©Novel Buddy
Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 151 --
"The system is corrupt and inefficient. Yes, I’m dismantling it. That was always the plan." Elara made more notes. "The question is whether I can dismantle it faster than they can organize effective resistance."
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## Week Three: The Secret Project
But Elara knew better than to announce her plans openly.
The conversation with Petra had been useful for clarifying her thinking. But the actual implementation? That needed to happen quietly.
So while publicly she continued negotiating with resistant nobles, conducting interviews, managing daily crises—
In secret, she pulled aside one of her newer administrators. Roland, a former military logistics officer who’d been dishonorably discharged for refusing to participate in a noble family’s embezzlement scheme. He’d been homeless when Elara’s recruiters found him. Now he was Deputy Director of Military Resource Allocation.
"Roland. I have a confidential project requiring your expertise."
He straightened immediately. "Yes, Your Highness?"
"I need feasibility analysis for establishing independent military unit staffed entirely by beast knights. Officer training curriculum, equipment requirements, operational doctrine, legal framework, political risk assessment. Complete proposal within two weeks. Tell no one you’re working on this."
Roland’s eyes widened. "That would... Your Highness, that would fundamentally challenge noble military authority."
"Correct. That’s why it’s confidential. The nobles can’t organize resistance to something they don’t know exists until implementation is too far along to stop." Elara handed him a folder. "These are preliminary specifications. Modify as necessary based on professional military assessment."
"You’re serious about this."
"I don’t assign projects I’m not serious about. That would be inefficient." Elara’s voice stayed flat. "Can you deliver the analysis or should I find someone else?"
"No—I can do it. I will do it." Roland clutched the folder. "This is... Your Highness, if this works, it changes everything."
"That’s the goal. Changing everything that’s currently broken." Elara glanced toward the door where her beast knight guards stood. "Those soldiers saved my life multiple times over the past weeks. They’re competent, loyal, and systematically underutilized because of arbitrary social prejudice. I’m correcting that inefficiency."
"It’s not just efficiency, Your Highness. This is justice."
"I don’t make decisions based on justice. I make them based on optimal outcomes. Justice is occasional beneficial side effect." Elara turned back to her desk. "Two weeks. Comprehensive analysis. Absolute confidentiality."
"Yes, Your Highness."
He left.
Alone in her office, Elara allowed herself a small moment of strategic satisfaction.
The nobles thought they were managing her. Stalling her reforms through bureaucratic resistance, economic pressure, political maneuvering.
They didn’t realize she was already building the systems that would make their resistance irrelevant.
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## Week Four: Breaking Point
By week four, Elara was running on three hours of sleep per night.
The interview process continued—she’d hired 127 new administrators now, still needed about 90 more. Each interview took minimum thirty minutes. That was 65 hours just on interviews, not counting the actual work of reviewing financial records, managing daily crises, updating security protocols after assassination attempts.
The assassination attempts had increased to nearly daily occurrences. Nothing as sophisticated as the first arrow attack—mostly crude attempts by hired thugs. But each one required response, investigation, security updates.
The nobles’ resistance had solidified into organized opposition. Duke Veltris had convinced six other provincial leaders to jointly refuse cooperation with imperial auditors. They’d submitted formal petition to the Imperial Council demanding Elara’s removal as regent, citing "administrative overreach and disregard for traditional noble authority."
The petition wouldn’t succeed—Elara had the Emperor’s official seal and legal authority—but it signaled the nobles were coordinating instead of acting individually. That was more dangerous.
And on top of everything else, the daily governance continued. Tax disputes. Military deployment decisions. Infrastructure repair authorizations. Trade agreement negotiations. Judicial appeals. Hundreds of small decisions that couldn’t be delayed just because Elara was simultaneously rebuilding the entire government.
Petra found her in the office at 2 AM, surrounded by papers, eyes bloodshot but still focused.
"You need to sleep," Petra said.
"After I finish this revenue projection analysis. Approximately ninety minutes remaining."
"Elara, you’re going to collapse. You can’t maintain this pace—"
"Current pace is unsustainable long-term. I’m aware. But it’s necessary short-term to prevent systemic failure during transition period." Elara didn’t look up from her calculations. "Once new administrators are fully trained and noble resistance is sufficiently managed, workload will decrease to sustainable levels. Estimated timeline: six more weeks."
"Six weeks of three hours sleep per night will kill you faster than the assassins!"
"Unlikely. Human body can function on minimal sleep for extended periods if nutrition and stimulant management are optimized. I’m monitoring my own health metrics." Elara made another notation. "Cardiovascular stress is elevated but within acceptable parameters. Cognitive function shows minor degradation but remains sufficient for required tasks."
"You’re monitoring your own health metrics. Like you’re a machine."
"Efficient self-assessment prevents catastrophic failure. Would you prefer I ignore warning signs until I actually collapse?" Elara finally looked up, and Petra could see the exhaustion even in those emotionless eyes. "I’m being as careful as circumstances permit. That’s optimal strategy given constraints."
Petra sat down heavily. "I wish Eleana and Parmilda were here. They’d force you to rest."
"They’re on vacation because they were exhausted from decades of palace politics. If they were here, they’d be equally overworked and we’d have three people collapsing instead of one person managing effectively." Elara returned to her work. "Their absence is actually beneficial. No emotional pressure to accommodate their concerns. I can work at optimal efficiency."
"That’s a terrible way to think about family support—"
A knock at the door. One of the night-shift beast knights entered.
"Your Highness. Report from the investigation team. They’ve identified the source of schedule information leaks to assassins."
Elara set down her pen immediately. "Who?"
"Lord Merchant, Your Highness. One of the former treasury secretaries you terminated for incompetence. He’s been selling your schedule to noble families opposed to the reforms. We have documentation of payments, message exchanges, everything."
"Arrest him. Standard charges: conspiracy to commit murder, treason, information trafficking. Trial within the week." Elara’s voice was cold. "What’s the status of the six nobles he was selling information to?"
"All from families under investigation for corruption. Duke Veltris is one of them."
"Of course he is." Elara made notes. "That establishes direct connection between financial investigation resistance and assassination attempts. Useful for legal proceedings. Anything else?"
"The investigation team also found evidence of a larger conspiracy. Lord Merchant is part of a network of approximately twenty dismissed officials who are actively working to sabotage your administration. They’re coordinating with resistant noble families."
Elara absorbed this information. "Twenty people. Organized sabotage network. Funded by corrupt nobles. Targeting administrative functions, security, and public perception."
"Yes, Your Highness."
"How much of our current operational difficulties are attributable to deliberate sabotage versus normal transition problems?"
The knight consulted his report. "Estimated thirty to forty percent. The delayed supply shipments, the ’accidental’ document destruction, several of the personnel problems—all linked to this network."
Elara was quiet for a moment, processing.
Then she stood. "Arrest all twenty. Immediately. Tonight. Before they can coordinate response or destroy evidence. Bring them to the palace detention facility. I’ll personally oversee interrogations starting at dawn."
"Yes, Your Highness." The knight bowed and left quickly.
Petra stared at her. "You’re going to interrogate twenty people starting at dawn after working all night?"







