Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 91 --
"And this," Elara continued, pulling out a document Dimitri hadn’t known existed, "is a signed confession from your warehouse supervisor. Obtained by the Shadow Guild two hours ago."
She unfolded it and read aloud: "’On the fifteenth day of this month, Merchant Lord Carver personally instructed me to add a prepared substance to specific spice containers destined for the Fourth Princess’s establishment. He provided the substance in a sealed vial and specified exact mixing ratios. He stated the mixture would cause illness but not death, and that I was to tell no one.’"
Silence.
Carver’s face had gone pale. "That’s... I don’t know what you think you have, but—"
"Your supervisor is currently in custody," Elara said. Her tone didn’t change—still flat, clinical. "Along with your personal assistant and two delivery workers. All four have provided detailed testimony about your direct involvement in poisoning my customers."
She folded the document and handed it to the magistrate, who stepped forward.
"Merchant Lord Carver," the magistrate said formally, "under imperial authority granted to Princess Elara Blackwood, you are hereby charged with deliberate poisoning, attempted mass harm, commercial sabotage, and conspiracy against a member of the imperial family." He unrolled an official warrant. "Do you have anything to say in your defense?"
Carver stared at the warrant. At Elara. At the ten beast knights standing in formation behind her, hands resting on sword hilts.
His expression shifted—shock to calculation to anger, cycling through in seconds.
"This is absurd," he said finally. His voice had an edge now. "You can’t just march into my home with fabricated evidence and—"
"The magistrate verified every piece of evidence before we arrived," Elara interrupted. "The testimony is legally binding under imperial law. The physical evidence was examined by the city physician. The confession was witnessed by three separate officials." She paused. "And the charges carry a minimum sentence of twenty years in imperial prison. Maximum is execution."
She let that sink in. Watched his face process it.
"However," Elara continued after a moment, "I’m not here to see you imprisoned."
Carver’s eyes narrowed. "Then why are you here?" 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
"To offer you a choice." She pulled another document from inside her jacket—a property transfer agreement, already prepared. "You sign over all business assets to a holding company I designate. You dissolve all partnerships and commercial operations in Port Crestfall. You leave the city within one week and never return."
Carver took the document. Read it. His hands shook slightly—rage or fear, difficult to tell.
"You want me to give you everything," he said quietly.
"Yes."
"My warehouses. My ships. My trade routes. My supplier contracts. Everything I’ve built over thirty years."
"Yes."
"In exchange for what?"
"I delay presenting this evidence to the Emperor for one year." Elara’s voice remained calm. "If you comply fully—transfer all assets, leave the city, cause me no further problems—the evidence is suppressed. You live quietly somewhere else with whatever personal wealth you’ve saved outside Port Crestfall."
"And if I refuse?"
"Then the magistrate files charges today. You’re arrested, tried, and sentenced. Given the evidence, conviction is certain. Twenty years minimum, possibly execution depending on how the imperial court views poisoning customers of a princess’s business."
Carver set the document down on the table between them. His face had gone from pale to flushed—anger rising.
"This is extortion," he said.
"No. This is consequences." Elara met his gaze without expression. "You poisoned eight people to damage my business. I’m responding by removing you from the market entirely. It’s proportional."
"Proportional?" Carver’s voice rose. "You’re taking everything I own!"
"You tried to destroy everything I built. I’m simply being more successful at it." She gestured toward the document. "You have three options. Sign the agreement and leave with some dignity. Refuse and go to prison for twenty years. Or refuse and force me to pursue option three."
"Which is?"
"Complete destruction of you and everyone connected to you."
The magistrate shifted uncomfortably. The beast knights didn’t move.
Carver stared at her. "You’re bluffing. You can’t just—a merchant lord has protections, connections—"
"Attempted poisoning of imperial customers is a capital offense," Elara said. "The magistrate can confirm that. The evidence is overwhelming. If I want you executed, I file the paperwork and wait for the Emperor’s seal. You’d be dead within a month, and all your assets would be seized by the imperial treasury anyway."
She paused.
’Well this imperial name is really a strong brand just use it even on dogs and its become more important then a commoner life ’
"My offer lets you keep your life and some personal wealth. The alternative is you lose everything, including your head."
Carver’s hands clenched into fists. "You walked into this city six months ago with nothing. You’re unfavored. The weakest princess in the succession battle. And you think you can just—"
"I already did," Elara interrupted. "Baron Kessler signed similar terms two weeks ago and left the city. Viscount Marrs accepted an arrangement yesterday afternoon. You’re the third local noble who tried to stop me, and you’ll be the third to lose."
"Marrs accepted your terms?" Carver looked genuinely shocked.
"She was smart enough to recognize a good deal. You should do the same."
"I’m not Marrs. I have actual power in this city. Resources. I can fight this—"
"You can try," Elara said. "But every day you spend fighting is a day the evidence gets more public, the charges get more severe, and your business operations continue to deteriorate." She pulled out her pocket watch, checked it. "You have sixty seconds to decide. Sign and leave, or face prosecution."
"I need time to consult with advisors—"
"Fifty seconds."
"This is absurd! You can’t just—"
"Forty seconds."
Carver looked around wildly—at his estate, his guards who wouldn’t meet his eyes, the magistrate who held imperial authority he couldn’t challenge.
"You’re destroying me," he said quietly. "Everything I built. My family’s legacy."
"You should have considered that before poisoning my customers."
"Thirty seconds."
"Damn you," Carver whispered.
"Twenty."
He grabbed the pen from the table. His hand shook—rage making the signature barely legible as he scrawled his name across the transfer documents.
"There." He threw the pen down. "Satisfied?"
Elara took the documents, verified each signature, cross-checked against the witness sections. Everything was in order.
"The magistrate will oversee the asset transfer," she said. "You have one week to finalize all paperwork and vacate Port Crestfall. If you’re still in the city on the eighth day, the original criminal charges are filed immediately and this agreement becomes void."
"I understand," Carver said through clenched teeth.
"Good." Elara turned toward the door. "Your warehouse supervisor and the others who testified will be released once the transfers are complete. They cooperated with the investigation, so they’re not being charged."
"You got them to betray me by threatening their families," Carver said bitterly.
"No. I got them to betray you by offering them immunity and compensation for truthful testimony. They chose survival. Just like you should have chosen not to poison my customers in the first place."
She walked toward the exit, her knights falling into formation behind her.
"Princess," Carver called out.
She paused, didn’t turn around.
"I hope you realize what you’ve done. Destroying Kessler, me, forcing Marrs to back down—you’re making powerful enemies. And you’re still in the middle of a succession battle where your own sisters want you dead."
"I’m aware."
"Then you know this won’t end well for you. Eventually, someone will succeed where we failed."







