Elias wasn't invincible. He just pretended well.
At least until he collapsed face-first into a half-stirred pot of cabbage stew with a dull splorp.
Rhea blinked, spoon in hand. "Did you just die?"
No response. Just the faint hiss of vegetables gently boiling beside his cheek.
"Okay," she said, standing on a stool and poking his forehead. "You either died mid-sentence or entered an extremely unimpressive coma."
Still no response.
She leaned in, squinting suspiciously. "Are you faking this to get out of helping with math?"
Then she noticed the fever. The kind that made skin feel like overcooked bread and breath come in weak, hot gasps.
Rhea's eyes widened.
"Elias?"
The healer lived a mile out of town and charged two silvers just to glance at someone.
Instead, Rhea wrapped Elias in every blanket they owned, dragged a mattress halfway into the living room (with great dramatic effort), and created what she decided was a "Recovery Nest."
It was lumpy. It was crooked. It was also kind of on fire in the corner because she accidentally sneezed sparks again. But it had heart.
When he finally stirred, Elias blinked up at her through sweat-matted bangs.
"Wha… Rhea?" His voice sounded like it had been left out in the rain.
"You got stupid-sick," she declared. "And I've taken over the house."
"You what?"
"New rules. One: You do nothing. Two: I do everything. Three: No more cabbage stew. It smells like betrayal."
He coughed and winced. "I think I overdid it using healing magic after… the cleric fight."
"No duh. You collapsed like a soggy scarecrow."
He groaned. "Can't believe I passed out like that."
Rhea pressed a cool rag to his forehead with surprising gentleness.
"Yeah, well. Even heroes get fungus."
"I don't have fungus."
"Not yet."
He managed a weak chuckle before slipping back into sleep.
Over the next few days, Rhea was… attentive.
In her own way.
Her "tea" consisted of warm milk mixed with cinnamon and something suspiciously spicy.
Her "soup" was hot water with three gummy bears and a potato chip.
She gave him hourly reports of the outside world, which mostly included observations like:
"The neighbor's cat is plotting something."
"Clouds look like aggressive marshmallows today."
"Your cactus blinked. I think it's evolving."
Despite the chaos, Elias couldn't remember the last time he'd felt so… cared for.
Every time he woke, she was there. Curling up at the foot of the mattress like a protective gremlin, reading storybooks aloud (with dramatic villain voices), or muttering spells that fizzled out into glitter because she still hadn't mastered control.
Once, in a half-dream, he heard her whisper to herself:
"You're my safe place, you know. Even if you snore like a wounded goose."
Three days in, Elias felt slightly less like a bag of damp laundry.
He managed to sit up, groaning, as Rhea approached with a bowl of what looked like… jellybeans floating in broth?
"What is this?" he asked.
"Breakfast surprise," she said cheerfully. "Also lunch and possibly dessert."
He stared at it with all the wariness of a man presented with a live grenade disguised as soup.
"I think I'm ready to stand."
"Nope."
"I'm feeling better."
"Nope."
"I really need to use the—"
She lifted a finger. "Use the bucket."
He stared at the aforementioned bucket in the corner, which was clearly not intended for that purpose.
"...I hate being sick."
"Good. That means you'll take better care of yourself next time."
He smiled despite himself. "Have you always been this bossy?"
"I used to command infernal legions. I think I know how to run a sick room."
Fair point.
That evening, the fever finally broke.
Elias sat by the hearth, wrapped in a quilt, while Rhea braided wildflowers into his hair.
"Don't move," she said. "This one's symbolic."
"Of what?"
"Victory over cabbage stew."
He snorted. "You really hate that soup, huh?"
"It tasted like guilt and soggy wood chips."
He tilted his head to look at her. Her hair was wild, her face smudged with soot, and her eyes were soft with something like… peace.
"Thanks, Rhea."
"For what?"
"For staying."
She blinked at him.
"Where else would I go?"
"I mean… you could've panicked. Or tried to fix things with fire again. Or accidentally summoned a ghost doctor."
"I did try that," she admitted. "But it just yelled at me in Latin and turned into mist."
He laughed, and she grinned.
"I'm glad you're okay," she said, quieter now. "When you collapsed, I…"
She didn't finish the sentence.
Instead, she leaned forward and pressed her forehead gently to his.
"You're my safe place," she whispered. "Even when you're gross and sweaty."
He closed his eyes.
"And you're mine. Even when you feed me boiled candy."
They stayed like that, forehead to forehead, while the fire crackled beside them.
Outside, the last traces of storm clouds drifted away.
And for the first time in days, Elias felt warm—not from blankets or fever, but from something deeper.
Something real.
To be continued…