It started, as many catastrophes in Revantra's life did, with a note.
Not a magical scroll, not a cursed relic, not even a suspiciously glowing whisper in the dark. No. Just a regular, folded scrap of paper, slipped between her spellbooks and slightly crumpled like Elias had second-guessed giving it to her half a dozen tis.
It read:
et at the plaza at 6.
That was it. No signature. No punctuation. No explanation.
And yet sohow, it sent Revantra into a frenzy that could only be described as 'mildly unhinged.'
She stared at the note as if it were a royal summons. Then she read it again. Then a third ti. She even turned it over in case there was a hidden romantic code on the back. Nothing.
Just seven little words.
Her heart thumped.
"He's asking on a date," she whispered to herself.
Theo, who was nearby struggling to summon a light spell without setting his sleeves on fire, looked up. "Did soone say 'explode?'"
"No!" she snapped. Then softened. "Wait. Actually, never mind. Go away. I have girl things to do."
Theo blinked. "You an like makeup or murdering your enemies?"
"Yes."
He left without further questions.
By 5:43 PM, Revantra had done the following:
Changed outfits three tis.
Burned her own hair slightly trying to curl it with heat magic.
Panicked over whether this counted as a date and then decided it definitely did.
Practiced saying "I had a nice ti" in the mirror while blushing like a war general about to confess treason.
Now she stood at the edge of the plaza, swaying in a pale lavender tunic embroidered with little silver flas, hair tied back in a loose ribbon, and the faintest shimr of glitter under her eyes. Just a touch. She wasn't going to go full glamor spell—but also, she wanted Elias to maybe... notice.
The plaza was bustling with the last light of day, lanterns being strung overhead, shops preparing for the coming Festival of Light. The cobblestones glowed warm beneath her feet. The scent of sizzling at skewers, sweet rice cakes, and burning sugar drifted around her.
Her heart kept trying to launch itself into the clouds.
She spotted him near a flower cart.
Elias was wearing his usual—plain shirt, dark vest, dical pouch at his hip, and a distracted expression as he argued with the herb vendor over the potency of dried sage.
Revantra's smile began to tremble.
She approached slowly, like soone walking toward a crush and a cliff simultaneously.
He turned, spotted her, and blinked.
"Rhea?"
She paused. "You said to et you at six."
"I did! Yeah, thanks for coming." He looked genuinely relieved, then turned back to the vendor. "She knows which leaves are good. Don't sell the dried-out ones again."
"...Leaves," Revantra echoed.
It hit her like a flying brick.
This wasn't a date.
He wanted help picking herbs.
HERBS.
Elias gestured to a crate of assorted greenery. "Can you check the mint? Mine always dries out too fast. I think I'm being scamd."
Revantra did not move.
"Sure," she said. "Because this... was obviously about plants."
He finally glanced up at her again—and really looked this ti. His eyes widened a fraction.
"You, uh. You look really nice."
She deadpanned. "Do I look like soone who dressed for agriculture?"
"No," he admitted. "You look like you might fireball a cheating boyfriend."
"I might."
Elias rubbed the back of his neck. "Wait. Did you... think this was...?"
"I thought this was a date, Elias."
There it was. No hesitation. No rephrasing.
Elias turned the color of overripe tomatoes.
"I didn't—I an—I wasn't thinking—I just needed help with—"
"Plants," she finished for him, crossing her arms. "Which I'm sure is very romantic if you're a tree."
The herb vendor, sensing impending doom, wisely disappeared into his cart.
A silence fell between them.
Lanterns flickered overhead.
Children ran by laughing. A musician plucked at a stringed instrunt in the distance.
Revantra didn't say anything. She looked down at her boots, then at the firelight dancing on the cobbles. Elias stood like soone preparing for both an apology and an explosion.
Then, softly, Revantra asked, "Do you even want to go on a date with ?"
The question lingered, too fragile and too blunt all at once.
Elias opened his mouth. Closed it. Then took a step closer.
"I didn't think I was allowed to."
Her eyes lifted. "What do you an?"
"I an..." He exhaled. "You're the forr Demon Queen. You're a student. You're figuring things out. I didn't want to make things weird—or push—or misread—"
"I'm not glass, Elias."
"I know. I just—didn't want to assu."
She raised a brow. "So you assud herbs were safer?"
"Yes," he said honestly. "Herbs don't stare at like they want to kiss them."
Her face turned pink. "I never said I wanted—!"
"You don't have to say it. I do have eyes."
They stared at each other.
Then Revantra took a breath, tilted her head, and asked calmly:
"So... what now?"
Elias looked at the food stall nearby. "We could eat sothing?"
She considered him. "Skewers?"
He nodded. "Skewers."
They walked together in awkward but unspoken agreent, stopping by a sizzling at cart where the vendor had rcifully not witnessed their argunt. They bought two skewers each and sat on the stone rim of a nearby fountain, feet dangling just above the water.
They ate in silence for a mont. The at was sweet and smoky, with a spice that lingered pleasantly.
Revantra chewed slowly, then said between bites, "This still counts as a date."
Elias turned to her with a smirk. "Oh, does it?"
"We're alone. There's food. Lanterns. You complinted ."
"You threatened ."
"That's part of my charm."
He laughed, genuinely. "Alright, fine. It's a date."
She smiled, small and satisfied. "Good."
Another beat passed.
Then Elias said, half-grinning, "Next ti I'll write 'Herb Ergency – Not a Date' on the note."
Revantra flicked a droplet of water at him from the fountain. "Next ti you don't clarify, I'm showing up in a ballgown."
He leaned a little closer. "Promise?"
She blinked.
Then turned her head away quickly, muttering, "Shut up and eat your skewers."
He did.
But he was smiling the whole ti.
Later, as the crowd thinned and the last of the lanterns swayed overhead, Elias offered her his jacket when the breeze turned cool. She took it without a word, wrapping it around herself like it was armor.
They walked back to the school slowly, side by side, not touching but always within reach.
Just before the gates, Revantra paused.
He looked back. "What is it?"
She glanced up at him. "I still want a real date. One that isn't accidental. One where you ask on purpose."
Elias nodded. "Okay. I will."
She stepped a little closer. "And when you do, I'm wearing the ballgown."
"I'll bring flowers."
She grinned, then whispered, "It better be fireproof."
And with that, she turned and walked through the gates—her steps light, her heart even lighter.
Behind her, Elias stayed a mont longer, staring after her like he couldn't quite believe this was real.
It was. And both of them were finally brave enough to admit it.
To be continued...
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