Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 47 --
Someone had been in here. Recently. While she’d been at dinner.
Elara’s heart hammered, but she forced herself to stay calm and think. She had a habit—some might call it obsessive—of arranging things in very specific ways. Every buckle at a particular hole. Every lock aligned just so. Every trunk positioned at an exact angle.
It drove the servants crazy. But right now, it might have just saved her life.
She glanced at her door. The fox knight stood guard outside. She could call him in. Get help checking everything.
But then he’d know. He’d tell the others. Word would spread through her household that someone had breached her room again. People would panic. Get sloppy. Make mistakes.
And whoever did this would know she’d noticed.
No. Better to handle this alone. Quietly.
Elara opened the first trunk carefully, working by lamplight. She pulled out clothes layer by layer until she reached the bottom.
There. A small cloth pouch that hadn’t been there before, tucked into the corner seam.
She stared at it for a long moment, then very carefully lifted it by the tied corner—not letting it tip, not letting anything spill out. She brought it close to the lamp.
Dark powder. She didn’t open it, didn’t breathe deeply near it, but she recognized the color. Nightshade blend, probably. Maybe mixed with silverleaf or something worse.
If that had opened during the journey in a confined barge cabin...
She set it down on her desk, far from anything else, and went back to the trunks.
For the next three hours, she went through everything. Slowly. Methodically. Checking each item against her mental inventory of exactly what she’d packed and how.
She found:
- A preservation anchor in her materials trunk that looked right but felt wrong when she activated it with a trickle of magic. It sparked weakly, failing after two seconds. A sabotaged anchor. If she’d used this to demonstrate the magic to merchants, it would have made her look incompetent. Or worse, if it had failed catastrophically, it could have injured someone.
- A carefully torn seam in one of her traveling dresses, placed so it would rip completely the first time she wore it in public. Small humiliation, but effective.
- A contract copy with one clause subtly altered—changing "exclusive rights" to "negotiable rights." Small change, massive legal implications.
- A bottle of ink that smelled faintly off. She dabbed a bit on scrap paper and watched it. The color faded noticeably within minutes. Disappearing ink disguised as normal ink.
- A cloak with a hidden cut in the lining that would worsen in rain, leaving her cold and wet during the river journey.
Not all lethal. But together? They added up to failure. Humiliation. Sickness. Death by a thousand careful cuts.
She worked in complete silence, replacing each sabotaged item with verified alternatives from her remaining supplies or simply removing them entirely. The poisoned pouch went into a lockbox she shoved to the back of her wardrobe. The failed anchor she wrapped carefully and hid separately. Evidence, maybe, if she ever needed it.
By the time dawn light started creeping through her window, she’d repacked all three trunks with items she’d personally verified.
Her hands were steady. Her mind was clear.
She didn’t call for help. Didn’t alert the guards. Didn’t tell anyone.
Because whoever had done this was watching. Waiting to see if she’d react. Waiting to see if she’d panic, accuse someone, make a scene that would delay her departure or make her look unstable.
She refused to give them that satisfaction.
Instead, she locked the trunks with fresh locks she’d kept in her desk—ones no one else had keys to. She positioned them at a new angle, memorizing exactly where each corner sat relative to the floorboards.
Then she changed into fresh clothes, washed her face, and sat down at her desk to review departure logistics as if nothing had happened.
When the fox knight knocked an hour later to check on her, she opened the door looking composed.
"Your Highness. You’re awake early."
"Couldn’t sleep. Too much to organize." She gestured at the papers on her desk. "I want to review guard rotations for the barge one more time."
He nodded, seeing nothing unusual. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
Good.
Four more days in this palace.
Four more days surrounded by people who wanted her dead.
But now she knew: they could get into her room. They could touch her things. They could try to kill her slowly and subtly.
And she could catch them.
Her obsessive habits—the ones that made servants roll their eyes, the ones that seemed paranoid and excessive—had just proven their worth.
She’d check everything. Trust nothing. Watch everything.
And she’d do it alone.
Because the moment she told someone she’d found the sabotage, she’d lose her advantage. They’d know she was paying attention. They’d adapt. Get better. Try harder.
Better to let them think their careful work had gone unnoticed.
Better to let them believe she was oblivious.
Right up until the moment the barge pulled away from the dock and their window to kill her closed.
Four more days.
She could survive four more days.
.
.
.
The summons came at dawn, three days before departure.
Not from the Emperor this time. From ’her’.
A single servant arrived at Elara’s door—a woman in the First Consort’s colors, silver and deep purple. She bowed with mechanical precision.
"Her Ladyship, the First Consort, requests Princess Elara’s presence. Private audience. Immediately."
The fox knight stiffened behind Elara. The First Consort—the Emperor’s highest-ranking wife, Eleana’s mother—never summoned anyone directly. She existed in the background of palace life, attending ceremonies, managing the Emperor’s household, but otherwise staying out of succession politics.
Or so everyone assumed.
"Now?" Elara asked.
"Immediately, Your Highness."
There was no room for refusal in that tone.
Elara followed the servant through corridors she’d never used before. They climbed stairs that spiraled upward into the oldest part of the palace, where the air smelled of dust and centuries-old stone. The fox knight trailed behind, but when they reached a particular doorway, the servant stopped him with one raised hand.
"The First Consort sees Princess Elara alone."
"I don’t leave my charge," the fox knight said flatly.
"You will. Or there is no audience."
Elara met his eyes. Saw the conflict there. Then she nodded once. "Wait here."
"Your Highness—"
"It’s fine." It wasn’t fine. Nothing about this was fine. But refusing Eleana’s mother would be worse.
The door opened.
Elara stepped inside.
***
The First Consort’s private chambers were nothing like she’d expected.
No luxury. No gold. No silk.
Just a circular room lined floor to ceiling with books. Old ones. Some bound in leather so ancient it looked ready to crumble. Others wrapped in cloth and marked with symbols Elara didn’t recognize. A single window let in grey morning light. One chair. One small table. Nothing else.
And sitting in that chair, wearing a simple grey dress with her silver hair unbound, was the First Consort.
She looked like an older, colder version of Eleana. Same sharp cheekbones. Same pale skin. But her eyes were winter ice where Eleana’s were calculating fire. Beautiful in the way a knife was beautiful—cold, precise, dangerous.







