©Novel Buddy
Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts-Chapter 173 --
Elara stumbled as reality reformed around her. She was no longer standing in peaceful whiteness. She was standing on scorched earth, beneath a sky the color of old blood.
Heat slammed into her—oppressive, suffocating, wrong. The air tasted like copper and ash.
"Welcome," the voice said, now coming from directly beside her, "to one of the places where petty selfishness ends up."
Elara turned.
A woman stood there now—fully materialized for the first time. Tall, ageless, with features that seemed to shift between ethnicities and ages depending on how the light hit them. Her eyes were ancient. Her expression was... disappointed.
"What is this?" Elara asked, voice steady despite the wrongness of everything around her.
"Hell," the woman said simply. "One of many. The realm where souls are purified through suffering proportional to the suffering they caused."
She gestured ahead.
Elara looked.
The landscape was nightmare made manifest. Rivers of something that moved like water but burned like acid. Mountains of twisted metal and bone. And everywhere—*everywhere*—people.
Screaming.
Burning.
Dying.
And then reforming to do it all again.
"Come," the woman said. "Let me educate you about consequences."
She walked forward, and despite every instinct screaming at her to run, Elara followed.
They approached the first scene.
A man knelt in a circle of fire, hands pressed to his head, mouth open in a scream that had no sound. His body bore wounds—stab wounds, dozens of them, bleeding but never bleeding out enough to kill.
"Watch," the woman said.
As they observed, the wounds closed. The man’s scream cut off. He looked around, confused, hopeful—
A blade materialized in the air and plunged into his chest.
He screamed again.
The blade twisted. Withdrew. Struck again. And again. And again.
Twenty-seven times.
Elara counted automatically.
When the twenty-seventh strike finished, the man collapsed. His body dissolved into ash. There was a moment of silence—
Then he reformed, kneeling, hands to his head, wounds already appearing.
The cycle started again.
"He killed twenty-seven people in your world," the woman said conversationally. "Twenty-seven murders. Each one stabbed to death. So here, he experiences dying by stabbing. Twenty-seven times per cycle. The exact way each victim felt it—the fear, the pain, the betrayal, the desperate hope that maybe the next wound wouldn’t come."
She looked at Elara with those ancient eyes.
"He’s been here for six hundred years. He’ll be here for four hundred more before his soul is considered purified enough to reincarnate. That’s the math—one hundred years per life taken, multiplied by how cruelly he took them."
Elara’s expression didn’t change, but she was processing. Calculating. "That’s... ten thousand repetitions per year. Accounting for—"
"Three million six hundred thousand deaths," the woman finished. "Give or take. Yes. He’s experienced death three million times so far. He’ll experience it another million and a half before his sentence concludes."
She gestured to the next area.
"Come. There’s more."
They walked past hundreds of similar scenes. Thousands. Each soul trapped in their own cycle of suffering:
A woman drowning repeatedly—lungs burning, water filling her throat, the moment of panic as consciousness faded. Over and over. "She drowned fifteen children in a well over ten years," the woman explained. "She experiences each death. Fifteen variations of the same terror. Forever cycling until her time is complete."
A man being crushed beneath stones, bones breaking, organs rupturing, the slow horrifying realization that death was coming but not quickly enough. "He executed people by crushing. Enjoyed watching them suffer. Now he knows exactly how long those deaths took. Down to the second. He’ll know for the next two thousand years."
A young person—barely more than a child—standing on a cliff’s edge, feeling overwhelming despair, stepping off, experiencing the fall and impact. Then reforming at the top to feel that despair all over again. "Suicide," the woman said quietly. "They took their own life at seventeen. But they didn’t just hurt themselves—they destroyed their family with grief. Their younger sibling followed them into death six months later. So now they experience not just their own death, but the emotional torment they caused. The guilt. The grief. The despair they inflicted on others. Until they understand the full weight of what they did."
"That seems..." Elara paused, searching for the right word. "...disproportionate. They hurt themselves. The family’s response was their own choice—"
"Was it?" The woman turned to her sharply. "When you’re twelve years old and your older sibling—your hero, your protector—decides life isn’t worth living, is your choice to follow them really free? Or is it the inevitable result of trauma and loss combined with underdeveloped coping mechanisms?"
She gestured broadly at the hellscape around them.
"Every action has consequences, Elara. Every choice creates ripples. These souls aren’t being punished for malice—most of them truly believed they had good reasons for what they did. The murderer thought his victims deserved it. The woman who drowned children believed she was saving them from worse fates. The executioner was following orders. The suicide victim thought they were ending only their own suffering."
Her expression hardened.
"But intentions don’t erase harm. So here, they learn. They experience *exactly* what they inflicted. Not as punishment for punishment’s sake, but as education. As purification. So that when they reincarnate, they carry the weight of understanding in their soul—even if they don’t consciously remember."
She snapped her fingers again.
The scene changed.
Now they stood in a massive arena. Thousands—tens of thousands—of souls filled the space. They fought each other with weapons that appeared and disappeared, killing and dying and reforming to kill and die again.
"Warriors," the woman said. "Soldiers who loved war. Who chose violence not out of necessity but preference. Who killed not to protect but because they enjoyed the power, the dominance, the thrill of victory."
The fighting was brutal. Visceral. Elara watched with clinical detachment as a man gutted an opponent, only to be beheaded from behind a moment later. Both reformed within seconds and rejoined the battle.
"They loved war," the woman continued. "So they get war. Eternal war. They kill and are killed, over and over, experiencing every death they ever inflicted plus thousands more. Learning—slowly, painfully—that violence isn’t glorious. It’s suffering."
She looked at Elara directly.
"How long do you think they’ll be here?"
Elara calculated. "Dependent on kill count and cruelty metrics. If we assume average medieval soldier with twenty to thirty kills over a career, and apply your stated ratio of one hundred years per life taken... two to three thousand years."
"Close. But you’re forgetting the multiplier for those who killed joyfully. Who *enjoyed* it. That adds time. A lot of time." The woman’s expression was cold. "Some of these souls have been fighting for ten thousand years. They’ll fight for ten thousand more. Until the love of violence is completely burned out of them." 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦
Another snap.
The scene shifted again.
This time they stood in a pristine white room—almost like the void they’d started in, but subtly wrong. Sterile. Clinical. And filled with glass chambers.
Inside each chamber, a person sat alone.
Completely, utterly alone.
No torture. No violence. Just... isolation.
"These souls," the woman said quietly, "didn’t kill or hurt physically. They destroyed people through manipulation. Gaslighting. Emotional abuse. They made others doubt reality, doubt themselves, feel worthless and alone. They were bullies, narcissists, abusers who left no physical scars but destroyed minds."







