I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 82 – Principal’s Suspicion

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Chapter 82 - 82 – Principal’s Suspicion

The school hallway, if one were to describe it charitably, looked like it had hosted a minor earthquake. A less charitable description would be "a war crime committed by a fire-obsessed teenager with boundary issues." The floor tiles had split in an almost perfect radial pattern, like something had exploded from the center. The ceiling bore a dark scorch mark in the shape of a humanoid smear. And a decorative statue of some long-dead archmage was now headless and sulking in two pieces.

Principal Margelin stared at the scene. Then at the three students standing before him: Revantra, Theo, and Elias.

Then back at the statue.

Back to the students.

He exhaled slowly, pinching the bridge of his nose. "Let me guess. Spontaneous architectural failure."

Revantra coughed into her hand. "Er. Technically... yes?"

Theo stepped forward, nodding far too enthusiastically. "She's right! I mean, we were walking and talking—definitely not dueling or invoking forbidden knowledge or chasing cultists—and then suddenly, BAM! The floor just... gave up. I think it had existential fatigue." freёnovelkiss.com

Margelin stared at him, eyes like slate. "Existential fatigue."

Theo didn't blink. "Yessir."

"I see." Margelin turned his gaze on Revantra, who suddenly found a scuff mark on her boot extremely fascinating.

Elias was the only one not trying to perform either improv comedy or tactical camouflage through silence. He cleared his throat. "Principal Margelin, if I may—"

"No, you may not," the man said flatly. "Because the last time you 'may-ed,' the east wing's alchemy lab required evacuation. And the week before that, someone tried to fuse a banana to the dean's cat."

"Technically," Elias muttered, "that wasn't my—"

Margelin raised a hand. "What I want, right now, is a single, coherent explanation as to why this hallway looks like it was hit by a siege spell. And I want it in twenty words or fewer."

Revantra opened her mouth, counted in her head, closed her mouth again.

Theo lifted a finger. "Oh! I've got this. Uh... hallway damage caused by unforeseen mana instability due to minor, localized, temporary metaphysical anomaly."

Margelin blinked. "...You rehearsed that?"

"I have several ready for emergencies. That was Explanation B-2."

"I hate that I believe you."

Elias sighed. "Look, we may have discovered some... tunnels. Under the school. Very old. Very sealed off. There may have been a summoning circle involved."

Margelin didn't speak for a long time. He simply turned and began walking down the corridor, one hand held behind his back, the other massaging his temple like he was bargaining with a headache deity. The students followed.

"Let me be clear," he said, voice low. "You entered a forbidden area. You damaged school property. You engaged in unsanctioned magical activity."

"Technically," Revantra said weakly, "we were trying to stop an unsanctioned magical activity."

Margelin stopped walking. "Did you file a report with the proper faculty?"

There was a silence so loud you could hear the dust in the air rethinking its life choices.

Revantra gave a small, apologetic shrug. "We... forgot?"

Margelin turned to them with the calm of someone deeply, deeply tired. "Miss... whatever-your-legal-surname-is... if you're going to break school policy, I beg you—at the very least—lie better."

Theo tried to help. "She was under duress. From, uh, memory. Of trauma. And possible sulfur poisoning."

Revantra turned slowly to glare at him. "Are you trying to make it sound more suspicious?"

"Oh, am I succeeding?"

"You are thriving, Theo."

Margelin resumed walking, muttering something under his breath that sounded suspiciously like, "I should've taken that posting at the all-golem academy."

He led them into his office, which was modest, book-lined, and absolutely filled with the smell of bitter warding incense and high-level paranoia. Revantra flinched a little as she entered. Something in the corner—it wasn't visible, but she felt it—pricked against her skin like it knew her.

"Take a seat," Margelin said, gesturing to a plush bench that looked less comfortable than a courtroom witness stand.

They sat. Theo adjusted his collar like he was about to deliver a musical number.

Margelin folded his arms. "I'm not going to expel you. Yet."

Revantra sat a little straighter.

"But I will be filing an incident report," he continued, turning to the desk. "And given the nature of your... talents... the capital's Church Watch will need to be notified."

That sank in like a stone in cold water.

Revantra's heart stuttered. "Wait. The Church Watch? I didn't—I wasn't—"

"I'm aware of your record," Margelin said, still not looking at her. "You've tried hard to keep your magic within limits. And I appreciate that."

"Then why—"

"Because it wasn't just fire," he said, glancing at her now. "What happened in that hallway was old magic. Something from the Bone War days. And when the old stuff surfaces, they want to know why."

Theo, for once, had the decency to look worried instead of whimsical.

Elias leaned forward. "She was defending herself. Someone else was using that magic—someone dangerous."

"I believe you," Margelin said quietly. "But that won't matter. The Church doesn't need guilt. Just cause."

There was a weight in the air now. A dread that settled between Revantra's ribs like ice in her lungs. All her awkward bravado, all the sarcastic deflections—they crumbled in the presence of something she couldn't burn.

Being found.

Being known.

Elias saw it. The stillness in her. He gently touched her sleeve. "We'll handle it," he said softly.

"How?" she asked. Her voice cracked. "If they come for me—if they realize what I was—"

"You're not that anymore," he said. "You're Revantra who grumbles about homework and still doesn't know how to fold towels."

"I do so fold towels!"

"Lying doesn't help your case."

Margelin cleared his throat. "If you two are done reinforcing your co-dependent dynamic—"

"We're not co-dependent," Revantra muttered.

"She's just a little emotionally clingy," Elias added with a slight smirk.

Revantra threw a pencil at him. It bounced harmlessly off his shoulder.

"Out," Margelin said. "All of you. I've got paperwork to bury under euphemisms and half-truths."

As they stood, Revantra hesitated at the door. "Sir... thank you."

He didn't smile. But his tone softened a fraction. "Just don't make me regret believing in your potential."

She nodded once.

The three of them emerged from the office into the late-afternoon hallway, where the sunlight through the windows slanted gold and quiet. Theo clapped his hands. "Well! Who wants to break into the headmaster's wine cellar next?"

Revantra threw the pencil at him this time.

Elias caught it before it hit.

She sighed as they walked. "So... the Church knows now."

Elias gave her a sidelong glance. "Let them watch. We're not hiding."

She looked down at her hands. They weren't trembling—but they were warm.

"I hope you're right," she murmured.

He bumped her shoulder gently. "Hey. You've got me."

"And me!" Theo piped up.

"Less helpful, but still appreciated," Revantra muttered.

As they walked toward the dorms, the first stars began to flicker in the evening sky.

Far behind them, in his office, Principal Margelin sealed a letter with red wax and set it into a magical dispatch tube. The seal bore the symbol of the Church Watch.

And though he did not say it aloud, the words etched in the seal's arcane ring read:

"Potential Hazard – Royal Capital to be Alerted."

To be continued...