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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 74 : The Magic Duel
Chapter 74 - 74 : The Magic Duel
Revantra had just sat down for lunch when the snob arrived.
"Enjoying the peas, farm girl?"
She didn't even look up from her tray. "You're the third person to call me that this week. Try harder."
Across from her, Theo nearly choked on his bread roll. "Technically," he wheezed, "you are from a rural district—"
"Theo."
"Right. Shutting up."
The cafeteria buzzed with its usual midday noise: silverware clinking, enchanted napkins flapping away from food fights, and third-years arguing over elemental ethics. But somehow, over it all, the voice of one Leoric Vantrelle—top student in Enchantments, heir to a noble line, and walking hair product commercial—cut through like a bad flute solo.
"I'm only surprised he let you out alone," Leoric continued, eyes sweeping down to Elias's lunch box on the table. "Does your babysitter know you're socializing without permission?"
Revantra calmly stabbed her carrot with a fork. "He's not my babysitter."
"No?" Leoric grinned, flashing far too many teeth. "Then what is he? A father figure? An adopted stablehand? Your emotional support peasant?"
The table went quiet.
Theo looked nervously between them.
Revantra's smile did not reach her eyes.
"You've got food on your face," she said sweetly.
Leoric frowned and rubbed his mouth.
"Nope," she said. "Still there."
He turned to his group of lackeys—three younger students who clearly mistook cruelty for charm—and gave a smug little shrug. "Jealousy doesn't become you, Rava."
She twitched.
Theo leaned sideways and whispered, "Please don't vaporize him. The paperwork would be unbearable."
"I'm not going to vaporize him," Revantra muttered.
"Thank you."
"I'm going to humiliate him so thoroughly he regrets ever being born with vocal cords."
"Oh no."
It didn't take long for word to spread.
By the time Revantra and Leoric stood at the dueling circle behind the library tower, half the student body had gathered. The afternoon sun slanted down on the worn stone ring, casting long shadows across the chalked glyphs and cracked runes.
Revantra rolled her shoulders. Her robe sleeves were tied back, and her boots dug into the dirt with satisfying stability. Theo stood off to the side with a flask of juice and a worried expression. Elias hadn't returned from his supply errand yet—and she was very glad for that.
Leoric, meanwhile, struck a pose like he was auditioning for a sword-and-sorcery romance cover. He twirled his wand—an actual wand—and gave a dramatic bow. "Try not to cry, Rava. I've already made a girl cry this week, and I'd rather not break my record."
"You're going to break something, alright," Revantra muttered.
The dueling proctor, a sleepy fourth-year named Min, raised a hand and shouted, "Standard rules. First one disarmed or out of bounds loses. Try not to kill anyone. Begin!"
Leoric moved first, conjuring a flash of blue sparks and firing a twisting burst of wind her way.
She deflected it with a flick of her fingers.
He followed up with a vine snare spell—low-grade, tangled, aimed at her feet. She stepped aside without blinking.
"You've got pretty reflexes," he called, "for a girl raised in hay."
"Keep talking."
He summoned a lightshield and tried to blind her with a refracted flash.
She reached forward, grasped the beam, and crushed it in her palm.
The crowd murmured.
Leoric's smile faltered. "Okay, what—"
Revantra raised a hand and whispered a word in Old Demonic.
A ripple of heat shimmered through the air.
Leoric's next spell fizzled.
"Wait—what was that—"
The glyph beneath her feet ignited with a soft thrummm, echoing across the ring like a heartbeat. The stone hummed beneath her boots.
"I said," she replied, "keep. Talking."
Flame spiraled up her arm—pure, golden, whip-like. It didn't burn her. It danced at her fingertips like a pet.
Leoric panicked.
He fired a freezing burst.
She snapped her fingers.
The ice evaporated before it reached her.
He tried a water lash.
She caught it, turned it into steam, and redirected it at his boots.
Leoric shrieked and jumped back—but not fast enough.
The flame whip cracked—once.
It caught the hem of his enchanted robe.
There was a moment of stunned silence.
Then a loud FOOMF as the entire robe ignited in a harmless but extremely humiliating burst of heatless illusion fire.
His pants survived. Barely.
He stood there, charred at the edges, hair frizzed, blinking at his now very bare shoulders.
A small child in the audience shouted, "HE'S IN HIS UNDERWEAR!"
Leoric screamed and ran.
The crowd erupted.
"I told you not to burn anyone!"
"I didn't burn him! I burned his robe!"
"You can't use demonic glyphs in a student duel!"
"He insulted your haircut!"
"That's not a crime!"
Revantra and Elias stood outside the principal's office while the walls vibrated from magical insulation spells. The shouting inside involved phrases like "irresponsible," "flammable," and "ancient cursed dialects are not extracurricular!"
Elias rubbed his temples. "You're lucky they didn't expel you."
"He called you a peasant!"
"That's not—okay, yes, that was rude. But I don't need avenging! I need low blood pressure!"
She folded her arms. "You weren't there. I needed to win."
"Because I wasn't there?"
"...Yes."
Elias's expression softened.
He crouched beside her. "Revantra, you don't have to fight everyone who mocks me. I'm used to it."
"Well I'm not."
That came out sharper than she intended. She looked away.
He waited.
Then, gently, he said, "Was it really about me?"
She scowled at the floor.
The truth was: no. Not entirely.
It had started as that. Her fury at hearing someone belittle Elias—the one person who saw her as more than a ticking time bomb. But it had twisted into something else. A pressure. A need to prove herself. To show them all she wasn't weak. That she still had power. That she wasn't just some little girl with a bad haircut and a forgotten past.
"Maybe I wanted to remind them," she mumbled, "that I'm not to be messed with."
Elias was quiet.
Then he smiled faintly. "You definitely did that. I think Leoric's going to have trauma dreams about you for weeks."
"...Good."
"But just try to keep your fire powers within human limits, okay? For my sake?"
She rolled her eyes. "Fine. I'll only use the medium fire."
"Thank you."
They both sat down again, this time in comfortable silence.
After a moment, Revantra glanced sideways at him.
"You really didn't mind what he said?"
Elias shrugged. "I've been called worse."
"Like what?"
He considered. "Once, in the village, a drunk merchant called me 'gremlin boy.'"
"...Gremlin boy?"
"I was twelve. He thought I stole his chicken."
"Did you?"
"...That's not the point."
Revantra chuckled. "I'd call you Gremlin Boy."
"I will tell the principal you threatened a noble student with pyromancy."
She gasped. "You wouldn't!"
"Try me, Gremlin Queen."
She kicked his shin.
He winced. But smiled.
And somehow, even with the threat of detention, the smoldering humiliation of one Leoric Vantrelle, and a future full of principal lectures—Revantra felt lighter.
Just a little.
Like maybe, even now, she could still choose who she wanted to be.
And that person?
Wouldn't take insults lying down.
Especially not about Elias.
To be continued...