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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 51 : Fake Purification Ritual
Chapter 51 - 51 : Fake Purification Ritual
The bells of Saint Caelin's Cathedral rang louder than usual that morning—shrill, ceremonial, and slightly off-key. Elias winced from across the cobbled town square as the tolling echoed through his head like a judgment.
"Why do all religious bells sound like someone dropped a tin pan down the stairs?" he muttered.
Rhea, beside him, was squinting at the distant church with the same expression she used when confronted by steamed vegetables. "I smell incense and hypocrisy," she said flatly.
"You're not wrong."
The town's mood was unusually tense. Flyers had appeared overnight—printed, blessed, and magically sealed in self-unfurling scrolls—all declaring a grand Purification Ritual to protect the town from 'unseen corruption' and 'dark residue left by recent magical anomalies.'
They didn't name names.
They didn't have to. ƒrēewebnoѵёl.cσm
"They mean me," Rhea said bluntly, arms crossed, standing all of three-foot-eight with the gravitas of a dethroned apocalypse queen trapped in the body of a child.
"Yes," Elias admitted, tugging at his collar. "But let's pretend we don't know that, in case anyone's listening."
As if on cue, a flock of white-robed clerics swept into the square, chanting in measured cadence. The Inquisitor—freshly arrived from the Capital—led them, an imposing woman with platinum hair, three earrings that glowed holy blue, and a staff topped with a symbol that always looked like it was judging you.
Elias had dealt with worse.
But only barely.
"Sir Elias, Teacher of Class 3-F," she called. "You have been cordially invited to accompany your... daughter... to the Blessing."
Cordially invited. Inquisition-speak for: Show up or we drag you there in chains and call it a sacred procession.
Elias forced a smile. "Of course, Lady Inquisitor. We're honored. Aren't we, Rhea?"
Rhea's glare could have made milk curdle. But she nodded with the fakest, most saccharine smile ever to haunt a seven-year-old's face. "Can't wait to get blessed," she said, deadpan.
The church was stuffed to the rafters. Banners of gold and silver shimmered in enchanted wind. Choir boys hummed in minor key. Candles floated midair, each blessed to detect malice or demonic aura. It was like stepping into a paranoid cloud of incense.
Rhea sneezed.
Every candle flickered.
The Inquisitor's eyes narrowed by a millimeter. "She's... strong in magic, isn't she?"
"She's gifted," Elias said carefully. "Some of it wild, yes, but nothing unholy."
"She'll undergo the full ritual, of course."
Rhea tilted her head. "Will it involve salt? Garlic? Chicken feathers?"
"...Holy water," the Inquisitor replied, after a pause. "And soul-thread illumination."
"Sounds made up."
"It is not."
"Still sounds made up."
Elias cleared his throat loudly. "She's just... spirited."
"Possibly in more ways than one," the Inquisitor muttered.
They were led to the center platform, a ring of marble lined with golden runes. Elias could already feel Rhea's mana reacting—curling inward like a cat ready to swat the next person who poked it.
"You okay?" he whispered.
"I feel itchy. Deep in my teeth. That's not normal, right?"
"No. But keep it together. We don't want you to... explode anything."
She gave him a sideways look. "Just one pew?"
"No pews. Especially not the wooden ones. They burn fast."
The ritual began.
It involved reciting her full name—which she technically didn't have—so she made one up on the spot: Rhea Doomflame Revantra the Eternal.
Elias nearly facepalmed.
A candle flickered dangerously at that.
Then came the part where she had to hold a soul-thread—a golden string enchanted to react to purity. For normal children, it glowed softly and harmonized with the user's heartbeat.
When Rhea touched it, the thread screamed.
Not figuratively.
The thread emitted a high-pitched whine like a kettle possessed by a banshee. The priest holding it dropped it instantly, hissing like he'd been burned. Several acolytes gasped.
The Inquisitor looked like she'd just smelled a sin.
"She... may be under a curse," one muttered.
"She's not cursed," Elias said quickly, stepping in front of Rhea. "She's just complicated."
"Demons are complicated too."
Rhea frowned. "I'm not a demon anymore. I'm just... someone trying really hard not to be one."
There was a long silence.
Then, because fate has a sense of timing, one of the floating purification orbs—the ones used to detect deep-seated corruption—hovered toward her.
It orbited once.
Twice.
Then wobbled, dipped, and popped like a bubble.
Everyone stared.
Elias blinked. "That... that can't be good."
"Your child," said the Inquisitor coldly, "just broke a divine artifact."
"She didn't break it!" Elias shouted. "It just... lost the will to live!"
Rhea raised a hand. "I might have breathed shadow-magic at it. Instinct, sorry."
The crowd began to whisper.
Elias turned, placing both hands protectively on Rhea's shoulders. "She's not evil. She's scared. This whole ritual is like putting a scared animal in a cage and poking it with sticks."
"She is not an animal," the Inquisitor said.
"Then treat her like a person."
Another silence.
Then Rhea leaned closer to him, whispered, "Can I burn her shoes a little?"
"No."
"Just a toe?"
"No, Rhea."
She sighed. "You're no fun in churches."
Somehow, miraculously, they weren't arrested.
The official verdict was "indeterminate anomaly." They were ordered to report monthly for 'magical recalibration sessions,' which sounded exactly as torturous as it was intended to.
On the walk home, Rhea was quiet. For a long time.
Elias finally asked, "You okay?"
"I didn't like how everyone looked at me."
"Neither did I."
"I thought the thread would work. I wanted it to."
He stopped walking and knelt beside her. "Hey. It doesn't matter what some enchanted string thinks of you. I've seen you share food with a crying girl, hug a bird you accidentally singed, and help a blind old man cross the street even though you were terrified he'd recognize your aura."
Rhea blinked. "You saw that?"
"Yep. I see all the good stuff. That's how I know who you really are."
She was quiet again, this time in a warmer way.
Then she kicked a rock. "Still wish it hadn't screamed."
"Me too. But I screamed the first time I touched a frog, so we all have our moments."
She snorted. "You're comparing me to a frog?"
"Emotionally, yes."
"...Gross."
They walked home under the dusk, candles of judgment behind them, and the stars above beginning to twinkle.
Rhea reached for his hand, held it tight.
"You're not my real dad," she said, "but you're my real... realest person."
Elias smiled. "I'll take it."
To be continued...