It was a crisp, blue morning the kind that usually ant long etings and endless paperwork, but today Malvoria felt none of the usual heaviness as she stepped out onto the courtyard grass.
For the first ti in a week, there was genuine anticipation, a restless energy moving through her veins.
The magic circle was ready. More than ready, perhaps—it looked more intricate and stable than it ever had before, its runes perfectly balanced, the ley lines now singing in harmony, no longer straining against their purpose.
For seven days, Malvoria, Elysia, Veylira, Raveth, and even Kaelith (who contributed mostly with sticky handprints and enthusiastic clapping) had rebuilt, refined, and, above all, listened to the old magic.
Now, the circle shimred with a silvery light, stable and waiting. This morning, Malvoria had barely needed to nudge the power in the runes.
They responded instantly, hungry to be used, eager for the connection to finally be made.
Veylira checked the circle one last ti, stooping with the practiced eyes of soone who’d seen a thousand rituals, her silver hair glinting.
Raveth adjusted a protective ward at the periter, then straightened, arms folded, exuding silent confidence.
Malvoria let her eyes linger on Elysia and Kaelith—Elysia in a crisp white tunic, silver hair braided, eyes bright; Kaelith wearing her miniature "general’s" jacket, boots polished and eyes wide with excitent.
If she was nervous about stepping into the unknown, it didn’t show. She clutched Elysia’s hand and bounced on her toes, face split with a lopsided grin.
"Ready?" Elysia asked, voice low but clear.
Malvoria nodded. "Let’s do this."
Together, they moved to the center of the circle, with Veylira, Raveth, and Kaelith just behind. Kaelith squealed as the magic pulsed underfoot, making the grass shimr with color.
Elysia squeezed Malvoria’s hand, and the world tilted as the air changed, thickening, folding inward and outward at once.
The mont they poured their magic into the circle, the world split open—no monster this ti, just the clean snap of a bridge being ford.
The castle faded around them, and a split-second later, Malvoria found herself standing in a sunlit marble corridor.
Pale blue banners hung from the walls, embroidered with constellations, and soft light filtered in through stained-glass windows. The air was chill, almost painfully pure.
They were in the Celestian castle.
For a heartbeat, nobody moved. The silence pressed in—deeper and sohow heavier than any silence Malvoria had ever known.
Every footfall, every breath seed amplified. In the demon lands, magic crackled in the air, unruly and wild. Here, it was tight, controlled, as if every mote of dust was expected to obey a centuries-old protocol.
Malvoria felt herself straighten instinctively, one hand going to rest on Kaelith’s shoulder in a silent warning: be calm, be still.
Veylira was the first to whisper, her voice reverent but teasing: "Well, at least they keep things clean."
Raveth rolled her eyes, but even she moved with more caution than usual. The Celestian kingdom was no place for chaos. Even the castle stones seed to glare at noise and disarray.
They took a few tentative steps down the corridor, letting the circle seal behind them. The portal’s closing left a faint shimr in the air, like the last note of a bell.
It was Lara who found them first, materializing at the far end of the hallway. She looked almost different here—her usually wild hair was braided back, her clothes neater, and her walk more careful than Malvoria had ever seen. Still, there was mischief in her eyes as she approached.
"About ti," Lara murmured, grinning as she studied their travel-worn group. "If you’d taken another day, Sarisa would’ve staged a coup."
Malvoria arched a brow. "Are you responsible for this side of the circle?"
Lara flashed a lopsided smile. "Of course. Do you see anything broken? No? That’s because I didn’t let Raveth touch the runes."
Veylira huffed. "Show off."
But Malvoria could see the truth in the lines of the spellwork—everything here was perfectly aligned, with just enough flexibility to accommodate the quirks of both realms.
Lara might claim to hate rules, but when it ca to magic, she was ticulous.
Kaelith looked around in awe, tugging at Elysia’s hand. "Big! Shiny!"
Elysia hushed her gently, but there was amusent in her eyes. "It is big, little star. And very shiny. But we have to be quiet, rember? Celestian halls don’t like loud voices."
As if to illustrate her point, footsteps echoed down the marble, and a pair of Celestian guards appeared at the far end—tall, silver-armored, their eyes like pale chips of ice.
For a mont, Malvoria tensed, wondering if this was the welco or the warning.
But Lara stepped forward, making a complicated gesture. "They’re expecting us," she whispered, before switching to Celestian, her words flowing with a practiced ease.
"Demon Queen Malvoria, Queen Elysia, Princess Kaelith, and the Lady Veylira and Commander Raveth. Escort to the Queen’s receiving room, please."
