Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 31 --

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Chapter 31: Chapter-31

After walking several paces, Elara stopped and turned to face the fox knight trailing behind her.

"That lion beastman. How much influence does he have?"

The fox knight paused mid-step, ears flicking forward in surprise. A subtle expression—one Elara had learned to read as equivalent to shock in someone trained to show nothing.

She tilted her head slightly. "Beast knights aren’t supposed to display emotions. Most of you show nothing—not reluctance, not pleasure, not even acknowledgment beyond functional response. But he was smiling. Why?"

The fox knight lowered his head immediately. "Your Highness, it’s not that we cannot feel emotions. We simply aren’t permitted to show them." He paused, choosing words carefully. "Sir Robin is... different. Perhaps because he is the First Princess’s most favored knight, but he displays expression quite openly compared to the rest of us."

Elara processed this. "So he shows emotion regularly? This is normal behavior for him?"

"Not constantly, Your Highness. But more than standard protocol allows." The fox knight’s voice remained perfectly even. "If you wish, I can eliminate him for the disrespect."

Elara blinked once. Then the information clicked into place—something she’d read in the household regulations but not fully internalized until now. Beast knights could kill each other at their master’s command. No trial. No investigation. Just execution of an order.

The casualness of the offer was what struck her. No hesitation. No moral weight. Just a tactical option presented for consideration.

"Does he have influence over anything that poses danger to me?" she asked instead.

"No, Your Highness. Beast knights hold no authority over royal family members or palace operations. If you wished, you could have him whipped in the courtyard right now. You could order him to grovel on the ground. He would have no recourse." The fox knight’s tail remained still, expression neutral. "We exist to serve. We have no power beyond what our masters grant."

"So he’s functionally irrelevant," Elara said. "Just a trained asset. A tool."

The fox knight paused for just a heartbeat—long enough that she noticed—then nodded. "Yes, Your Highness."

Elara studied his face. No resentment. No anger at the dehumanizing description. Just agreement.

The royal family had broken these people so thoroughly that they would accept any characterization, any insult to their own kind, without protest. They’d been conditioned to the point where their sense of self existed only in service to their masters.

It was efficient. Disturbing. And explained why they made such effective intelligence assets—they literally could not conceptualize betrayal.

"Understood," Elara said. "Then Sir Robin is not a priority concern."

"Yes, Your Highness."

She turned and resumed walking, mind already filing the interaction into her growing database of palace mechanics. Beast knights were more complex than she’d initially assessed. The conditioning was absolute, yes—but individuals like Robin proved that personality could persist beneath the training. Which meant variability existed within what appeared to be a uniform system.

Useful information.

Behind her, the fox knight followed silently, and if he felt anything about the conversation they’d just had, his face showed absolutely nothing at all.

For three days, Elara sealed her palace doors to outside visitors and focused entirely on internal reorganization.

The new staff had been hired, orientation completed, and initial assignments distributed. Mira, the accountant, had taken over the financial records. Dimitri was establishing merchant contacts. The legal researcher was mapping court precedent for household rights. The logistics coordinator was inventorying physical assets.

But when Mira delivered her preliminary audit report on the third evening, the numbers told an uncomfortable story.

Elara sat at her desk reviewing the ledger columns with methodical precision. Her household had funds—enough for standard operations, servant salaries, basic maintenance. But competing in a succession battle? The kind of campaign that would require intelligence networks, political gifts, research funding, and emergency reserves?

Insufficient by at least seventy percent.

"The previous administration was bleeding money through embezzlement," Mira explained, pointing to highlighted entries. "But even correcting for theft, your base income from imperial allowances and estate rents won’t sustain an active political operation."

"I need independent revenue," Elara said.

"Your Highness, most royals supplement through noble house patronage or—"

"Which creates debt and political obligations. Unacceptable." Elara set down the ledger. "I need income that doesn’t compromise autonomy."

Mira hesitated. "Then... commercial ventures? But the imperial family—"

"The imperial family doesn’t engage in common trade. I’m aware." Elara tapped the desk once. "But the majority of wealth in this empire doesn’t sit in noble treasuries. It flows through merchant hands, guild operations, and common markets. If I need money, that’s where I get it."

She looked up at her assembled staff—all four of them gathered in her office for this strategic session. "I have three advantages: technical knowledge from my mother’s research, access to imperial patent systems, and a household seal that allows me to license commercial applications of magical theory. We’re going to monetize that combination."

Dimitri leaned forward. "Your Highness, are you proposing to sell research patents to merchants?"

"Not sell. License. Controlled distribution with revenue sharing." Elara pulled out a blank sheet and began sketching a basic organizational chart. "Mira handles financial structuring. Dimitri negotiates with merchant partners and establishes distribution channels. I provide the actual innovations—practical applications of existing theory that solve commercial problems."

"What kind of innovations?" the legal researcher asked. 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢

"Preservation spells for food transport. Temperature regulation for textile storage. Resonance markers for authentication of luxury goods." Elara wrote rapidly. "Nothing revolutionary enough to attract imperial scrutiny. Just useful, profitable applications that the merchant class desperately needs and currently doesn’t have access to."

The logistics coordinator nodded slowly. "That could work. Merchants lose enormous amounts to spoilage and counterfeiting. If you could solve even one of those problems..."

"I can solve three of them within a month," Elara said. "And we structure contracts so I receive percentage royalties on every licensed use. Initial capital investment: minimal. Long-term revenue: scalable and independent of political favor."

Mira was already calculating. "If we target the merchant guilds, start with the food preservation application to the eastern trade routes..." Her eyes widened. "Your Highness, if adoption rates reach even twenty percent, annual revenue could exceed your current household budget within two years."

"And more importantly," Elara added, "it establishes economic relationships with the merchant class, the crafting guilds, and the common trade infrastructure. Which means intelligence access, transportation networks, and political support that doesn’t depend on noble house allegiance."

The room went quiet as her staff absorbed the implications.

"You’re building a parallel power base," Dimitri said slowly. "Outside the aristocratic system entirely."

"I’m ensuring survival through economic independence," Elara corrected. "The succession battle will be won or lost based on resources, information, and alliances. My sisters have the nobles. I’ll take the merchants. They’re richer anyway."

She stood, ignoring the pull in her still-healing shoulder. "Dimitri, I need a list of every major merchant guild representative in the capital by tomorrow. Mira, draft three commercial licensing contract templates—simple, enforceable, favorable to us but reasonable enough merchants won’t reject them outright. I’ll have the first working prototype ready for demonstration in one week."

"Which prototype, Your Highness?" the legal researcher asked.

Elara’s expression remained perfectly flat, but there was something sharp in her eyes. "Food preservation. Every merchant in this empire loses money to spoilage. I’m going to sell them the solution."

As her staff dispersed to begin their assignments, Elara returned to her desk and pulled out her mother’s research notes—the ones she’d been studying for weeks, looking for anything commercially viable.