The dream began like they always did: in fire.
Not the warm crackle of a hearth or the comforting glow of stove embers—but the ravenous, open-mawed hunger of wildfire. It devoured the city beneath her feet—golden dos lting, marble streets cracking under smoke and heat, people screaming prayers to gods that would not answer.
Revantra stood in the middle of it all, untouched by the flas.
The air around her shimred. Heat waves danced across the ruined horizon like ghosts in mourning. Ash swirled in the sky like snow.
And then ca the angels.
Kneeling.
Rows of them. Wings folded in submission. Heads bowed so low their halos scraped the scorched ground. Their white robes were torn, blackened with soot and divine blood.
At the center of it all, a throne of black stone. Carved from obsidian or shadow, it pulsed faintly with power—living, humming, hungry.
And she was on it.
She saw herself—older, yes, but unmistakably her. Queen Revantra. Not the reborn girl of now, but the true version. The Demon Queen. A creature of calm cruelty, regal and terrible, draped in flowing black lined with crimson. Her eyes burned gold. Her expression held neither rage nor compassion. Only judgnt.
A man knelt before her. One of the angels? No—sothing else. Human, perhaps. Familiar.
Revantra squinted. Tried to make out the face. But it was blurred. Shadowed.
The dream pressed in tighter.
The throne-Revantra raised one hand. The kneeling man trembled.
And then—
"He will betray you."
The voice slithered into her ears like cold wind.
It did not co from the angel.
It did not co from the queen.
It ca from everywhere.
And nowhere.
"He will betray you, like he did before. Like he always will."
Revantra gasped.
And woke.
The darkness of the room was too silent.
She sat bolt upright in her bed, heart hamring, sweat clinging to her back.
The sheets tangled around her legs like shackles.
For a second—just a heartbeat—she didn't know where she was.
Until she turned.
And saw Elias.
Sleeping peacefully on the other bed across the room, blanket kicked off halfway, face mashed adorably into the pillow, hair sticking out in every direction like he'd been in a pillow fight with a small hurricane.
Her breath hitched.
She climbed out of bed, silent.
Her feet barely touched the floor as she crossed the room.
She hesitated for a second—then crawled into his bed.
Not carefully. Not gracefully.
More like a panic-stricken raccoon flinging itself into the nearest soft place.
Elias blinked awake with a grunt. "Huh... wha—Rea?"
She didn't answer.
Just curled up against his chest.
Trembling.
He stiffened for a heartbeat—then wrapped his arms around her instinctively.
He always did.
Even when he was half-asleep and still dreaming about sentient laundry or talking frogs (long story), he always held her like she mattered.
Like she belonged.
"...Rea?" he whispered, more awake now. "What happened?"
She buried her face in his chest. Muffled voice. "Promise you'll never leave ."
He blinked again. "...Is this because I forgot to buy more licorice?"
"No."
"...Is it about that one ti I accidentally called you cute in public and then you turned red and set a bench on fire?"
"No."
He sobered. Shifted just enough to cup her face. Her eyes were wet.
Realization dawned.
Another dream.
Another one of those dreams.
The kind that left her voice too quiet and her limbs too small again.
The kind that reminded her who she used to be.
He didn't push for details. She never told him everything, anyway. Just fragnts. Just enough to make him worry but not enough to understand.
So he did the only thing he could.
"I'm not leaving you," he said softly. "Not ever."
She stared at him, eyes glinting in the dark.
"Even if I turn into that version of again?" Her voice cracked. "The cruel one. The cold one. The one who makes angels kneel?"
He took a breath. Thought about it.
"...Will this version of you still enjoy spicy fried turnips and whine when your feet get cold?"
She blinked.
"...Maybe."
"Then yeah. I'm staying."
Revantra's mouth twitched, confused between a smile and a sob.
She pressed her forehead to his collarbone and muttered, "You're so stupid."
"I know."
"You really think I won't corrupt you?"
"I'm already corrupted. I once ate week-old fish balls because I didn't want to insult the tavern lady."
"...I love you."
Silence.
Revantra stiffened. Wait. Had she—
Did she—
She pulled back slightly, eyes wide. "I didn't an—I an—I did, but not like—"
He touched her cheek.
"You don't have to explain."
"I do. I'm fourteen. You're twenty-sothing. This is awkward and weird and I might be confusing this with panic-induced affection and—"
"I know."
She paused.
He didn't look away. "Whatever this is becoming... we'll figure it out. Slowly. Carefully. With boundaries. And soup."
"You're just saying that so I don't explode your shoes again."
"That too."
She smiled. This ti for real.
He stroked her hair. "Do you want to tell what you saw?"
She hesitated.
"Throne," she said softly. "And angels. And... myself. The real . She wasn't angry. Just sure. Like she had the whole world under her heel and didn't even need to press down."
Elias frowned.
She looked up. "And a voice. It said you'd betray . Like you did before."
He blinked. "I betrayed you?"
She nodded.
"But... I've never even betrayed a sandwich."
"I know."
"You gave a bite of your spicy rice ball once and I cried."
"You're not helping."
"Right."
She sniffed. "It felt real. Like... like it wasn't just mory. It was a warning. A prophecy."
He went still.
Then, carefully, he said, "Do you believe it?"
She didn't answer right away.
Her hands twisted in the hem of his shirt.
"...I don't know," she whispered. "But it scared . Because I wanted to believe you. And there was a part of , in the dream, that... that didn't."
He kissed her forehead.
And said, softly, "Then let prove that part of you wrong. Every day. As long as you'll let ."
She exhaled shakily.
Then shoved him lightly. "Ugh. That was sappy."
"You clung to like a fire-hugging koala. You don't get to call sappy."
"You said you love soup boundaries."
"That's a real thing."
"You're an idiot."
He grinned. "Your idiot."
She curled against him again.
And slowly, finally, fell asleep.
The next morning, Elias woke up to Revantra sitting on his chest, poking his nose repeatedly.
"...Rea."
"Wake up. I had a realization."
He groaned. "It's six."
"I said wake up."
"You weigh more now. You grew hips. It's like being sat on by a sack of potatoes and vengeance."
"I rembered more of the dream."
He blinked.
Now he was fully awake.
She looked down at him, expression sharp but troubled. "There was a figure beside the throne. I didn't notice before. He was always in shadow. But this ti I saw his eyes."
"...And?"
"They were yours."
He stared.
"Except—colder. Older. Like you weren't... you."
He sat up, gently moving her off his chest.
"Rea. What if that's not just a mory? What if... I really was part of your past life?"
She hugged her knees. "You might have been my general. Or my enemy. Or both. You might've killed . Or died for . Or..."
He reached for her hand again.
"You're not her," he said. "And I'm not him. Whatever we were then—we get to choose differently now."
She stared at him.
And for the first ti since the dream, her expression softened.
"...Okay," she said.
And she ant it.
To be continued...
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