palaces without transfer authorization. My budget was paying their wages. Other households were receiving their labor. The arrangement had been ongoing for at least two years." She kept her tone even, factual. "Additionally, I found evidence of systematic theft, falsified records, and at least fifteen individuals with fabricated identities working as palace staff."
The Emperor’s eyes moved across the pages. He said nothing.
"I retrieved the displaced staff, audited the finances, and removed the compromised elements," Elara continued. "The individuals responsible for organizing the fraud have been detained and are available for Your Majesty’s judgment."
The Emperor closed the file. "And the steward?"
"Immobilized and secured," Elara said without inflection. "He possessed extensive knowledge of financial routes and off-ledger transactions. I deemed him a security risk."
"So you had his hands broken and his tongue cut."
"Yes, Your Majesty."
Another pause. Longer this time.
The Emperor set the file on the armrest and looked at her—really looked, the way someone might examine a piece of unexpected machinery that had just started working after years of sitting idle.
"You’ve been awake for three days," he said. "In that time, you provoked your sister into a public mistake, survived a disciplinary hearing, restructured your entire household, and personally led an operation that violated diplomatic courtesy across four separate palace wings." He tilted his head slightly. "Some would say you’re being reckless. Others would say you’ve lost your mind."
"What does Your Majesty say?" Elara asked.
The Emperor’s mouth curved—not quite a smile, but close. "I say you’re finally acting like someone who understands what blood you carry." He stood, and immediately every guard in the room straightened. "The question now is whether you’ll survive the consequences of making yourself visible."
He descended the dais steps slowly, deliberately, each footfall deliberate. When he reached the floor, he walked past Elara, circling her once like a general inspecting a soldier.
"You look like your mother," he said quietly. "Dressed like that. Standing like that. She wore white too, when she first came here. The court hated it."
He stopped in front of her.
"They’ll hate you more now than they did when you were invisible," he said. "Every noble whose staff you seized. Every steward whose operation you exposed. Every princess whose favor network you disrupted." His voice dropped. "And especially the one whose knights you humiliated by walking into her territory and taking what you wanted."
Elara didn’t look away. "I understand, Your Majesty."
"Do you?" The Emperor studied her face. "Because once you start this—once you claim power instead of hiding from it—you can’t go back to being ignored. The next move won’t be whispers and theft. It’ll be poison, accidents, convenient scandals."
"I know," Elara said.
"And you’re prepared for that."
"I’d rather die standing than live kneeling," Elara said. "Your Majesty."
For a long moment, the Emperor said nothing. Then he turned and walked back toward the throne, hands clasped behind his back.
"Keep the soldiers you have," he said over his shoulder. "I’m reassigning another unit to your palace—human knights this time, ones who answer directly to the throne. If someone tries to remove you quietly, I want witnesses who can’t be accused of beastkin loyalty."
He sat down again, settling into the throne like it was an extension of his spine.
"Your household audit is approved retroactively," he continued. "Any noble who complains will be reminded that theft from imperial property is treason, regardless of which princess it belonged to." He picked up the file again. "The staff you detained will be tried under my authority. The ones with false identities will be interrogated by imperial intelligence. If they’re spies, I want to know who sent them."
Elara bowed. "Thank you, Your Majesty."







