Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 253 --

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Chapter 253: Chapter-253

Elara added it to the description notes.

Additionally: the second consort had been asked not for records, but for something different. Access to the children’s quarterly medical assessments before they were formally filed — a twenty-four hour window in which the documents passed through the consorts’ household office for signature before going to the central archive.

Twenty-four hours in which alterations would be practically undetectable.

Elara sat with that for a moment after the second consort finished speaking.

"She was editing the records," Elara said. "After the procedures. Removing evidence that the procedures had occurred."

"I didn’t know that’s what she was doing," the second consort said. "I thought — I thought it was just access. I didn’t think about what access meant."

"I know," Elara said.

She wrote the note. Added it to the stack.

Gave the second consort the same clean document she’d given the sixth consort — write it all down, take your time.

The second consort wrote for forty minutes.

When she finished she looked up and said, very quietly: "My son is four. He doesn’t understand any of this."

"He doesn’t need to," Elara said. "He won’t."

The second consort nodded.

Left.

***

Elara sat in the empty office afterward and looked at the two written testimonies sitting on top of the document stack.

The System materialized at the corner of the desk, next to where the plum stone was still sitting because she hadn’t moved it.

"Is that a plum stone," the System said.

"Yes," Elara said.

"On your desk."

"Ken brought a plum," Elara said.

The System looked at the plum stone. Looked at Elara. "Ken brought you a plum because he wanted to."

"He said he thought I might like one," Elara said.

"That’s—" The System appeared to be processing something that brought it a lot of quiet satisfaction. "That’s very sweet." 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎

"It was a good plum," Elara said, which was not the same as agreeing with the System’s characterization but wasn’t exactly disagreement either.

The System looked at her with the expression it used when it was trying very hard to keep its face neutral and failing.

"What," Elara said.

"Nothing," the System said.

"You’re doing a face."

"I’m not—" The System paused. "I’m not doing a face. I’m simply observing that you ate a plum someone brought you for no reason except that they thought you might like it, and it’s currently sitting on your desk next to the regent’s seal, and you haven’t moved it."

Elara looked at the plum stone.

It was, objectively, just a plum stone. There was no reason to keep it on the desk. The correct action was to have it cleared with the morning’s general tidying.

"It was a good plum," she said again.

The System made a soft sound that was not quite a laugh.

***

Mahir came in at midmorning with Liam’s updated surveillance report.

Elara read it while he stood across the desk. The secretary had made contact — not with the Empress Dowager directly, but with a mid-level household administrator who served the north wing. The contact had been brief, apparently casual, in the east corridor near the document room. Liam had captured it.

"He lip-reads," Mahir said, at Elara’s look. "Northern training. It’s useful."

"What did they say," Elara said.

"The secretary asked if the Empress Dowager had reviewed the morning correspondence yet. The administrator said not until the afternoon meeting." Mahir paused. "The secretary said — and this is Liam’s read: *tell her the arrangement may need to close early. There are questions being asked.*"

Elara set the report down.

*There are questions being asked.*

The secretary knew. Not the full picture — she didn’t know how much Elara had — but she knew something had shifted. The sixth consort’s meeting yesterday had been noticed, or the archive visits had registered, or something in the network had twitched.

"She’s going to move," Elara said. "Quickly."

"Or she’ll advise the Empress Dowager to move," Mahir said.

"Same result," Elara said. "She’ll try to close the evidence gaps before I can fill them." She looked at the working list. "The archive — the amendment records Dimitri has been accessing. I need a preservation order on them today. This morning."

"I can have that filed with the council secretary’s office within the hour," Mahir said.

"Do it." She paused. "And the children’s medical assessment records — the quarterly files. Every one from the past eighteen months. I want those in secure custody today. Not reviewed, not analyzed yet — just secured so they can’t be altered."

Mahir nodded, making notes.

"And Mahir," she said.

He looked up.

"The collar review," she said. "This afternoon. Before anything else."

He looked at her.

Something happened in his expression — quick, warm, then carefully settled. "Yes," he said.

He turned to go.

"Also," Elara said.

He turned back.

"Tell Ken—" She stopped. Started again. "Thank him. For the plum."

Mahir looked at the plum stone on her desk.

The expression happened again. This one he didn’t settle as quickly.

"I’ll tell him," he said.

"Efficiently," she said. "Don’t make it a thing."

"Of course, Your Highness," Mahir said, extremely professionally, and left.

Elara heard him in the outer corridor say something low to Ken, and heard Ken say something back, and heard a sound that was Mahir quickly suppressing something.

She looked at the plum stone.

Looked at the working list.

Picked up her pen.

Outside the window the morning was doing something genuinely unreasonable — the sun coming through the cloud cover at an angle that lit the courtyard stones a bright, warm gold, the kind of light that had no practical value and existed purely to make things look better than they strictly needed to.

She noted it.

Kept working.

But the plum stone stayed where it was.

’’Location:’’ The Knight Assembly Hall — Midday

The hall fit them, barely.

One hundred and twenty beast knights in off-duty configuration — no uniforms, her specification, a distinction that mattered to her even if she wasn’t certain it mattered to them — arranged in rows with the precise, unconscious spacing of people trained since childhood to occupy exactly as much space as required and no more. No clustering. No leaning. No quiet conversations in the gaps before she entered.

Just stillness.

The particular quality of stillness that Elara had been learning to read since her first day — the kind that wasn’t peace or patience or ease but something else entirely. Something that had been built rather than arrived at.

She stood at the front of the room and looked at one hundred and twenty faces that looked back at her with identical, careful blankness and thought: ’this is going to be one of the hardest rooms I’ve ever spoken to, and they’re going to make it look like it isn’t.’

The System was invisible somewhere in the upper rafters.

She began.

’’’

"I’ll be direct," she said. "I found something in the collar framework that shouldn’t be there. I want to explain what it is, what I know about it, and what I intend to do. After that, questions are permitted."

She didn’t add ’if you have any.’ She had a feeling about how that would land.

Like, no matter how oblivious she is, she still doesn’t dare to bet.

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