©WebNovelPub
Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 28 --
"Define negligence," Elara interrupted. "Specifically, explain how a perimeter guard positioned forty meters from an external courtyard could have prevented a non-verbal projectile spell cast by an imperial princess who had every right to be in that courtyard."
Silence.
"I’ll wait," Elara added.
The magistrate’s jaw worked. "Your Highness, the Empress determined—"
"The Empress required a visible response. I understand the political necessity. However, executing my household staff without my authorization sets a precedent that undermines the administrative authority my father just granted me." She paused. "I assume you’d prefer I not bring this precedent concern to the Emperor’s attention during his morning briefing."
The magistrate’s expression went carefully blank. "What exactly are you proposing, Your Highness?"
"Transfer the prisoner to my custody. I will conduct internal household disciplinary review. If negligence is confirmed, I will issue appropriate sanctions under my own authority. If not, the matter is closed."
"The Empress has already announced the execution publicly—"
"Then announce the prisoner died during transfer," Elara said flatly. "Complications from flogging injuries. Medical failure. The Empress’s sentence is carried out symbolically, I retain jurisdiction over my household, and no one needs to escalate this to the Emperor. Everyone preserves face."
The magistrate stared at her. Behind him, one of the officials shifted uncomfortably.
"You’re asking me to falsify an execution record," he said quietly.
"I’m asking you to resolve a jurisdictional conflict efficiently," Elara corrected. "The alternative is formal appeal, which delays the execution, forces imperial arbitration, and creates exactly the kind of bureaucratic entanglement that annoys my father during research season."
Another long silence.
The magistrate exhaled slowly. "If I agree to this... arrangement... the prisoner would be confined to your household. No public appearances. No official duties. Effectively exiled from active service."
"Acceptable."
"And you accept full responsibility for his conduct going forward."
"Obviously."
The magistrate looked at the fox knight, then back at Elara. Something like reluctant respect flickered across his face. "You realize the Empress will not be pleased when she discovers this."
"The Empress will receive official documentation confirming her sentence was carried out and the matter resolved," Elara said. "What happens to household staff after that is my concern, not hers."
The magistrate studied her for a long moment. Then he turned to one of the officials. "Draft the transfer order. Prisoner remanded to Fourth Princess Elara’s household custody, effective immediately. Execution postponed pending jurisdictional review."
"Yes, sir."
As the official hurried back up the stairs, the magistrate looked at Elara one more time. "Your Highness... you’re playing a dangerous game."
"I’m clarifying administrative boundaries," Elara replied. "That’s not a game. That’s governance."
She turned back to the cell as the guard unlocked it. The fox knight looked between her and the magistrate, shock rendering him immobile.
"Stand up," Elara said. "You’re coming with me."
He scrambled to his feet, chains rattling. The guard unlocked them with obvious reluctance.
As they climbed back toward the surface, the fox knight walking just behind her with two guards as escort, Elara calculated outcomes. She’d burned some political capital, created a debt with the magistrate, and openly maneuvered around the Empress’s authority.
But she’d also demonstrated three things: she understood legal leverage, she protected her assets, and she could win bureaucratic fights without the Emperor’s direct intervention.
The previous princess had stayed calm because she never intended to step into the throne battle.
Elara was different.
She understood one brutal truth—if she did not enter the battle, she would die all the same.
It wouldn’t matter who became the next Emperor. Eldest sister. Second sister. Any of them. Once the crown was settled, the first step would be simple and efficient: eliminate the remaining royal siblings.
From everything Elara had seen since waking in this body, she was certain of one thing—she would be first on that list.
So why hesitate?
If there were only two choices—run toward death or run toward power—then she would run straight into the fire and seize the throne itself.
And by intervening tonight, she had already crossed that line.
Everyone knew now.
So why hide?
If she was already part of the game, then she would make herself impossible to ignore. A presence too competent, too dangerous to dismiss as the "useless fourth princess."
Besides—the Crown Princess position had not yet been chosen.
That seat was still empty.
Which meant it was still available.
’’’
On the other side of the palace, in the western wing’s largest residence—
CRASH.
A porcelain cup shattered against the floor, fragments skidding across polished stone like broken stars.
Princess Eleana stood before her vanity mirror, chest heaving, fury twisting her beautiful features into something ugly and raw. Her hands trembled as she gripped the edge of the table.
"That ’bitch’," she hissed.
On the bed behind her, a lion beastman lay sprawled across silk sheets, completely naked and utterly unhurried. He rose slowly, powerful frame catching the lamplight as he approached her from behind. Golden eyes tracked her reflection with predatory focus.
Strong arms wrapped around her waist, pulling her back against his chest.
"Your Highness," he murmured, voice low and coaxing, lips brushing her ear. "Calm yourself. Anger does not suit your beauty."
Eleana gritted her teeth so hard her jaw ached. Her eyes fixed on the broken mirror—dozens of fractured reflections staring back at her, each one twisted with rage.
"Elara," she hissed, voice low and venomous. "Just you wait... I would make you regret being even born."
The lion beastman stood beside her, his gaze also turned toward the shattered glass. But where her face showed fury, his expression was completely blank—eyes half-lidded, features utterly neutral. He didn’t move, didn’t speak, didn’t react. Just stared at the broken reflection with the patience of a predator that had all the time in the world.
Eleana’s fingers curled into her palms, nails cutting crescent marks into her skin. "She thinks saving one pathetic guard makes her clever. She thinks playing legal games with the magistrate makes her untouchable."
The lion beastman’s tail flicked once—the only sign he’d heard her at all.
The next morning, the fox knight—now officially reassigned to her household under probationary custody—delivered a stack of personnel files to Elara’s desk.
She reviewed them methodically, cross-referencing names against property records and incident reports. The Beast Knights had been efficient. Within twelve hours, they’d compiled backgrounds on every dismissed servant who’d once worked under her household, complete with skill assessments, work histories, and current locations.
Impressive. But only within certain parameters.
Elara noticed the pattern immediately: every piece of information came from palace sources. Guard rotation logs. Servant registries. Administrative archives. The intelligence network was comprehensive—but only ’inside’ the palace walls.
She tested the hypothesis. "What about merchants the household contracted with before? The ones who supplied laboratory materials?"
The fox knight hesitated. "Your Highness, I would need to send word through the civilian liaison office. Knights aren’t authorized to conduct external investigations without—"
"Without royal decree," Elara finished. "And you’ve never left the palace grounds yourself."
His ears flattened slightly. "No, Your Highness. Beast Knights are assigned to imperial protection duties. We don’t leave unless escorting royalty."
Elara filed that limitation away. The intelligence gap was significant.







