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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 71 : The Cult Symbol
Chapter 71 - 71 : The Cult Symbol
Revantra had never been particularly good at sketching.
It wasn't that she lacked artistic talent—she did—but more that she had never seen the point. When you could conjure fire with a snap or bend shadows to your will, why waste time with pencils? And yet, here she was, hunched over Elias's borrowed notebook, tongue poking slightly out of the corner of her mouth in deep concentration, drawing what looked disturbingly like a lopsided fried egg.
"Ugh," she muttered, erasing half of it with the side of her hand. "It looked more sinister last night."
The real symbol had glowed like veins of fire through the stone, intricate and precise. Her recreation, by contrast, had all the menace of a poorly iced pastry. She tapped her pencil against her chin, then sighed and started again, trying to recall every line, every curve, from the memory still burned behind her eyelids.
The sketch took twenty minutes, four erasers, and the sacrifice of her pride.
When she finished, she stared at the symbol.
It was circular, but not perfect—a spiral nested within a six-pointed web, with thin spokes radiating outwards. There was something jagged at the edges, like a broken wheel or a sun that had been shattered and stitched back together. It hummed in her mind, even now. Not loudly. Just there.
She shivered.
Then, she did what she had been putting off all morning.
She took the sketch and slipped out of the house before Elias could wake up.
The capital's library was three stories of quiet judgment and ancient dust, held together by thick beams, thicker tomes, and the even thicker silence of angry old librarians who remembered when people respected paper. It wasn't open to students this early, technically, but Revantra had long since learned the secret to gaining entrance:
Pretend you're delivering something for a professor and look like you might explode into fire if someone questions you.
"Ah, good morning," said the clerk at the desk, eyeing her smoldering hair with caution. "Top floor's closed for cataloging."
"I'm headed to the historical archives. Just dropping off a scroll."
"Who for?"
"Professor Aldoon."
"Which Aldoon?"
"...The one with the beard."
The man blinked.
"They all have beards," he said, but didn't stop her.
Score.
She found her way into the restricted history wing, where the real books were kept—the ones that didn't float or sing or require a signed disclaimer. Thick tomes bound in cracked leather filled the shelves. Dust motes danced in the sunlight streaming from narrow windows. The air smelled of old parchment and forgotten secrets.
Perfect.
Revantra pulled up a chair, opened her sketchbook, and got to work.
An hour passed.
Then another.
She skimmed past modern sigil theory, passed old spellwork diagrams and the familiar elegance of High Demonic runes. Nothing matched.
Her fingers itched.
Then she found it.
Tucked in the back of a banned text with the charming title "Unraveling Forbidden Cults: A Guide to Dangerous Faiths and Fools Who Follow Them," was a page half-burnt at the corner, marked with faded red ink.
The symbol stared back at her.
Her breath caught.
It was nearly identical. A few lines missing, probably eroded by time—but unmistakable. The broken sun. The web. The spiral.
Underneath it, the caption read:
"The Mark of the Hollow Flame. Known symbol of the Ashen Choir, a pre-Cataclysmic demon-worshipping cult that believed fire was a divine hunger that consumed lies. Thought extinct. Categorized as Class-S Forbidden." freёweɓnovel.com
She stared at the words.
Her fingers went cold.
She remembered them. Not from this life—from her last. Back then, she had ruled over hundreds of magical factions, but there were always fringe groups in the shadows. The Ashen Choir had been small. Insignificant. Fanatics who believed even the Demon Queen wasn't worthy of the flame.
They'd tried to summon something once.
She'd had them burned for it.
Not even because they were a threat—but because their magic was wrong. It wasn't demonfire. It wasn't natural.
It whispered.
Much like the voice in the wall.
Revantra slammed the book shut.
The silence of the library pressed in.
"Well," she muttered under her breath, "this is exactly what I didn't need."
Back at home, Elias had already left for the hospital.
She set the sketch on the table and stared at it over a bowl of reheated soup.
This wasn't just an ancient ward or some misplaced enchantment buried under the school. This was deliberate. A cult symbol etched into the very bones of the academy. But who would have the power—or the insanity—to do that?
And why now?
Was it lying dormant?
Or was it waking up?
And worst of all... why had it responded to her?
She scowled, stabbing at a carrot in the soup. The answer was obvious and terrible.
Because she wasn't just Revantra the student.
She was Revantra the former Demon Queen.
Even if no one else knew that... the magic did.
That evening, Elias came home later than usual, whistling.
She stuffed the sketch into her book and shoved it under the couch cushion just before he walked in.
"Rough day?" he asked, setting down a paper bag.
"I could ask you the same."
"I got barfed on twice." He held up two fingers.
"...Were you keeping score?"
"Yes. I feel like I earned a prize."
She squinted at the bag. "Is that cake?"
He grinned. "Only for healers who get vomited on."
She made a slow grab for the bag.
He snatched it out of reach. "Nope. Only if you tell me why you've been acting weird lately."
She froze. "I'm not acting weird."
"You've been out early. You've been jumpy. You over-seasoned your stew, which never happens. I thought I was being attacked by chili."
"Coincidence."
"You had demon-spark residue on your sleeve."
"Fashion."
"You left the house with a notebook and came back with soot on your nose."
"I tripped into knowledge."
He leaned in. "Revantra."
There it was again. That name, said with a softness only he used. No titles. No suspicion. Just her.
She looked away.
"I can't tell you yet," she said finally.
"Why not?"
"...Because you'll worry. And I don't want you worrying until I know if there's actually something to worry about."
Elias watched her for a long moment.
Then he sat down across from her, reached into the bag, and slid a small slice of cake toward her.
"Fine. I won't press."
"Really?"
He nodded. "But the moment you find out something dangerous, you tell me."
She paused.
Then nodded back.
"Deal."
He handed her a fork. She took a bite. It was too sweet, too frosted, and inexplicably blue.
She made a face.
He laughed. "You hate it."
"I hate that I like it."
"That's not the same."
"I'm complicated."
They shared a quiet moment, one of those strange, warm silences that didn't need filling. Outside, the city buzzed in the distance. Inside, she felt the hum of that symbol still lodged in her bones.
Something was coming.
But for now... she had cake.
That night, she couldn't sleep.
The whisper returned in her dreams.
The flame sees you.
You are the key.
Open the door.
She woke with her sheets tangled around her legs, cold sweat on her brow.
And in the darkness of her room, tucked inside her sketchbook, the cult symbol faintly glowed.
Just for a second.
Then it was gone.
To be continued...