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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 55 : Final Night
Chapter 55 - 55 : Final Night
Their last night in the town unfolded in a hush of moonlight and flour.
It was supposed to be a quiet, early bedtime kind of night—rest before the long journey to ancient demon ruins, secret paths, and probably some overly dramatic stone doors that required blood offerings or interpretive dance.
Instead, Elias stepped into the kitchen to find Rhea on a stool, covered head to toe in powdered sugar and waging war against dough.
There was flour on the ceiling.
The ceiling.
She looked up with the proud smile of a battlefield general and said, "Don't panic. The oven is technically still intact."
He blinked. "Technically?"
"The fire inside is contained. That's what you taught me. Contained means safe."
He walked in, cautiously, eyeing the flour-splattered counter, the mountain of dishes teetering in the sink, and the mysterious green puff emerging from what might once have been whipped cream.
"Okay," he said slowly, "so let me rephrase. Why does it smell like someone summoned a sugar elemental in here?"
"I'm making a pastry."
"You?"
"Yes."
"For me?"
"Yes."
He looked around again. "...Should I be afraid?"
Rhea puffed her cheeks. "Tch. No faith. It's a thank-you pastry."
"Thank you for what?"
She stopped stirring and gave him a small, serious look—one of those rare expressions that made her seem older than she was. "For staying. For choosing me. When you didn't have to."
The words hit harder than any awkward joke or magical mishap ever could. Elias rubbed the back of his neck. "That's... I mean. You don't have to thank me. I—"
"I wanted to," she said, looking back at her bowl. "And besides, it was either this or a very sentimental death poem involving cats and lightning bolts. This felt less embarrassing."
"Just barely," he muttered, but there was no heat in it.
She smirked without turning around.
The oven groaned like a wounded beast.
Something sizzled ominously behind its metal door.
Elias sat at the table with a cup of over-steeped tea Rhea had "improved" by adding what might've been molasses and a pinch of confusion. She paced in front of the oven like a hawk watching a mouse made of custard.
"Don't open it yet," she ordered. "It has to suffer—I mean bake—longer."
Elias raised an eyebrow. "You sure the pastry isn't suffering already?"
"No pastry made with love suffers. That's baking law."
"Sounds made-up."
"Most laws are."
After a long minute, the oven dinged. Rhea's head snapped toward it with the sharp grace of a predator. She opened it with a dramatic flourish and pulled out... something.
Elias stared. "It's... alive."
"No, it's flaky!"
"It just hissed at me."
"That's steam! Probably."
She set the creation down before him, careful and proud. It was vaguely pastry-shaped. Golden-ish. Possibly fruit-filled. Possibly filled with something that used to be fruit and had now transcended normal categorization.
Elias looked at her, then at it, then back. "I'm going in."
She nodded solemnly. "May the pastry gods guide you."
He took a bite.
And paused.
And chewed.
And then—his face didn't contort. It didn't explode. It didn't even frown.
"...It's actually good," he said, blinking.
Rhea beamed. "I told you! I followed the recipe exactly. Then I ignored the parts that were boring. Then I added cinnamon."
"Cinnamon saved it," he admitted, taking another bite. "A miracle."
She sat beside him, watching like a cat watching someone open a can of tuna. "You really like it?"
"I do."
She folded her arms and leaned back in satisfaction. "Well, don't get used to it. Baking takes effort. I might never do this again."
"That's fair."
A pause.
Then Rhea leaned in, chin on the table, voice quieter. "I just wanted to make something that showed you... y'know. That I'm not just a burden. That I can do things too."
Elias turned to her, setting down the half-eaten pastry. "Hey. You are not a burden."
"I'm technically a war criminal reborn as a magical child. Most people would disagree."
"Well, most people can't cook this well, so you win."
Her mouth twitched. "Smooth."
"I try."
He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a small object wrapped in cloth. She perked up.
"What's that?"
"Your thank-you gift," he said, sliding it toward her. "For surviving pastry warfare. And for everything else."
She unwrapped it carefully.
Inside was a locket—simple, silver, and shaped like a half-moon. When she opened it, inside were two initials carved in tiny, steady script: E.C.
Her lips parted. "Elias..."
"I figured," he said softly, "wherever we end up, this way you'll always remember that I'm with you. Even if I get turned into a toad or abducted by griffins or..." He cleared his throat. "You know. Stuff."
She closed the locket gently and clutched it to her chest. "I'm gonna pretend I'm not crying, okay?"
"I'll pretend I didn't notice."
She smiled.
Then: "Is this enchanted?"
"No."
"Can we enchant it?"
"...Maybe." freeweɓnovel.cѳm
"Cool. I want it to shoot lasers."
"Rhea."
"Emotional lasers."
"That doesn't make it better."
Later that night, the dishes were (mostly) done, the kitchen returned to semi-order, and Elias and Rhea sat by the fireplace on the living room floor, the locket twinkling faintly on her chest.
Rhea leaned against him, comfortably quiet.
"Tomorrow we start running again," she said. "But for once, I'm not scared."
He looked down at her, brushing some sugar out of her hair. "That's good."
"I've got my useless dad mage."
"Hey!"
"And my laser locket."
"It does not shoot lasers."
"Yet."
She closed her eyes. "Thanks for this."
"For what?"
"For giving me something normal. Just for a little while."
Elias swallowed thickly. "You gave me something too."
She peeked open one eye. "What?"
"A reason to keep going."
She was quiet for a beat. Then she mumbled, "...Gross. Emotional. Blegh."
He laughed softly. "Sleep, terror."
She didn't answer, but her breathing slowed, steady and peaceful.
And in that final night, in that little house full of flour and warmth and ridiculous attempts at baking, there was a stillness. Not the fear kind. The safe kind.
Tomorrow, they would move. But tonight?
Tonight, they simply belonged.
To be continued...