Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 259 --
’ I want the corruption that killed the seventh prince to be in the permanent record attributed correctly.’
’ I want the consort situation resolved in a way that doesn’t leave anyone stranded.’
’ I want to find the undocumented provincial bloodlines before someone else does.’
’ I want Caius to have a choice about what his bloodline means rather than having it decided for him.’
She paused.
Wrote:
’ I want to finish the working list.’
Looked at that line.
Added:
’ And then I want to eat dinner at a table and sleep in a bed and not think about succession law for at least one full day.’
System made a sound from the corner of the desk that was the closest it came to a laugh.
She looked at it.
"Don’t," she said.
"I didn’t say anything," System said.
"You made a sound."
"I make sounds," System said serenely.
She looked back at the paper.
Wrote:
’ What I do not want is the throne.’
Looked at that.
It was true. She had known it was true for some time and had not written it because writing it had implications. She did not want to be emperor. She wanted the empire to function and she wanted the systems to work and she wanted the people inside those systems to be treated correctly — but the throne itself, the permanent institutional centralization of all authority in a single body, the specific vulnerability of an empire that depended on one person being both capable and in good health simultaneously —
She had seen what happened when that system failed.
She had been watching it fail for three months.
She wrote:
’ What I want is for the throne to be held by someone capable, with systems strong enough that the empire doesn’t collapse if they’re sick for a week.’
’ What I want is for those systems to outlast whoever holds the throne.’
’ What I want is to build something durable and then be able to step back from it.’
She paused.
’ The question is whether that’s possible. Whether I can build something durable enough to step back from without it coming apart.’
’ The question is whether Caius is the answer to that or a different kind of problem.’
’ The question is whether there is anyone in this empire I trust enough with the thing I’m building.’
She looked at the last line for a long time.
Then she picked up the pen again.
Wrote very slowly:
’ I trust Mahir.’
’ I trust Ken.’
’ I trust System .’
’ I trust the fox-eared guard whose name is apparently Shen and who has been posted at my door for three months and deserves to be addressed by name.’
’ I trust the third consort and the Sixth consort and possibly the sixth consort.’
’ I am beginning to trust Caius.’
’ I am watching the Third Princess carefully and I think she is trustworthy in the specific way that very patient, very capable people are trustworthy — which is that they have a consistent direction and they pursue it honestly and they tell you what they want.’
She looked at the list.
It was, she thought, not nothing.
For someone who had arrived in this world with no alliances, no relationships, no working knowledge of the environment, in a body that collapsed under stress, surrounded by people who considered her a convenient irrelevance —
It was not nothing.
"System ," she said.
"Yes," it said.
"The twelve families," she said. "When all thirty responses come back. When the covenant is finalized. When the collar review is complete and the extraction audit is done and the provincial bloodlines are located and Caius has made his choice about what to do with his record—" She paused. "What comes next?"
System was quiet for a moment.
"You tell me," it said.
She looked at the clean sheet with its honest lines.
"Building," she said. "Whatever comes after dismantling is building."
"Yes," System said.
"The administrative structure needs to be rebuilt with actual oversight rather than the appearance of it," she said. "The succession framework needs to be designed so that it functions independent of any single person’s continued presence. The beast knight legal status needs a permanent charter revision, not just a collar amendment." She paused. "The undocumented bloodlines need a resolution process that doesn’t become a succession crisis every time one surfaces." Another pause. "The provincial governance review that hasn’t been done in eleven years needs to happen." Another pause. "The merchant guild agreements need renegotiation under terms that don’t leave the eastern territories as economically dependent as they currently are."
She stopped.
Looked at the list.
"That’s years," she said.
"Yes," System said.
"Many years," she said.
"Yes," System said.
She was quiet for a moment.
"I don’t want the throne," she said. "But I also don’t trust anyone else with it yet." She paused. "That’s the problem."
"That’s the honest version of the problem," System said. "Yes."
"The dishonest version is that I’m still building toward a handover that I don’t know the timeline for," she said. "And in the meantime I’m the regent and everything runs through me and I am one person who eats dinner at a desk and sleeps four hours on a good night and has a list that never gets shorter."
"You could delegate more," System said.
"I delegate constantly." 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦
"You delegate the execution," System said. "You don’t delegate the thinking."
She opened her mouth.
Closed it.
"That’s—" she started.
"Accurate," System said. Not unkindly.
She looked at the window.
The city had gone dark while she was writing. Just the lights now, the scattered warm points of them across the northern districts, the river a black absence at the far edge.
She thought about what it would look like in ten years. Twenty. If she built what she was trying to build — if the systems held, if the oversight worked, if the beast knight charter became law rather than policy and the succession framework had enough integrity to survive a contested transition — what would the city look like.
She couldn’t know.
She had never been able to know outcomes. Only inputs and structures and the probability distributions of various futures given those inputs and structures. The actual future was always the variable that remained.
But she thought about it anyway.
The city lights, steady and ordinary, each one a person or a family or a business operating in the space that governance was supposed to protect and mostly failed to.
"I want it to work," she said quietly. "For them. The city. The provinces. All of it." She paused. "Not for the dynasty. Not for the bloodline. For the people who live in it."
System was very still.
"I know," it said.
"That’s probably in the report," she said.
"It’s been in the report," System said, "since the second week."
She looked at it.
"What did the second week’s entry say," she said.
System considered.
"It said," it said carefully, "’ subject appears to be operating from a motivational framework that does not map cleanly onto any standard category for this environment. Not political ambition. Not personal survival, though survival is clearly a practical priority. Not ideological — subject does not appear to hold strong views about the correct shape of governance in the abstract.’ " It paused. "’ Closest approximation: subject finds systems that don’t work correctly to be personally offensive in a way that is not emotional but is also not entirely rational. She fixes things because they are broken. The question of who benefits appears secondary to the fact of the brokenness.’ "







