Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 152 --

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Chapter 152: Chapter-152

"Yes. This is priority situation. The sabotage network explains why reform implementation has been slower than projected. Eliminating it will improve efficiency by estimated thirty-five percent. Worth the sleep deprivation."

"Elara—"

"Petra." Elara’s voice was still flat, but there was something underneath. Not emotion—she didn’t experience emotion the way Petra did—but intensity. Focus. "I understand you’re concerned about my wellbeing. I appreciate that concern. But I’m fighting a war against systemic corruption that’s had forty years to entrench itself. The enemies aren’t just corrupt officials and resistant nobles. They’re organized networks actively sabotaging reform efforts while simultaneously trying to kill me."

She gestured at the stacks of paperwork.

"Every day I delay is another day these people maintain power. Another day they steal money, abuse authority, undermine governance. Another day the empire continues operating inefficiently, harming the population through incompetent administration." Her voice stayed steady. "So yes, I’m working myself to near-collapse. Because the alternative is accepting slow failure instead of pushing for fast success. And I don’t accept failure. It’s inefficient."

Petra looked at her—this impossible, brilliant, emotionally broken princess who was trying to rebuild an empire through pure analytical determination—and didn’t know what to say.

Finally, she just stood. "Fine. But I’m staying here. If you collapse, someone needs to catch you before you hit the floor."

"Acceptable compromise." Elara returned to her work. "There’s a couch in the corner. You can sleep if needed."

"I’m not sleeping while you work yourself to death."

"Inefficient resource allocation. One of us should maintain full cognitive function."

"Too bad. We’re both being inefficient tonight."

Elara almost smiled. Almost. "Noted."

They worked in silence—Elara on her revenue projections, Petra reviewing personnel files for the next day’s interviews.

Outside, dawn approached. Twenty saboteurs were being arrested. The noble conspiracy was being exposed. The empire ground forward, day by exhausting day.

And in that office, Fourth Princess Elara Blackwood continued the endless work of reform.

Not because she wanted to.

Not because she enjoyed it.

But because it needed to be done.

And she was the only person capable of doing it.

Efficiently.

Thoroughly.

Irreversibly.

Even if it killed her.

---

## Week Four Continued: The Interrogations

Dawn came too quickly.

Elara had managed exactly forty-five minutes of rest—head down on her desk, not quite sleep but close enough to provide minimal recovery. Petra had dozed off on the couch around 4 AM.

At 5:30, the beast knights arrived with the first prisoner.

Lord Merchant looked significantly less confident than he had during his previous employment. Hands bound, clothes disheveled from being dragged from bed in the middle of the night, face pale with fear.

Elara sat across from him, a fresh notebook open, pen ready.

"Lord Merchant. You sold my daily schedule to assassins on six separate occasions. The documentation is comprehensive. Denial is pointless. I’m interested in three things: who paid you, how much, and who else is involved." Her voice was flat, clinical. "Answer efficiently and your cooperation will be noted during sentencing. Lie or delay and I’ll pursue maximum penalties. Your choice."

Lord Merchant tried to maintain dignity. "I want legal representation—"

"You’re entitled to legal representation during trial. This is preliminary investigation. Different legal standard." Elara made a note. "I’ll ask again. Who paid you for schedule information?"

"I don’t have to tell you anything—"

Elara looked at the beast knight standing guard. "Note that subject is refusing cooperation. Recommend maximum sentence for treason: forty years imprisonment with hard labor. No parole eligibility. Assets seized to compensate victims of assassination attempts."

Lord Merchant’s face went white. "Wait—forty years—you can’t—"

"I can. I have full legal authority during administrative transition. Imperial law is clear on treason penalties." Elara’s pen was poised over paper. "Last opportunity for cooperation. Who paid you?"

The man broke. "Duke Veltris! Duke Veltris paid me! Two thousand gold for your schedule information!"

"Good. Starting point established." Elara wrote. "Who else? You mentioned a network of twenty dismissed officials. Give me names."

"I—if I give you names, they’ll kill me—"

"If you don’t give me names, you’ll spend forty years in prison. Choose which consequence you prefer." Elara’s voice didn’t change. "The network members are being arrested simultaneously. They can’t retaliate if they’re in custody. Your concern is outdated."

That logic worked. Lord Merchant started talking.

Over the next hour, Elara extracted:

- Complete list of network members (19 names—one had fled the capital already)

- Payment amounts from various noble families (totaling over thirty thousand gold)

- Specific sabotage activities (destroyed documents, delayed shipments, falsified reports)

- Timeline of coordination (started three weeks ago when nobles realized reform was serious)

By the time she was done, she had comprehensive map of the conspiracy.

"Thank you for your cooperation," Elara said. "It will be noted. Sentencing reduced to twenty-five years with parole eligibility after fifteen. Guards, return him to detention."

Lord Merchant was led away, looking relieved despite the severe sentence.

Petra, who’d woken up and been watching, said quietly, "You just sentenced him to twenty-five years and he looked grateful."

"Compared to forty years, twenty-five is significant improvement. He made rational choice to cooperate." Elara stood, stretching slightly. Her back was stiff from sleeping at the desk. "Nineteen more interrogations. This will take all day. You should get proper breakfast. I’ll continue here."

"You need breakfast too—"

"I’ll eat between interrogations. Efficient time management."

The interrogations continued. Each prisoner provided additional details, expanding Elara’s understanding of how deeply the sabotage had penetrated her administration.

By noon, she’d confirmed:

- 40% of delayed supply shipments were deliberate sabotage

- 7 key administrative documents had been intentionally destroyed

- 12 newly hired administrators had been approached with bribery offers (3 accepted, 9 reported it—those 9 would receive commendations)

- The noble families funding the sabotage network included all 12 under investigation for embezzlement

But there was a pattern Elara noticed. A gap in the information.

"The coordination is too sophisticated," she said to Petra during a brief break. "These dismissed officials aren’t strategic thinkers. Someone is directing them. Someone with political experience and tactical knowledge."

"Who?"

"Unknown. But the pattern suggests noble family involvement at higher level than just funding. Someone is actively planning the sabotage operations." Elara reviewed her notes. "Need to identify the strategist. They’re the real threat."

---

## Week Five: The Strategist Revealed

The answer came from an unexpected source.

One of the arrested saboteurs—a former records clerk named Daniel—requested private audience with Elara.

"I have information you want," he said when brought to her office. "But I want full immunity and protected relocation in exchange."

"State the information first. I’ll determine if it’s valuable enough to warrant immunity."

"It’s about who’s running the operation. The noble coordinating everything."

Elara leaned forward slightly. "Name?"

"Full immunity first."

"I don’t negotiate with terrorists or saboteurs. You provide information or you get maximum sentence. Those are the options." Elara’s voice was ice. "Choose."

Daniel hesitated, then made his calculation. "Fine. It’s Duchess Merchant. She’s been coordinating the resistance since you started reforms. She’s the one who organized the sabotage network, funded the assassination attempts, coordinated the noble families’ refusal to cooperate with audits."

Duchess Merchant. Elara ran through her mental database.

Wealthy. Connected to six different noble families through marriage alliances. Controlled significant trade networks. Politically savvy. And—Elara’s eyes narrowed—she’d submitted a marriage proposal to Elara three weeks ago. One of the rejected proposals.

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