Reborn as the Psycho Villainess Who Ate Her Slave Beasts' Contracts
Chapter 327: Chaoter-
She had, at various points, tried to calculate the total. She had never arrived at a number she trusted.
Now she called them.
The summons went out the previous evening, and by mid-morning of the eighth day, they were assembled in the Corridor of the Winter Moon — the long, high-ceilinged passage that connected the residential wings of the palace to the central court, where the light fell in long pale bars through the high clerestory windows and the floor was pale marble, cold even in summer. The corridor was where the emperor had always received his subjects in informal audience, standing at the top of the three broad steps that led down from the elevated walkway where he had stood — where the position of height made every encounter a reminder of who was looking down and who was looking up.
Elara arrived and stood at the top of those steps, and looked down.
The silence that greeted her was the silence of children who had learned that silence was safe.
It struck her, that silence. It struck her more than she had expected it to — not emotionally, not softly, but in the precise, analytical way that genuine information strikes a person who has learned to pay attention. These children were not simply nervous. They were not simply overawed by the occasion or by her presence. They had the particular, practiced stillness of small creatures who had understood, at a formative age and in an indelible way, that being noticed was dangerous.
She knew something about that.
She looked at them and she began to take stock.
The first through the sixth princesses she had already accounted for in her mental ledger. The first princess — — was gone, a year ago, before any of this had begun. Runaway or, she had always been unclear on the details to when she return , but the girl had not been seen in the capital in a year now and was not here now. The second princess was dead. The third had made the error of aligning herself too enthusiastically with the faction that had believed a greedy boy emperor would be easiest to manage, and she had been now become a tale no one speak of in the palace in The fifth had died of a fever, genuinely — there was no politics in it, just the ordinary cruelty of illness in a palace that had never adequately invested in its medical staff. The sixth had died in the chaos of the northern campaign. An illness, they said. She had heard other things. She did not know which version was true, and this was, at the moment, a question for another day.
She moved her eyes over the ones who remained.
The seventh princess was perhaps sixteen, and she stood with the careful, deliberate composure of someone who had spent a long time learning to be invisible in plain sight. Elara recognized it because she had worn the same posture herself, once. The seventh’s eyes were lowered, but not entirely — there was a fraction of a degree of attention in her stillness that suggested she was watching from beneath her lashes, measuring the room, calculating. Elara noted this. She filed it.
The others — the eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh among the legitimate daughters — were represented here in their various states. Several had not survived. The ones that remained were young: one was perhaps nine years old, one slightly younger, one barely old enough to stand without swaying. The thirteenth princess, she was told, was four, and was standing very seriously at the end of the line holding the hand of a nursemaid and staring at the ceiling as though she had found something interesting up there. The fourteenth was even younger and had apparently decided that the correct response to this gathering was to fall asleep, which she was currently doing with her head on the nursemaid’s shoulder in a posture of complete unconscious indifference.
There were also the boys, and their numbers were both more and less than she had expected.
The legitimate male line was effectively extinct. She had known this already, but seeing it rendered in human form was different than knowing it abstractly. What should have been a row of princes was instead a handful of children, some so young their gender was barely legible in the court robes they had clearly been dressed in for the occasion, their small faces identically solemn in the way that children become solemn when adults have impressed upon them that something important is happening even if the children themselves do not entirely understand what.
Most of the boys were bastards. There was nothing wrong with that in any moral sense — she was not particularly concerned about that particular distinction — but it told her something about the state of things, about which children had been protected and which had not, about the way this court had organized itself around the question of whose children mattered.
She began to move. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
She descended the three steps without quite deciding to, her feet carrying her down into the corridor while her eyes moved across the assembled children with the slow, deliberate attention of someone taking a genuine inventory. She moved down the line — not quickly, not performing the gesture for the benefit of witnesses, simply looking, in the way she looked at everything when she was trying to understand it.
And then she stopped.
He was near the middle of the line, slightly set apart from the others — not by design, she thought, but by the simple geometry of a wheelchair in a line of standing children. He was perhaps ten years old, which would have made him old enough to be among the more senior surviving children, and yet she had not noticed him at first, which told her something about how thoroughly he had learned to make himself unnoticeable.
He was thin. Not the thinness of a boy who had not yet grown into his frame — that was a thinness she recognized, having seen it in healthy children throughout the provinces — but the finer-grained thinness of someone whose food had, at various points in his life, been something that had to be competed for. The wheelchair was functional but not new; the leather of the seat had been worn in the particular way that spoke of years of use, not recent provision. His hands rested on his lap with a stillness that was not the practiced stillness of the seventh princess — it was something older, something that had stopped being practice and had become simply the way his hands were.
His face was lowered.
She stopped in front of him and looked.
He did not look up.
She looked at him — not in haste, not performing patience for an audience, but because she was genuinely looking, taking in the specific facts of him with the attention she gave to anything she wanted to understand. The bones of his face were extraordinary. Not in the manner of the late emperor, whose looks had been of the symmetrical, obvious, slightly aggressive kind — the beauty of a man who had always known he was beautiful and had incorporated that knowledge into the structure of his personality. This was different. This was the kind of face that did not announce itself, that asked nothing, that existed with a strange, still composure that had nothing to do with confidence and everything to do with a long acquaintance with being overlooked.
She turned to the guard standing at the corridor’s edge.