Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 190 --
Another surge. This one felt like it was burning through her veins. Elara’s vision whited out for a second. When it cleared, she was lying on her side on the bed, curled around the pain-that-wasn’t-pain, trembling.
The sheets under her palms were cold. That helped. Marginally.
[DURATION: 01:23:15]
An hour and twenty-three minutes.
How much longer? How much more could she—
Magic tore free. 𝒇𝒓𝙚𝒆𝔀𝓮𝓫𝒏𝓸𝙫𝓮𝓵.𝓬𝙤𝙢
She felt it rip out of her control like a dam breaking, flooding the room in a wave of raw power that made the dampening arrays shriek. Light blazed blue-white across the walls. The temperature dropped ten degrees in seconds as the arrays struggled to absorb the discharge.
And the heat in her body intensified immediately, as if the magic leaving had created a vacuum that demanded to be filled.
Elara heard herself make a sound—low, desperate, nothing like her normal voice. Her fingers dug into the mattress. Every nerve was on fire. Every breath felt like inhaling sparks.
"Host." The System’s voice was gentle now, worried. "You need help. Call Ken back. He can stabilize the drain, make this easier—"
"No." Elara forced the word out. "Not... with someone watching. I can’t..."
She couldn’t explain it logically. It wasn’t logical. But the thought of anyone seeing her like this—reduced to nothing but heat and need and animal responses—was worse than the pain. Worse than the magic tearing her apart.
"Pride isn’t worth dying for," the System said.
"Not pride." Elara gasped as another surge hit. "Just... privacy. Please."
The mouse was quiet for a moment. Then: "Alright. But I’m monitoring your heart rate. If it crosses the red line, I’m calling him in whether you like it or not."
"Fine."
Time stopped meaning anything.
There were just waves—building, cresting, crashing. Magic pouring out of her in bursts that lit the room like lightning. Heat that burned through her until she couldn’t tell where her body ended and the fire began. The dampening arrays glowing so bright they hurt even through closed eyelids.
At some point she stopped trying to think. Stopped trying to analyze or control or optimize. Just endured.
Breathing. Waiting. Surviving.
[DURATION: 03:47:52]
Three hours and forty-seven minutes.
Somewhere in the fog, she became aware of voices outside the door. Muffled. Concerned.
"—been too long—"
"—Master Cullens said four to six hours—"
"—her magic output is still—"
Ken’s voice, steady and firm: "Her Highness ordered privacy. We wait unless the physician says otherwise."
Good. Ken understood.
Another surge, weaker this time. The heat was still there but less intense, as if the worst of it had burned through. Her magic discharge slowed from a flood to a steady stream. The arrays’ glow dimmed fractionally.
Was it ending?
[DURATION: 04:15:20]
Four hours fifteen minutes.
The next wave was definitely weaker. Still present, still uncomfortable, but no longer overwhelming. Elara could think again—not clearly, but enough to process basic information. Her body still felt feverish, oversensitive, but the desperate *need* was fading.
She uncurled slowly. Her muscles ached like she’d spent hours in combat training. Her throat was dry. When had she last had water?
The System mouse floated closer. "Vitals stabilizing," it reported quietly. "Magic output decreasing. Heart rate coming down. You’re past the peak." [1]
"How long?" Elara’s voice was hoarse.
"Four hours twenty minutes. Shorter than last time by about forty minutes."
Because she’d let the magic discharge instead of fighting it, Elara realized. The System had been right—control had made it worse.
She’d have to remember that. Adjust her approach for next time.
Next time.
The thought should have bothered her more than it did.
[DURATION: 04:38:17]
The heat faded to warmth. The magic drain slowed to a trickle. Elara lay still, staring at the dampening arrays as their glow decreased back to faint blue. Her mind was coming back online piece by piece, thoughts reorganizing themselves into familiar patterns.
Assessment: Episode survived. Duration approximately four and a half hours. Physical damage minimal—exhaustion, dehydration, probable muscle strain. Magical channels stressed but not ruptured. Overall: acceptable outcome.
The door opened slightly. Ken’s voice, careful: "Your Highness? The arrays indicate discharge has ceased. May I enter?"
Elara considered her state. Sweaty, disheveled, exhausted. But clothed, coherent, and no longer actively dying. "Yes."
He stepped in, golden eyes scanning her quickly, professionally. No judgment in his expression—just assessment. "Your Highness survived," he said. It wasn’t a question.
"Obviously," Elara said. She pushed herself up to sitting, the movement slower than she’d like. "Water?"
He crossed to the side table and poured from the pitcher there, brought her the glass. She drank half of it in one go, the cool liquid soothing her raw throat.
"Master Cullens is outside," Ken said. "And Administrator Demorti. They’ve been waiting to verify your condition."
"Send Cullens in," Elara said. "Tell Demorti I’m functional but require rest. No meetings today."
"Already handled, Your Highness. He cleared your entire schedule the moment the episode started."
Efficient. She approved.
Cullens entered, medical case in hand, face drawn with worry. "Your Highness, thank the Heavens. May I examine you?"
"Go ahead."
He took her pulse, checked her temperature with a cool hand to her forehead, peered at her eyes. "Heart rate still elevated but decreasing. Fever breaking. Pupils responsive." He pulled out a small vial. "Drink this. It will help with the dehydration and muscle fatigue."
She drank. It tasted like mint and something bitter.
"The episode lasted four hours and thirty-eight minutes," Cullens said, making notes. "Shorter than the first. Your magic discharge was more controlled this time—less violent surging. That’s good. It means your body is adapting." He looked at her seriously. "But Your Highness is exhausted. You need rest. Real rest. No work, no meetings, no reading reports in bed."
"Understood," Elara said. Because arguing would be pointless. She could barely keep her eyes open.
"I’ll have Mira bring mild food—broth, bread, nothing heavy. Eat what you can, then sleep." He packed his case. "I’ll check on you this evening. If anything changes—fever returns, chest pain, anything unusual—send for me immediately."
"I will."
He bowed and left. Ken remained by the door.
"Your Highness should move back to your regular chambers," he said quietly. "This room is for containment, not comfort."
Elara looked at the plain walls, the dampening arrays, the utilitarian furniture. He was right. But the thought of standing, walking, moving at all felt impossible.
"In a moment," she said.
"I can carry you if—"
"No." The word came out sharper than intended. "I’ll walk. Just... give me a moment."
Ken nodded and waited.
The System mouse settled on the pillow beside her. "You did it," it said softly. "Survived episode two. That’s progress."
"That’s endurance," Elara corrected. "Not progress. Progress would be finding an antidote."
"Seventeen days until the suppressants arrive," the System reminded her. "Then it gets easier."
Seventeen days. Four more episodes, probably. Four more cycles of heat and loss of control and stripped-away dignity.
She could endure four more.
She had to.
Elara pushed herself to her feet slowly. Her legs trembled but held. Ken moved to her side immediately—not touching, but ready to catch her if she fell.
"I’m fine," she said.
"Of course, Your Highness."
They walked back to her chambers together, Ken matching her slower pace without comment. Mira was waiting there, face pale with worry, fresh bedding already prepared.
"Your Highness," she breathed. "Please, rest. I’ll bring food shortly—"







