It started with cinnamon toast and ended in flames.
Not literal flames this time—though given Rhea's history, that was always on the table—but the metaphorical kind. The kind that lit up in her eyes, flickered through her memories, and scorched a little hole right through my heart.
But first: breakfast.
"Do you want toast or porridge?" I asked, juggling two steaming pots.
Rhea was sitting at the kitchen table with her cheeks puffed and her arms crossed. Her tail swished across the seat like an agitated cat.
"I want toast… but crispy," she declared.
"That sounds suspiciously like burnt," I said.
"I am a connoisseur of char."
"That's not a real thing."
"It is now," she said imperiously, jabbing a spoon at me like it was a royal decree.
I sighed. "Fine. One connoisseur-style toast, coming up."
I turned my back for two seconds to butter the other slice—and she'd already enchanted hers.
The smell of fire-magic laced the air. The toaster let out a death rattle. I spun around just in time to see the bread levitate, burst into flames, and land back on the plate with a dignified sizzle.
Rhea beamed. "Perfect."
"It's black."
"That's the point," she said, taking a bite and crunching it like it was her proudest creation.
And then she froze.
Not dramatically. Not the usual "I just remembered I'm a demon queen and I'm not supposed to like jam" kind of freeze.
This one was different.
Still haunted.
I put down the pot.
"…Rhea?"
She didn't answer right away.
Her fingers tightened around the toast.
Smoke curled from the edges, but not from the bread—from her.
"I remember…" she whispered.
I was next to her in an instant, crouching beside her chair.
Her eyes were unfocused. Flickering. Like something else was looking through them.
"I remember wings," she said slowly. "They weren't like bird wings. Not feathers. Fire. Living fire."
She touched her back, as if half-expecting to feel them there still.
"I stood on a throne made of molten stone. There were people below. Kneeling. Burning. Praying. Dying."
Her voice cracked.
"I killed them. I killed too many."
She looked down at the toast.
And then quietly dropped it onto her plate.
"I thought they deserved it."
I didn't say anything.
Because what do you say to a child who remembers mass murder like it was yesterday's lunch?
You don't say it was okay.
But you also don't let them drown in it.
So I did the only thing I could.
I pulled a chair beside her, sat down, and nudged her shoulder with mine.
"You also once tried to curse a squirrel because it stole your cookie," I said.
She blinked.
"...That squirrel was asking for it."
"And you accidentally summoned a wind sprite in the bathtub because you got mad at the shampoo."
"It got in my eyes!"
I nudged her again.
"You also once drew me a picture of a fish with a sword and wrote 'Sir Swim-a-Lot, the Brave' underneath."
That one got a small, flickering smile.
"...He was a good fish."
I leaned back.
"You're not her anymore, Rhea."
Her tail twitched. "But I was."
I nodded.
"Yeah. You were also three times taller, terrifying, and had a voice that made grown men wet themselves. I've seen the old paintings."
"I looked cool," she said quietly.
I grinned. "You looked like a nightmare that got tired of waiting in closets and decided to invade kingdoms instead."
That earned me a little snort.
Victory.
"But still," she murmured. "I remember things in pieces. Fire. Screams. And this feeling that... I was right. That hurting them was justice."
She looked at her hands.
"Now I don't know if it was."
I took one of those hands in mine.
She didn't resist.
"They sealed you away, didn't they?" I said softly.
She nodded. "They called it mercy. Said I'd lost myself."
"And then…?"
"I fell. Into darkness. Into dreams. And then... you."
Her voice trembled.
"I was so cold. And then you were there."
Her grip tightened on my hand.
"I didn't even like you. But I clung to you anyway."
I laughed. "Still don't like me, huh?"
"Not when you make porridge without cinnamon."
"Wow. Betrayed for spices."
She grinned weakly, then leaned her head on my shoulder.
The kitchen was quiet for a while.
Then she whispered:
"What if I become her again?"
I looked down at her. This tiny firecracker of a demon girl curled up beside me. Former tyrant, current toast enthusiast.
"You won't."
"You don't know that."
"I don't," I admitted. "But I know this. You didn't burn down the school last week."
"Only a little scorched."
"You saved Lina from the mock goblin drill."
"I accidentally punched the teacher afterward."
"And you made a cake for the neighbor's cat's birthday."
"It exploded."
"But the cat loved it."
She snorted.
"You've made mistakes," I said gently. "But you've also chosen to care. That's not nothing."
She went quiet again.
Then: "The wings… I miss them. Isn't that awful?"
"No."
I brushed a hand through her hair.
"It's okay to miss who you were. As long as you choose who you become."
Later that day, we sat outside.
Rhea stared at the sky while munching on a less-flammable piece of toast. She'd enchanted it to make the clouds look like various monsters. A drake-shaped one passed overhead, wearing a monocle. She grinned.
"I remember falling," she said suddenly.
"Hm?"
"From the throne. When they sealed me. I remember the feeling of falling. Like… like I wasn't being punished. Like I was being given a second chance."
I didn't say anything.
Then she added, quieter:
"I don't want to waste it."
I leaned back on my elbows. "Then don't."
She turned her head to look at me.
"If I turn evil again... will you stop me?"
I raised an eyebrow. "Are you asking if I'll fight you?"
She nodded.
"I'll ground you."
She blinked.
"Like... time-out grounding?"
"Yup. No soul magic. No mirror shards. No cinnamon toast."
Her eyes widened. "That's inhuman."
"Exactly."
She tackled me.
We wrestled in the grass for a while, her giggling, me pretending to be overpowered. She declared herself Queen of the Lawn and demanded tribute in the form of cookies.
Later, as she sat beside me, catching her breath, she whispered:
"Thank you. For not being afraid of me."
I didn't answer right away.
Instead, I reached out and gently ruffled her hair.
"I'm terrified," I said honestly.
"But I'm still here."
She leaned into me, wings or no wings, fire or no fire, crown or curse.
And for that moment, it was enough.
To be continued…