Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 276 --
"The restricted section requires a direct bloodline key or regent authority," Elara said. "The regent authority transferred to the current administration at the moment of formal assumption of power." She paused. "You have access. You may not have tried the current administrative seal."
The woman looked at her.
"We used the previous regent’s seal," she said.
"That one would no longer work," Elara said. "Try the current seal."
A pause.
The man and the woman exchanged a look that contained a full conversation.
Then he looked back at Elara.
"How long have you been in the capital," he said.
"Since yesterday," she said.
"And before that."
"Varen," she said. "Eastern province. Liang Meridian has been operating out of Varen for the past year."
"You built a trading company," he said.
"I built several things," she said. "The trading company is the one with a commercial license and a contract with your trade commission."
He looked at the ceiling briefly.
The woman had a small expression that Elara was beginning to classify as her version of amusement — contained, precise, visible only if you knew to look.
"The succession framework," he said. "The relay report says it’s partially drafted." 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
"It requires input from several parties before it can be finalized," she said. "Including the individual with the sealed record. Including, if you’re willing, input from the current authority about what the framework needs to accomplish from your perspective." She paused. "I drafted it with the assumption that it needed to function independently of any specific person holding the throne. Whether that remains the design priority is something we need to discuss."
He looked at her.
"You want to finish it," he said.
"It’s on the working list," she said.
Another pause.
"The working list," he said slowly, as if trying out the phrase.
"I have thirty-nine items," she said. "Twenty-six currently open. The succession framework is item twenty-two. It has been open for fourteen months."
He was quiet for a long moment.
Then he said: "How long would it take."
"To complete the succession framework?"
"To finish everything on the list," he said. "All twenty-six open items."
Elara looked at him.
"I don’t know," she said honestly. "The list doesn’t get shorter. Items complete and new items appear. That’s the nature of governance that’s actually functioning."
He looked at the table.
At the documentation Mira had organized.
At the bag Dimitri was still holding.
At the butterfly pin on Elara’s lapel, which was the one thing about her that was not merchant and not Lian Mei and not anything except exactly what it had always been.
"The collar specialist," he said. "When can they be here."
"Three days," she said. "Two if the relay is clean."
"Get them here in two days," he said.
"Yes," she said.
"The provincial review documentation," he said. "I want to see the methodology today if possible."
"Dimitri," she said.
Dimitri opened the bag.
Started placing documents on the table with the care of someone handling things that had been carried for a long time and were finally arriving where they were supposed to go.
The man watched.
"One more thing," he said.
Elara waited.
"The individual with the sealed record," he said. "The one who wants to speak for himself." He paused. "I’ve been asking questions about that record for six months. I know what it says." Another pause. "Tell him — when he’s ready — I’m interested in a conversation. Not a negotiation. A conversation."
"I’ll tell him," she said.
He nodded.
The meeting continued.
For two hours they worked through the documentation — the collar charter, the provincial review, the administrative restructuring framework, the covenants, the independent bank structure, the relay network. The woman asked sharp precise questions that confirmed she had read everything available to her thoroughly. The man made decisions in real time, which was not what most people in his position did, and made them based on the information rather than on what the information might mean for his position.
’He reads briefings,’ the system said at one point, quietly amused.
’He does,’ Elara agreed.
At the end of the two hours the man sat back and looked at the table covered in organized documentation and said:
"This is more than I expected."
"The work doesn’t stop because circumstances change," Elara said.
He looked at her.
"I’m going to need someone who understands all of this," he said carefully. "The documentation, the framework, the things that were built and need to be continued." He paused. "I’m going to need—"
"You need an administrator," Elara said. "Someone with knowledge of the existing systems and the capacity to build what the systems still require."
"Yes," he said.
"That’s a separate conversation," she said. "For after you’ve read everything Dimitri just gave you and assessed what the gaps actually are."
He looked at her.
"You’re not going to make it easy," he said.
"I’m going to make it functional," she said. "Those aren’t the same thing."
He was quiet for a moment.
Then something happened in his expression that she had not seen coming — not surprise exactly, more like recognition, the specific look of someone encountering a fact they had half-expected and were relieved to find confirmed.
"You came back," he said.
"The work wasn’t finished," she said.
He nodded slowly.
"No," he said. "It wasn’t."
---
They left the administrative wing at the second bell of the afternoon.
The capital around them was ordinary and continuous. The merchant district traffic. The river sounds from the lower city. The specific ambient noise of a working city deciding what came next.
Nobody spoke for a block.
Then Dimitri said, quietly, to no one in particular: "He took the documentation."
"Yes," Elara said.
"All of it."
"Yes."
"Including the collar charter."
"Including the collar charter."
Dimitri exhaled. Slowly. The specific quality of someone setting down something they had been carrying for a very long time.
He did not put the bag down — he still held it, the strap over his shoulder, the now-lighter weight of it a different thing than it had been this morning.
But the exhale was real.
Mira was already making notes — the follow-up items, the timeline adjustments, the three things the woman had asked about that needed documentation they hadn’t brought today.
Petra was drafting in her head. Elara could see it in the quality of her focus.
Caius was quiet.
She walked beside him for half a block before he said anything.
"He said conversation," Caius said. "Not negotiation."
"Yes," she said.
"That’s—" He paused. "That’s what I needed to hear."
"I know," she said.
He was quiet again.
Then: "Tomorrow."
"Tomorrow is good," she said. "I’ll arrange it through the commissioner."
He nodded.
They walked.
The system was warm on her shoulder.
’The report,’ it said.
"Tell me," she said.
’Subject returned to the capital,’ it said. ’The documentation was received. The collar charter is with the appropriate authority. The conversation about the sealed record is arranged. The succession framework will be completed.’ A pause. ’Item thirty-eight is nearly done.’
"Nearly," she said.
’The list never gets shorter,’ the system said.
"No," she agreed.
’Are you all right with that.’
She thought about it.
The capital around her. The five people walking back toward a small office in the merchant district where a relay network was running and a year’s worth of work was organized and item thirty-nine was already forming.







