Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 271 --

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Chapter 271: Chapter-271

The main cabin was adequate. The working surface was a folded crate lid that Roen had improved with a piece of planking, which was functional if not elegant.

She had learned, over a year, to work in whatever space existed.

The working list traveled with her. Thirty-eight items. Eleven completed. Twenty-seven open, in various states of progress, organized by dependency — things that required other things to be done first, things that could run in parallel, things that were waiting on information that didn’t exist yet.

Item thirty-eight sat at the top.

’Return.’

Underneath it, in the margin, she had written in small precise script the seven sub-items that ’return’ actually contained. The contract review was one. The collar charter submission was two. The provincial bloodline review handoff was three. Items four through seven were contingencies — things she would need depending on what the capital looked like when they arrived.

She worked through the contingency planning while the river moved.

The system sat on the crate lid beside her documents and occasionally said things.

---

The delegation was five people.

She had considered larger and decided against it. Large delegations announced themselves. Five people representing a trading company attending a contract review was unremarkable. Five people who happened to also carry a year’s worth of carefully prepared documentation for a set of administrative submissions was just five people with a full bag.

Herself. Mira, because Mira handled the financial documentation and also because Mira was the most composed person in the household under sustained pressure. Caius, for reasons they had discussed at the Varen window. Petra, because formal correspondence was going to be required and Petra’s ability to produce exactly the right document in exactly the right register in minimal time was not something she was willing to operate without.

And Dimitri.

Dimitri because the collar charter was with Dimitri and had been with Dimitri since the night they left the palace and she was not separating that document from its carrier until it was submitted to a functioning authority and formally entered into the imperial record.

The other fourteen — fifteen with the three newer members — remained in Varen, operational, running Liang Meridian’s actual business and maintaining the relay network and continuing the provincial bloodline review from the eastern base.

She had left Ken in charge.

Ken had received this information with his professional expression and his professionally level eyes and had said ’yes, Your Highness’ in the tone that wasn’t quite operational language, and then had said, very quietly, so only she could hear: "Come back."

Two words.

She had filed them.

---

The capital appeared on the horizon at the third bell of the second day.

Elara was at the bow when it came into view. She had moved there an hour earlier — not from sentiment, not from the need to watch it approach dramatically, but because the bow gave her a clear sightline to the city’s skyline and she wanted to read the shape of it before they docked.

Cities told you things if you knew how to look.

The capital told her: ’functional, contested, still standing.’

The palace was visible at the highest point — it always was, built to be seen from a distance, which was the architectural language of authority. It looked the same from this distance as it had looked a year ago. Of course it did. Stones didn’t change in a year.

What had changed was invisible from here.

She would assess it up close.

’You’re quiet,’ the system said from her shoulder.

"I’m looking," she said.

’You’ve been looking for an hour.’

"There’s a lot to see."

The system was quiet for a moment. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞

’Are you ready,’ it said.

She thought about this honestly.

A year ago she had walked into a passage in the dark with one bag and fourteen people and a working list and a direction. She had built something in that year — real, functional, hers. The trading company. The relay network. The administrative documentation that was ready to be submitted. The household that had become whatever the thing was that it had become.

She was not the same person who had left.

She was not, for that matter, the same person who had arrived in this body fourteen months ago, in a room with stone ceilings and golden chandeliers and a servant saying ’Your Highness’ to someone who hadn’t known yet what that meant.

"Yes," she said.

The barge moved toward the docking district.

The city came closer.

’The report,’ the system said. ’Current entry.’

"Now?" she said.

’Just one line,’ it said.

She waited.

’Subject is returning,’ the system said. ’She is standing at the bow of a river barge watching the capital approach and she looks,’ a pause, ’like someone who knows exactly what she’s doing.’

"I don’t know exactly what I’m doing," she said. "I have a working list and several contingencies and significant gaps in current intelligence."

’I know,’ the system said. ’That’s not what it looks like from the outside.’

She looked at the city.

The docking district was visible now — the specific organized chaos of a major river port, boats and workers and cargo and the ordinary commercial energy of a city that had survived a political contest and kept moving because cities did that, because people needed to eat and trade regardless of who held the throne.

Behind her, she heard Mira come to stand at the rail.

Then Caius.

Then Petra and Dimitri, who had apparently both been watching from the side rail and had moved when the city came into view.

Five people at the bow of a river barge.

Nobody said anything.

The city came closer and the sounds of it reached them — the dockworkers’ calls, the creak of mooring lines, the specific dense noise of a working port — and the capital was no longer a shape on the horizon but a place, immediate and real and containing everything that the next phase of the working list required.

"Remember," Elara said, without turning around. "We are Liang Meridian. We have a contract review. Everything else is secondary until we have established presence and assessed the current structure."

"Yes, Your Highness," four voices said.

Then Mira said: "Lian Mei."

A pause.

"Yes," Elara said. "Lian Mei."

Old habit. She had been Elara in the household for a year because the household knew. In the capital she was Lian Mei, merchant, Liang Meridian representative, unremarkable person with a contract review scheduled.

She had worn that name for a year.

It would hold.

The barge docked.

---

The Liang Meridian office in the capital had been established four months ago.

Not by her — she had not entered the capital since the night of the passage. By Callum and Nadia, who had come ahead under commercial pretexts and set up a legitimate office in the merchant district, registered with the guild, staffed by two local hires who knew only that they worked for a trading company and were good at their jobs.

The office was small. It smelled like river paper and ink. The two local staff bowed when the delegation arrived and asked if they needed tea.

"Yes," Mira said, because Mira understood that some things were operational priorities regardless of how they appeared.

They sat at the office table and drank tea and Elara looked at the city through the window.