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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 75 : Elias’s Evening Out
Chapter 75 - 75 : Elias’s Evening Out
When the invitation arrived, Elias assumed it was a mistake.
"His Grace Elias Viren," he read aloud. "Distinguished guest of the Royal Healers' Circle and valued practitioner of rural regenerative treatment. Please attend our quarterly appreciation banquet—formal attire required." freewebnσvel.cøm
He blinked.
"I am neither distinguished nor graceful."
Revantra sat at the kitchen table peeling an orange with the seriousness of a surgeon. She didn't look up.
"You're going," she said.
"Do I have to?"
"You've been working yourself into a wrinkle. Go eat free food and pretend you're important. You'll love it."
Elias squinted at her. "Why are you so insistent all of a sudden?"
"I am not insistent," she snapped. "I just think it's healthy for you to socialize with people who aren't me or Theo. That's all."
"That's all?"
She shrugged and bit into a slice of orange like it owed her money.
Suspicious.
Still, that evening, Elias found himself in an actual tailored jacket—borrowed from a neighbor who was at least one size smaller—walking through the marble-arched entrance of the Capital Healing Hall.
It was... fancy.
Too fancy.
There were floating lanterns above the banquet hall like little bobbing stars. Waitstaff glided between tables with trays of artfully arranged appetizers. The healers, all in fine robes and glowing talismans, mingled with polite laughter and the occasional argument about blood-reversal charms.
Elias hovered near the drink table, sipping something purple and pretending to understand any of the conversation.
"Are you the famous countryside healer?" came a smooth voice beside him.
He turned. A woman in crimson healer robes stood beside him, her posture elegant, her silver necklace glinting. She had auburn curls, calculating green eyes, and the expression of someone used to having people nod along to whatever she said.
"I've read your reports," she continued, handing him a fresh drink. "You used moss compresses and stabilized a septal shatter with only a broken mirror and six drops of moonwater. Very creative."
Elias blinked. "That... sounds like me, yes."
She smiled. "I'm Dr. Serelle. I specialize in anatomical restoration. It's rare to find someone in this city who doesn't rely entirely on spell circles. You prefer old-world methods?"
"Sometimes. They're slower, but you get fewer magical side effects."
"Exactly," she said, eyes gleaming. "And you actually listen to your patients. That alone makes you more valuable than half the people in this room."
Elias flushed. "I wouldn't say that..."
But she was leaning closer now, interested, confident, asking him about patient ratios and tissue recovery like he was her intellectual equal. He hadn't been talked to like this since—
Well. Since forever.
He found himself relaxing. Smiling.
Maybe Revantra was right. Maybe he did need to get out more.
And then...
The doors burst open.
Dramatically. Loudly.
As if kicked.
And in stepped what could only be described as... a disguise.
An oversized navy coat hung off a figure much too small. A giant paisley scarf covered half their face. A pair of massive round glasses—clearly fake—sat crooked on their nose. The hair was familiar, too familiar, though tied back like a bad librarian impersonation.
Revantra.
Elias's stomach dropped.
Dr. Serelle turned toward the scene, curious. "Do you think security's been breached?"
Elias coughed. "That's, uh—local fashion. Rural mystery chic."
Revantra stalked toward them like a tiny windstorm.
She reached the table, pointedly ignoring Elias, and addressed Serelle in a voice several octaves too deep. "Pardon me, kind lady, I have a question about—soup."
Serelle blinked. "Soup?"
Revantra held up a bowl. "Yes. This one."
Before either of them could react, the bowl tilted.
And then—
SPLASH.
Soup.
Everywhere.
On the floor. On the chair.
On Dr. Serelle.
The crowd gasped.
Revantra gasped louder. "Oh nooooo," she said, monotone. "What a completely unforeseeable accident. So tragic."
Serelle stood in stunned silence, broth dripping from her sleeves.
"I—!" she began.
"I must flee," Revantra interrupted, "before I am arrested for my grievous clumsiness."
She turned and bolted.
"Wait—!" Elias called.
Too late.
She was already halfway out the door, knocking over a decorative plant in the process.
The room buzzed with whispers. Dr. Serelle muttered something about dry-cleaning spells and excused herself.
Elias slumped into his chair and covered his face with both hands.
She didn't come home until midnight.
He was sitting on the couch, still in the borrowed jacket, staring at the door with a pillow hugged to his chest.
When it creaked open, she peeked in, still wearing the coat and scarf.
Elias raised an eyebrow.
She sighed. "I can explain."
"Can you?"
"I had a perfectly rational motive."
"Did it involve soup?"
"...Partially."
He stood up. "Revantra, that was not subtle. That woman's robe tried to strangle her when it got soaked!"
"She was flirting with you."
"So?"
"She—! You were laughing!"
"I'm allowed to laugh."
"You never laugh like that with me!"
There it was.
The silence hit like a splash of cold water.
She winced and looked away, scarf still wrapped like a barricade. "I didn't mean that."
"Yes," Elias said softly, "you did."
A long pause.
Finally, she sat on the edge of the couch, arms folded, hair falling in her face. "I know it was stupid. And petty. And way over-the-top. And I ruined a perfectly good soup."
He sat beside her.
"You were jealous," he said.
"I wasn't jealous," she muttered. "I was... territorial."
"That's not better."
She picked at the edge of her scarf. "You smiled at her the way you never smile at me."
He looked at her.
She didn't flinch.
And it hit him just how young she still was. Not in power, not in memory—but in heart. All this—emotions, affection, jealousy—it was new to her. Raw and clumsy and honest.
"I didn't smile at her like that," he said gently.
"You didn't?"
"No."
"...Liar."
He chuckled. "Okay, maybe a little. But not because I liked her. Because someone was finally treating me like I mattered. I didn't realize I needed that."
"Oh."
She stared at her knees.
He nudged her shoulder. "But I don't need it from her."
Her eyes flicked toward him.
"You matter to me too," she mumbled.
"I know."
"I don't know how to say these things right. They always come out weird. And with... soup."
He laughed. "Yeah. Soup isn't usually a metaphor for healthy communication."
"I'll work on it."
"You're doing fine."
They sat together for a while longer, the quiet settling in.
Eventually, Revantra said, "Next time someone flirts with you, I promise I'll just glower at them from a distance."
"That's very mature of you."
"I'm growing."
She leaned her head against his arm.
He didn't move away.
And even though his shirt still smelled faintly of spicy carrot broth, and his legs were cramped from the too-tight pants, and his night had taken a sharp turn into chaos...
Elias felt strangely okay.
Warm, even.
Like maybe being emotionally attacked by soup wasn't the worst thing that could happen.
Especially not when it came from someone who cared far too much to admit it.
To be continued...