Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 78 --

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Chapter 78: Chapter-78

"Baron Kessler," Elara began, voice clinical and precise. "In the last six weeks, you have spent approximately eight hundred gold hiring assassins to kill me. Three separate contracts. Two failed completely. One resulted in a minor injury to one of my guards."

Kessler’s face went from red to white. "That’s—that’s absurd—I would never—"

"Don’t lie." Elara gestured to Dimitri, who opened the folder and pulled out the first document. "This is a record of payment from your personal account to a merchant intermediary named Velos. Dated five weeks ago. Amount: three hundred gold. Memo: security consultation."

She nodded, and Dimitri pulled out another page.

"This is testimony from Velos, obtained through legal channels, stating that you hired him to arrange ’removal of a business competitor.’ His words, not mine. He identified you by name, physical description, and provided copies of your written instructions."

Kessler opened his mouth. Nothing came out.

Dimitri pulled out a third document.

"This is the assassin’s contract itself. Your signature is at the bottom. We found it among the possessions of one of the men my guards killed two weeks ago."

Elara watched Kessler’s face cycle through emotions—denial, fear, rage, calculation.

"You have no proof—those could be forged—"

"They’re not forged. The city magistrate has copies. So does the merchant guild. So does the imperial records office." Elara’s tone remained flat, factual. "You attempted to murder a member of the imperial family. The penalty for that is death. Public execution, usually. Sometimes torture first, depending on the Emperor’s mood."

Kessler stood abruptly. "You can’t—I have rights—I’ll appeal—"

"Sit down, Baron Kessler. I’m not finished."

Something in her eyes made him sit.

Elara walked closer to the desk. "You’re going to die. That’s not a threat. It’s a fact. The evidence is documented, verified, and filed. When I return to the capital—which will be soon—I’ll present it to the Emperor personally. He’ll issue the execution order. You’ll be dead within a month."

Kessler’s breathing was rapid, panicked. "Please—Your Highness—I didn’t mean—it was a mistake—"

"It was attempted murder. Seven times." She paused. "But I’m not here to argue about what you did. I’m here to offer you a choice."

Hope flickered across his face. Pathetic.

"You can die," Elara continued, "or you can be destroyed. Pick one."

"I... I don’t understand—"

"Death is simple. Execution. Quick. Your family inherits your property, keeps your title, mourns publicly." She tilted her head slightly. "Destruction is different. I dismantle everything you’ve built. Your rental properties? I buy them. Your business partnerships? I dissolve them. Your reputation? I ruin it. Your family? I make sure everyone knows what you did, so they spend the rest of their lives associated with a failed assassin who tried to kill a princess over a market dispute."

Kessler’s hands were shaking now. "You’re... you’re a monster."

"I’m practical," Elara corrected. "You tried to kill me. I’m responding proportionally. The question is whether you prefer a quick death or a slow destruction."

"Why would I choose destruction?"

"Because your family survives it. Barely. Disgraced, poor, but alive." She pulled out a third option from Dimitri’s folder. "Or there’s option three."

"Which is?"

"You give me everything voluntarily."

Silence.

"I’m listening," Kessler said quietly.

"You transfer ownership of all your rental properties to a holding company I designate. You withdraw from all business partnerships in Port Crestfall. You leave the city within one week and never return." Elara set the document on his desk. "In exchange, I delay presenting the evidence to the Emperor for one year. If you comply fully and cause me no further problems, the evidence gets ’lost’ in the imperial archives and never surfaces."

"You want me to give you everything and trust that you’ll keep your word?"

"Yes."

"That’s extortion."

"It’s mercy," Elara corrected. "The alternative is execution or destruction. This way, you live. Your family keeps the title. You relocate somewhere quiet and rebuild from scratch." She paused. "Or you can refuse, and I’ll proceed with option one or two. Your choice."

Kessler stared at the document. His hands shook as he picked it up, reading through the terms.

"This is... this is everything I own." 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮

"In Port Crestfall, yes. You’ll have whatever assets you hold elsewhere." Elara’s voice remained emotionless. "But your presence here ends. Permanently."

"And if I refuse?"

"Then you’re dead within a month, and your family is ruined within two." She looked at him directly. "Baron Kessler, I don’t enjoy this. I’m not doing it for revenge or satisfaction. I’m doing it because you tried to kill me and I can’t allow that to go unanswered. This is the most efficient solution that serves my interests while giving you a chance to survive."

She pulled out a pen and set it on the desk.

"Sign. Or don’t. I leave in five minutes either way."

Kessler looked at the document. Looked at her. Looked at the beast knights by the door.

His hand picked up the pen.

"If you betray me—" he started.

"I won’t," Elara interrupted. "I keep my word when the other party keeps theirs. Sign, transfer the properties, leave Port Crestfall. Do that, and in one year this evidence disappears. Fail any part of that, and it goes directly to the Emperor."

Kessler signed.

His hand shook so badly the signature was barely legible, but it was legally binding.

Elara took the document, handed it to Dimitri, and turned to leave.

"Your Highness," Kessler said quietly.

She stopped but didn’t turn around.

"I’m sorry. For what I did."

"No, you’re not," Elara said. "You’re sorry you got caught. There’s a difference."

She walked out.

In the carriage ride back to her residence, Dimitri spoke carefully. "Your Highness, that was... efficient."

"It solved the problem."

"Will you really suppress the evidence if he complies?"

"Yes." Elara looked out the window at Port Crestfall passing by. "Dead enemies are simple. Destroyed enemies are examples. But controlled enemies are assets. Kessler will comply because survival is his only option. And if he doesn’t, I still have the execution option available."

"And Viscount Marrs? Merchant Lord Carver?"

"Marrs is next. Tomorrow. Carver is more complicated—he has actual power in this city." She paused. "But he’s also made the same mistake Kessler did. He tried to kill me quietly. That only works if I don’t find out. I found out."

Dimitri made notes. "Should I prepare similar documentation?"

"Yes. Same three options. They can choose how they want to lose."

The carriage continued through the city. Elara watched people moving through streets, buying goods, living their lives.

Unaware that three men who’d tried to kill the quiet princess in the warehouse district were about to discover that quiet didn’t mean harmless.

It just meant efficient.

---

# The Traitor Revealed

Four days after destroying Baron Kessler’s holdings, Elara received her first weekly report from the Shadow Guild.

It arrived at dawn, delivered by the same forgettable messenger to a designated drop point that changed every week. This time: a hollow stone in the wall behind her building.

Elara retrieved the sealed folder herself and returned to her office to read it.

The report was comprehensive. Market movements in Port Crestfall. Noble activities. Criminal operations. A shipping dispute at the docks. Two merchant families feuding over a contract. A brothel that had opened in the warehouse district.