The forest had grown quiet again.
Too quiet.
Elias knew better than to trust silence, especially this kind. He adjusted the ragged cloak over Rhea's shoulders and stirred the stew pot with a stick. It was more weeds than vegetables, but she claimed she liked the crunch.
Rhea sat beside him on the mossy log, cross-legged and barefoot, holding a stick as if it were a royal scepter. Her eyes narrowed as she stirred the pot exactly three times clockwise, then tapped it.
"Taste test!" she announced proudly, before handing him a chipped wooden spoon.
"It still tastes like wet bark," Elias muttered after a sip, "but now with a hint of mud."
"Excellent! That's progress. Last time, it tasted like regret."
He managed a weak laugh, but she saw it—the tiredness behind his smile. He'd barely slept since they fled. The bells of purity, that holy artifact the town had suddenly pulled out of nowhere, had nearly outed her in front of everyone. The moment it chimed and turned red, the crowd had gasped, and Rhea had instinctively gripped Elias's arm like a drowning child.
They ran. Again.
Now they were here—deep in the forest, hiding like outlaws, cooking regret soup.
Rhea stared into the small fire. Her flame magic crackled beneath it, flickering unnaturally violet.
"…Do you miss it?" she asked suddenly.
"Miss what?"
"The town. Normal life. People not whispering about you and your cursed child."
He blinked. "…You're not cursed. Just…flamboyantly magical."
"That's not a thing."
"It is now. Congratulations. You're flamboyantly magical and you've invented mud soup."
She smiled, faintly. "You're deflecting."
"Yes," he admitted, "because if I talk about it, I'll start punching trees."
She giggled, but it faded fast. The firelight caught the distant sheen in her eyes.
"I just wanted to go to school… eat sweets… make friends…"
He reached over and gently flicked her forehead.
"Ow!"
"You made a friend. Lina."
"She cried when I burned a hole in the fake goblin."
"Out of awe. Or maybe because the field caught fire. Fifty-fifty."
"…Still counts?"
"Absolutely."
They sat in silence again, fire crackling, soup bubbling.
Then something rustled.
It was soft—like cloth brushing against a branch—but distinct. Elias's entire posture shifted. He rose slowly, hand inching toward the sword lying beside the log. Rhea immediately extinguished the fire with a snap of her fingers, plunging the camp into a warm darkness.
More movement.
Elias stood protectively in front of her, eyes sharp. His ears strained.
"Who's there?"
No answer.
Then a figure emerged—tall, cloaked in black, a silver mask covering the lower half of their face. They held their hands up, palms bare.
"…Don't kill me," the figure said calmly. "I brought honey bread."
Elias blinked.
"…What?"
From beneath the cloak, the figure pulled a wrapped bundle of still-warm honey bread.
"I heard your soup tastes like emotional trauma. I thought this might help."
"…Who are you?" Elias said, not lowering his stance.
The figure chuckled softly. "Someone who once commanded ten thousand screaming demons and now spends their days baking. Call me… Shadow."
"Not your real name."
"Obviously."
Rhea peeked around Elias's waist. Her eyes narrowed. There was something… familiar about this person.
"Wait," she said. "You were one of mine."
The figure inclined their head. "Revantra remembers me. That saves time."
Elias stiffened.
"You're a demon general."
"Former general," Shadow corrected. "Emphasis on former. I took a hard fall down the hierarchy after you exploded."
Rhea squinted. "Wait… You're Velkar? The one who wore eyeliner and kept trying to start poetry duels?"
Shadow sighed. "It was war verse, and yes. That was me."
Elias lowered his sword—slightly. "You're not here to attack?"
"If I wanted you dead, I'd have poisoned the bread."
"…That doesn't help your case."
Velkar—or Shadow, as he now called himself—shrugged. "Fair."
They sat around the faint embers as Rhea carefully warmed the bread without setting it on fire. Elias still didn't trust him, but Rhea seemed oddly calm.
"Why now?" Elias asked. "Why find us?"
"Because she's starting to wake up," Shadow said, looking directly at Rhea. "And if you think a purity bell is scary, wait until the celestials hear the whisper of her soul again."
Rhea nibbled the bread. "…Is that bad?"
"Very," said Shadow. "They don't want you reborn. They want you sealed. Again. Permanently."
Elias frowned. "You mean like… death?"
"Worse," Shadow said. "Oblivion."
That word hung in the air. Rhea dropped her bread.
"I didn't ask to come back," she murmured. "I just… did."
Shadow's voice softened. "I know. That's why I'm here. To warn you. And maybe…"
He turned to Elias.
"…To see what kind of fool binds himself to her willingly."
Elias looked him dead in the eye.
"I'm her fool."
Rhea blushed furiously. "You can't just say things like that!"
"What, do you prefer flamboyantly magical guardian?"
She buried her face in her hands. "Worse!"
Shadow watched them with something like tired fondness.
"…You two are the weirdest apocalypse in the making I've ever seen."
"We're trying not to apocalypse, actually," Elias said.
"Well, good luck," Shadow muttered. "Because your contract? It's not just a pact. It's a beacon. Others will feel it. Demons. Celestials. They'll come."
Elias absorbed the words. "So what do we do?"
Shadow stood.
"You hide. You grow. And when the time comes… you choose. Protect the girl, or unleash the queen."
Rhea looked down at her hands. They were small. Human. But she remembered fire. Thrones. Screaming skies.
"…What if I don't want to be either?"
Shadow paused, then placed a gloved hand gently on her head.
"Then write your own title, little queen. And make sure it's worth remembering."
He turned and vanished into the trees.
The night felt heavier somehow—but warmer too.
Rhea tugged on Elias's sleeve.
"…Did you mean it?"
"Mean what?"
"What you said. About being my fool."
He hesitated.
"…Every word."
She stared up at him with big, unsure eyes. Then she smiled.
It was small, but real.
"Then… I think I can sleep tonight."
To be continued…