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Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 274 --
"The collar charter has already been submitted. The provincial bloodline review documentation exists and is complete and is ready for handoff to an appropriate authority." She paused again. "The succession framework is partially drafted. It requires additional input before submission."
The commissioner looked at her.
"You’re telling me you have all of it," he said.
"I’m telling you the work survived," she said. "Which was the point."
He was quiet for a moment.
"The current authority," he said, "would like to meet with you. I can arrange that."
"I know," she said. "That’s why we’re here."
He looked at her.
For the first time in the conversation, something shifted in his expression — the pragmatic professional assessment giving way briefly to something more straightforward.
"You came back," he said. Simply.
"The work wasn’t finished," she said.
He looked at the preliminary contract approval in his hand.
Then at the delegation in front of him.
Then, finally, with the expression of someone who had been managing the trade commission through a palace coup and a contested succession and six weeks of anonymous documentation submissions and had apparently decided that this was simply the kind of year it had been:
"I’ll send word today," he said. "The meeting will be at your convenience." A pause. "Lian Mei."
The slight emphasis.
The acknowledgment of the name and what it contained.
"Thank you," she said.
He stood. Gathered his documents. Paused at the door.
"The northern route contract," he said. "It’s a good proposal. Regardless of everything else — it’s a genuinely good proposal."
"I know," she said. "We built it well."
He left.
---
The room held its silence for approximately ten seconds.
Then Dimitri put both hands flat on the bag.
"When," he said.
"Tomorrow at the latest," she said. "The commissioner will move quickly. He’s been waiting for this conversation."
"The current authority," Mira said. "What do we know."
"Enough to proceed," Elara said. "The relay gave us the structure. The pragmatism is confirmed. The questions they’ve been asking about the collar system suggest they’re operating in good faith on that specific issue." She paused. "The rest we assess in the room."
"And Caius," Petra said.
Caius was looking at the wall.
"Caius makes his own decision," Elara said.
He looked at her.
"I’ve decided," he said.
She waited.
"I want to present the record myself," he said. "Not as part of the delegation. As myself." He paused. "Caius Valen. What I am. What the record says. What I want and don’t want." Another pause. "Let them deal with me as a person rather than as a document."
Elara looked at him.
"That’s the right approach," she said.
He nodded once. Looked at the table.
"I’m still working out what I want," he said. "But I know I want to say it in my own voice."
"Yes," she said.
The system was very still on her shoulder.
She could feel it processing. Filing. Adding to whatever the current report entry contained.
She didn’t ask it to tell her what the entry said.
She already knew.
Something like: ’subject is back in the capital. The work is continuing. The household is intact. Item thirty-eight is in progress.’
Something like: ’this is what it looks like when something holds.’
She picked up the working list.
Added a note beside item thirty-eight.
’Commissioner contacted. Meeting arranged. Caius presenting independently. Adjust timeline accordingly.’
Looked at the note. 𝒇𝒓𝙚𝒆𝔀𝓮𝓫𝒏𝓸𝙫𝓮𝓵.𝓬𝙤𝙢
Looked at thirty-seven other items, eleven completed, twenty-six in progress, item thirty-nine still forming.
"Tonight," she said. "Everyone reviews their materials. We prepare for the meeting as thoroughly as we prepared for the contract review." She looked at each face in turn. "We are still Liang Meridian until the meeting concludes and we have assessed the outcome. Nothing changes until we know what we’re working with."
"And after we know," Mira said.
Elara looked at the window. The interior courtyard. The ordinary institutional stone.
"After we know," she said, "we work with what we have."
She stood.
Picked up her coat.
Adjusted the butterfly pin — gold wings, small rubies along the body. She had kept it. Through the passage, through Varen, through a year of being someone else. She had kept it.
Not because it was the fourth princess’s. Not because it meant something she could explain cleanly.
Because it was hers.
"Let’s go," she said.
They went.
The capital moved around them as they walked out of the trade commission building and into the merchant district street — ordinary, continuous, doing what cities did.
And in the stream of ordinary people going about their ordinary day, five people from a trading company walked back toward a small office with good relay connections and a year’s worth of work in their bags.
Unremarkable.
Which was exactly as it should be.
The system rode on her shoulder.
The working list was in her pocket.
Item thirty-nine was almost ready.
She walked.
.
.
.
The meeting was arranged for the following morning.
Not the throne room. Not the formal audience hall. A working room in the administrative wing — the kind of room where actual decisions happened rather than the kind where decisions were performed. Elara noted this when the commissioner’s message arrived that evening.
It told her something.
She filed it under ’current authority: pragmatic, confirmed.’
---
The night before, the five of them worked.
Not in the anxious way of people preparing for something they were uncertain about — in the specific focused way of people who had been building toward something for a year and were now at the moment where the building met its purpose.
Mira organized the documentation into the sequence that would make the most sense for a new authority receiving a large amount of unfamiliar material. Not chronological. By urgency and actionability — the things that needed immediate decision at the front, the things that provided context behind them.
Petra drafted the formal cover correspondence. Three versions — one for if the meeting went well, one for if it went cautiously, one for if it went unexpectedly. She had been doing this since the third month in Varen and had a reliable success rate at anticipating which version would be needed.
Dimitri sat with the bag and reviewed the collar charter for what was probably the fifteenth time since he had first drafted it. Not from uncertainty. From the specific quality of care that he brought to things that mattered.
Caius sat at the corner table and wrote.
Longhand. His own words. The account of what he was and what he knew and what he wanted and didn’t want. He wrote for two hours and then read it back and crossed out a third of it and wrote it again and this time did not cross anything out.
Elara reviewed the working list.
Then reviewed the relay intelligence on the current authority one more time.
Then sat with the folded sheet from her inner pocket — the honest lines, the names of people she trusted, the margin note she had added in the Varen warehouse — and read it once.
Put it back.
’Are you nervous,’ the system said.
"No," she said.
’Are you something.’
She thought about it.
"Attentive," she said. "The situation has high variability. I’m paying attention to the variability."
’That’s not the same as nervous,’ the system said.







