I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 73 : Masked Visitor

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Chapter 73 - 73 : Masked Visitor

Revantra knew she was being followed.

It was the kind of instinct you didn't lose after ruling a kingdom of backstabbing nobles and blood-sorcerers. Even in a child's body, even in the supposedly safe halls of City Academy, the prickling tension at the back of her neck was unmistakable.

The cloaked figure had been tailing her since the end of Advanced Sigil Theory—an endless two-hour slog of runes, diagrams, and Professor Merin's phlegm-ridden commentary. At first, she thought she imagined it. A trick of her tired eyes. A student with bad posture. Someone else headed to the same corridor.

But then the footsteps matched hers. Turned when she turned. Stopped when she stopped.

They kept just far enough behind to stay hidden in crowds. But too close for comfort.

And worst of all, they were good.

Whoever it was, they didn't shuffle or breathe loud. They moved like a shadow—a measured, deliberate pace that reminded her of the cult scouts from her previous life. Silent. Purposeful. Observing.

It made her fingers twitch for a weapon she didn't carry anymore.

She slowed as she reached the arched stairwell to the outer courtyard, letting the after-class crowd pass by. Laughter and chatter echoed down the corridor. Students compared quiz scores, debated the ethics of turning frogs into chairs, and planned snack raids.

But Revantra lingered by the stone banister, pretending to fix her satchel strap.

Then she spun around.

Empty hallway.

Not completely empty. Far enough back, a cluster of first-years scurried around an overfilled herbology cart. But the figure—the one in the dark blue cloak with the drawn hood and perfectly still posture—was gone.

Or rather, had vanished.

Revantra narrowed her eyes.

This wasn't a rookie stalker. Whoever they were, they didn't want to be seen. Not by her.

Which made her even more determined to catch them.

She turned again and headed toward the gate that led to the supply hall, this time taking sharp turns and doubling back twice. She ducked into a side passage behind the laundry room and paused beneath the flickering torch sconces.

"Alright," she muttered. "Let's see you keep up with me."

A shadow shifted near the laundry chute.

She whirled toward it—and slammed face-first into a broad chest.

"—GAH!"

"Revantra?"

Elias caught her by the shoulders before she toppled backward. His brow furrowed in concern, his dark hair wind-tousled from the courtyard, and a half-eaten slice of flatbread sticking out of his coat pocket.

"Why were you sprinting?" he asked, then glanced past her. "Is someone chasing you?"

"I—no. No. Of course not." She straightened, brushing her skirt down, then glanced quickly behind her.

No cloaked figure. No sound. Not even a whisper of movement.

It was like they'd disappeared the moment Elias appeared.

She swallowed.

"They were just... a salesman," she said casually.

Elias raised a slow eyebrow.

"A salesman."

"Yes."

"In a cloak."

"Yes."

"Inside the academy."

"Correct."

"At sundown."

"Special promotion."

Elias stared at her like she'd just announced her intentions to marry a troll.

"What were they selling?"

"...Scarves."

"Scarves."

"Warm ones," she added. "Seasonal."

A long pause.

Then Elias sighed. "You're a terrible liar."

"I'm an excellent liar," she snapped, indignant. "I ruled an empire with lies."

"You're twelve."

"Temporarily."

He gave her a look. That frustratingly soft look. The kind you give a child pretending not to be scared.

"Did something happen?" he asked, gently. "Did someone threaten you?"

"No."

"Then why do you look like you're about to stab someone with a quill?"

She opened her mouth.

Closed it.

And then, to her own surprise, said, "I don't know."

That was the honest part. She didn't know. The figure hadn't spoken. Hadn't drawn a weapon. Hadn't chased her or left a note or even made a demand. But something about their presence had needled into her mind, like a whisper she couldn't quite hear.

Elias exhaled, then rested a hand on her head—lightly, just enough to muss her hair.

"I'll walk you home."

She bristled. "I don't need an escort."

"I know. I do."

She gave him a squinty glare. "You're manipulating me."

He smiled. "You're very perceptive."

She huffed. But followed him.

They walked through the academy's outer courtyard, where the stone walls glowed a lazy gold from the setting sun. Students trickled out in pairs and groups, some heading to the library, others to the evening meal. The breeze smelled like parchment and fried leeks.

Revantra walked with her arms crossed, just close enough to Elias that their shoulders almost brushed. He didn't press her for more. Just walked. Like he always did—beside her, not in front.

Eventually, she muttered, "If it was a cult scout, I'll deal with it."

"Cult scout?"

She winced.

"...I mean, sales scout."

Elias stopped.

"Revantra."

"Nope."

"Are you being hunted?"

"No one's hunting me."

A pause.

She added, "Yet."

Elias pinched the bridge of his nose. "Why can't we have one normal week? Just one. No mysterious voices. No weird symbols. No murder pigeons."

"That pigeon attacked me."

"Because you set it on fire."

"It lunged at me!"

They both stopped near the iron garden gate, arguing in front of an ivy-covered statue of a goddess with an unfortunately judgmental expression. A squirrel blinked at them from her crown.

"Look," Elias said finally, "I'm not going to force you to tell me everything. I know you don't like feeling... watched."

She flinched.

"But," he added, "if there's something dangerous going on, I'd rather know. Even if it's just a cloaked scarf salesman."

Revantra hesitated.

She wanted to tell him. She almost did.

But her mind returned to the glowing symbol beneath the school. The broken sun. The forbidden chant only she could hear. The old whispers from her past life crawling back like ghosts through cracks in the wall.

If Elias knew the full extent, he'd worry. He'd involve the school. Maybe even try to leave again.

And she couldn't let that happen.

Not yet.

"...It's probably nothing," she said. "I'm just being careful."

He didn't look convinced.

But he nodded. "Then I'll be careful too."

They resumed walking, passing the corner bakery where a student shouted about running out of tarts. Revantra slowed as they approached their shared residence.

"You won't report it?"

"Not unless it follows you again."

"And if it does?"

"I'll set a trap."

She blinked. "That was... surprisingly sinister."

He grinned. "You're rubbing off on me."

They reached the steps. Elias fumbled with the key while Revantra scanned the street again, eyes narrowing. But the shadows remained still. No cloaked figure. No strange sensation. Just the usual chill of approaching night.

As the door creaked open, Elias asked casually, "Still hungry?"

Revantra hesitated, then nodded. "A little."

"I made stew."

"...With what ingredients?"

"Don't ask questions you don't want answers to."

She groaned, trudging inside.

Later that night, while Elias snored in the adjacent room, Revantra sat by her window.

The moonlight poured across her desk, illuminating her sketchbook—the one filled with copies of the symbol she'd found beneath the school. The broken sun. The spiral core.

She added a new page.

This time, she drew a different figure: tall, cloaked, faceless. A shadow behind a crowd.

Then, for the first time since her rebirth, she added a label beneath the drawing.

"Mask-Bearer."

Her pen hovered.

She didn't know who they were. But she knew one thing for certain.

They weren't done.

And neither was she.

To be continued...