Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 72 --
She ignored it and kept working, because that’s what she always did.
Problems were just variables to solve. Obstacles were just steps in the process. Success wasn’t guaranteed, but failure only happened when you stopped calculating.
And Elara never stopped calculating.
Three weeks until opening.
Seventy-two variables left to manage.
Acceptable odds.
She pulled the next report toward her and continued reading, expression unchanged, while the city outside her window slowly dimmed into night.
.
.
.
Elara sat at her desk past midnight, staring at the calendar she’d marked with precise annotations.
Two months.
That’s all the time she had left.
The preservation magic contract with the merchant guild had been her official reason for leaving the capital—supervising the implementation, ensuring quality, overseeing distribution. Valid work that justified her absence.
But that work was finished now. Had been for three weeks.
The preservation anchors functioned perfectly. The merchant convoys were using them successfully. The guild had paid her first installment and already requested more units. By any measure, her stated purpose was complete.
Which meant she had no legitimate excuse to remain in Port Crestfall much longer.
If the Emperor summoned her back—and he would, eventually—she’d have no grounds to refuse. Not without openly defying him. And open defiance meant losing everything she’d built here.
The supermarket wouldn’t open for three more weeks. Even if it opened successfully, it would need at least two months of operation to prove stable profitability. Two months to establish vendor relationships, customer habits, supply chains. Two months to become something that could function without her physical presence.
She didn’t have two months.
She had eight weeks. Maybe nine if she pushed it.
Then she’d be forced back to the palace, back to her sisters’ reach, back to being a useful piece instead of a player.
Elara’s fingers tapped against the desk in a rare display of restless energy.
The math wasn’t working out. The timeline didn’t fit. She needed five months minimum to establish everything properly. She had two.
Unless she found a new excuse to stay.
Or unless she made returning to the capital more dangerous than staying away.
A soft knock interrupted her thoughts.
"Enter."
The fox knight stepped inside, expression serious. "Your Highness. Another one."
Elara didn’t need to ask what he meant. She stood and followed him to the window overlooking the back alley.
Three bodies lay crumpled near the storage entrance. Dark clothes. Masked faces. Weapons still in their hands.
"How many this time?" she asked.
"Five total. We killed three. Two escaped over the east wall." The fox knight’s ears were flat against his skull. "That’s the fourth attempt this week, Your Highness."
Four attempts. In seven days.
The assassination frequency had increased sharply since the supermarket construction became visible. Someone—probably multiple someones—had decided that killing her was now a priority.
"Injuries to our side?" Elara asked.
"Minor. One knight took a blade across the ribs. He’s been treated."
"Good." She turned from the window. "Double the night guard. Rotate shifts so no one’s on duty more than four hours at a stretch. Tired guards make mistakes."
"Your Highness, we already have ten knights on rotation—"
"Make it fifteen," Elara interrupted. "Pull them from day duties if necessary. The construction site has enough civilian workers. I need the security here."
The fox knight hesitated. "Your Highness... this is getting worse. Maybe we should inform the local guard. Or request imperial protection from the capital."
"No."
"But—"
"Local guard would report to local nobles. Some of whom probably sent these assassins." Elara’s tone was flat, factual. "And requesting imperial protection means admitting I can’t handle my own security. That makes me look weak. Invites more attempts, not fewer."
She walked back to her desk and sat down. "We handle this ourselves. Same as before."
The fox knight bowed and left, clearly unhappy but too disciplined to argue further.
Elara stared at the calendar again.
The assassination attempts were a problem, yes. But they were also data.
Someone wanted her dead badly enough to send professionals repeatedly. That cost money. Lots of it. Which meant whoever was funding this had deep pockets and considered her enough of a threat to justify the expense. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺
Good. Threats meant she was doing something that mattered.
But it also meant her time in Port Crestfall was more limited than she’d thought.
Because the attempts weren’t random. They were escalating. Coordinated. And sooner or later, one would succeed—not because her guards weren’t good, but because probability caught up with everyone eventually.
If she stayed here much longer, she’d die.
If she returned to the capital too soon, she’d lose everything she’d built.
Neither option was acceptable.
Elara pulled out a fresh sheet of paper and began writing. Not reports. Not financial projections. Strategy.
**Option 1: Find new excuse to extend stay**
- Problem: Already completed stated mission
- Possible solution: Claim complications requiring personal supervision
- Risk: Emperor sees through excuse, orders return anyway
**Option 2: Establish remote management before returning**
- Problem: Insufficient time to build reliable staff
- Possible solution: Promote Dimitri, Mira, Gregor to full authority
- Risk: Staff lacks experience, operation fails in her absence
**Option 3: Make returning more dangerous than staying**
- Problem: Would require evidence of capital-based threat
- Possible solution: Link assassins to palace source
- Risk: Might anger Emperor, could backfire catastrophically
**Option 4: Delay through medical excuse**
- Problem: Palace physicians would examine her
- Possible solution: Actual injury, controlled circumstances
- Risk: Real injury might be too severe to recover from
None of them were good options.
All of them had failure points she couldn’t fully control.
Elara set down her pen and looked at the ceiling. In her old life, this kind of timeline pressure was normal. Product launches that couldn’t be delayed. Investor meetings with fixed dates. Board votes that happened whether you were ready or not.
She’d always met the deadlines. Through planning, through ruthless prioritization, through working herself to collapse and then working more.
But this was different.
This wasn’t just about meeting a deadline. This was about building something that could survive without her—and building it fast enough that leaving didn’t destroy it.
The supermarket needed to open on schedule. No delays.
The food court needed to prove profitable immediately. No grace period.
The vendor network needed to stabilize within weeks instead of months.
And she needed to establish succession—train people to run this operation without her direct oversight—while also preventing those same people from betraying her the moment she left.
Elara picked up her pen again and began making lists.
**Critical path items:**
1. Supermarket opens week 6 (22 days from now)
2. First week operations must be flawless (demonstrates competence)
3. Revenue must hit projections (proves viability)
4. Staff promotions finalized by week 7 (gives them authority to continue)
5. Vendor contracts converted to long-term agreements (locks in supply)
6. Return to capital no later than week 10 (before Emperor summons her)
Four weeks to do what should take four months.
The math still didn’t work.
But it would have to.
Because the alternative was dying in an alley behind a warehouse, or returning to the capital empty-handed, or watching everything she’d built collapse because she’d left too soon.
All unacceptable.
Elara worked through the night, revising timelines, compressing schedules, identifying which corners could be cut without structural damage to the overall plan.