The guards exchanged a quick glance, then bowed with practiced formality, falling in on either side. Malvoria offered Lara a sideways look, equal parts admiration and confusion.
"You’ve gone native," she muttered.
Lara grinned. "I haven’t started eating salads yet. When that happens, you can worry."
The journey through the castle was surreal. Every corridor glead, every arch perfectly proportioned.
Celestian staff drifted by, silent and graceful, their eyes flicking to Malvoria and her entourage with varying degrees of curiosity and apprehension.
No one dared challenge them, though—the presence of Lara, and the guards, kept everything strictly by the book.
Kaelith’s excitent threatened to spill over at every turn. Malvoria could feel the child’s magic crackling beneath her skin, eager and wild, but Kaelith seed to sense the importance of this place.
She gripped Elysia’s hand tightly and gazed around with wide, reverent eyes.
They were shown to a set of tall doors engraved with starbursts and flowering vines. The guards rapped twice, then pushed the doors open.
Inside was the Queen’s receiving room, as bright and lofty as a chapel. Sarisa stood near the window, Aliyah in her arms, a tired but genuine smile lighting her face as she saw her family.
The Celestian Queen sat in her high-backed throne, her posture perfect, expression unreadable. Beside her stood several advisors, all dressed in shimring blue and silver robes, their features both beautiful and severe.
Lara imdiately made for Sarisa, taking her hand for just a second—a gesture so quick and careful, Malvoria almost missed it.
Aliyah gurgled, tiny fists waving, her eyes bright as athysts. Kaelith waved in return, her delight barely contained.
"Your Majesties," the Celestian Queen intoned, her voice echoing off the polished marble. "Welco."
Malvoria felt Elysia tense beside her, but Elysia matched the bow perfectly, Kaelith following after a mont’s hesitation.
Veylira and Raveth bowed with all the regal calm of old soldiers who’d learned to mask any hint of nerves.
"Thank you for your welco," Elysia replied, her voice cool and perfectly formal. "It is an honor to be received."
The Celestian Queen’s gaze lingered on Malvoria, weighing and evaluating, before moving to Kaelith, who returned the look with fearless curiosity.
A faint smile tugged at the Queen’s mouth, as if Kaelith’s energy was impossible to ignore even here.
"I trust your journey was smooth?" the Queen asked.
Malvoria inclined her head. "The new circle functions perfectly, thanks to your daughter’s work." She nodded to Lara, who bead.
Sarisa crossed the room, careful not to move too quickly, and handed Aliyah to Lara for a mont. She drew Elysia and Malvoria into a quick, tight embrace.
"I missed you," Sarisa whispered.
Kaelith peered over, delight blooming in her face. "Baby!" she cried, a little too loud.
Elysia winced, but the Queen only laughed, a sound so rare that every advisor seed to startle. "Let the children be children, Queen Elysia. Even in my court, laughter is not forbidden."
Kaelith, emboldened, toddled over to Aliyah and gently poked her cheek, making the baby squeal with laughter.
For a heartbeat, Malvoria saw a vision of what this alliance could an—two worlds joined, not just by treaties and magic, but by the ssy, unstoppable chaos of children.
Raveth, looking slightly uncomfortable in the silence, finally asked, "Are we allowed to sit?"
The Queen gestured gracefully. "Of course. You are guests, not prisoners." Her gaze, sharp and assessing, settled on Malvoria.
"Your presence here is a sign of faith. Let us hope the circle holds—and that this partnership is the beginning, not the end."
Malvoria let herself breathe, the tightness in her chest easing. Elysia’s hand found hers under the table, a quiet comfort. Veylira and Raveth exchanged a look, clearly relieved.
The formalities lted into conversation—about the portal, about the children, about the future.
The Celestian Queen, though still reserved, seed genuinely curious about Kaelith and Aliyah, even asking about Kaelith’s purple fire and Aliyah’s first attempts at floating her bottle with Celestian magic.
At one point, Lara confessed, "I think Aliyah likes it here. But she’ll like the demon castle more when she can eat cake every day."
Sarisa shot her a look, but it was full of warmth. "She’ll like wherever you are. And I think she’ll be very spoiled."
Malvoria let the conversation swirl around her. It was strange, this peace. It was delicate, fragile as spun glass—but it was real.
Every so often, she glanced at Elysia and Kaelith, at Veylira and Raveth and Lara and Sarisa and Aliyah, and felt a swelling pride.
When the ti ca to leave, the Queen rose and bowed. "May the circle remain strong, and may your path always be open."
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