The bells of the Cathedral of Saints tolled before dawn, slicing the cold air with their iron certainty.
From the highest window of the Church Tower, the High Priest looked down on the city like it belonged to him.
"Magic flows too freely here," he murmured to the white-robed Inquisitor beside him. "Like weeds after rain."
The Inquisitor bowed his head. "Shall I ready the purification scripts?"
The High Priest's gaze flicked toward the school in the distance. "No. First, let's trim the vines. Quietly. A decree will do."
Elias was late.
Not tragically late. Not "my potion exploded" late. Just the kind of late that came with living alongside a firestarter disguised as a teenage girl.
"I couldn't find my left sock," Revantra said from the kitchen, unapologetic.
He peered around the doorway. "It was under the plant pot. Again."
She blinked. "Oh. I thought that was where the other sock was hiding from it."
Elias pinched the bridge of his nose and muttered something about sock ecosystems, then shrugged into his coat. The hospital was calling mages in early this week for something "important and holy"—two words he trusted less and less these days.
But as he reached into the coat's inside pocket for his spell tags, his fingers closed around something unfamiliar.
A folded note.
No seal. No sender. Just plain parchment, faintly scented with ash.
He opened it absently.
He'll burn with you.
The words hit him like a punch. Ink black and sharp, the letters sliced through the fabric of his morning calm.
He frowned, lips parting in confusion—but before he could turn to show it to Revantra, a hand plucked it from his fingers.
She stood behind him, having moved with that silent, uncanny grace she used only when serious. Her expression flickered—recognition first, then cold fury.
"Where did you get this?" she asked, voice low.
"It was in my coat. I thought it was—"
She didn't let him finish. With a snap of her fingers, the parchment caught fire. Elias flinched, more at her expression than the flame.
"I've seen that handwriting before," she muttered, not meeting his eyes. "Back when I had... minions."
He paused. "You had minions?"
"Loyal demon cultists. Very stabby. Always writing things in poetic doom font."
"…Right."
She dropped the burned scrap into the sink and ran water over the ashes. Then, as if remembering they were supposed to be normal, she turned to him and added, "Don't worry about it. It's probably just Theo trying calligraphy."
Elias didn't laugh.
"Revantra…"
Her shoulders tensed.
"I'm not letting some zealot spook me," she said, turning away. "And you're not quitting your job because of a threat scrawled by someone who probably eats paper for breakfast."
He crossed the space between them. "I wasn't going to quit. But I am going to ask you why you burned that note instead of showing me."
She hesitated.
Then finally, in a voice softer than she ever let herself use: "Because you're the only thing they can't control. And I won't let them touch that."
The next day, the decree came.
Issued under seal from the Church's central tower, it read like a public health notice—but everyone in the magical community understood what it meant.
"All capital zones containing unstable or unvetted magical fields must be purified under Church supervision. Any practitioners unwilling to submit their spells to the registry shall be fined or removed."
Elias received the letter mid-shift, handed to him by an apologetic courier. The hospital was buzzing. People spoke in hushed voices, as if the ink on the paper could hear.
He read it, sighed, and walked straight to the administrator's office.
"You want me to assist them?" he asked flatly.
The head administrator—a wiry woman with stern eyes and white streaks in her braid—nodded. "You're one of the most stable elemental healers in the region. The Church requested you specifically."
Elias sat down. "And if I decline?"
Her brow rose. "They'll be displeased."
"Add it to the list." He rose again. "Tell them I'm flattered. And I'd rather bathe in acid."
At home, Revantra was trying to levitate a teacup using only sarcasm and glaring.
So far, the cup had spun halfway across the table and shattered against the bookshelf.
Elias ducked as a chip of porcelain flew past his ear.
"I think the cup's winning," he said dryly.
Revantra flopped backward onto the couch, dramatically. "I'm losing my edge. Or maybe just my patience."
He handed her a new cup. "Try love instead of rage."
She stared at it. "I'd rather burn it."
Still, she took it—carefully, and with only a small spark of heat flickering at her fingertips.
He sat beside her. "They want me to help purify magic zones."
"Of course they do." Her voice was venomous. "Cleanse the evil. Wash out the dangerous. Start with the little girl who makes things burn when she's annoyed."
He studied her face. There was bitterness there, but beneath it… fear. Of being exposed. Of being left behind.
"I said no," he replied simply.
She blinked. "What?"
"I said no," he repeated, gentler this time. "Told them I had better things to do. Like ducking tea cups."
Her lips trembled.
"I don't want you to give up your life for me."
"I'm not," he said. "I'm choosing the part of it that matters."
She looked at the floor.
And then, without warning, she leaned sideways and rested her head on his shoulder.
"You're either the bravest person I know," she murmured, "or the dumbest."
"Probably both."
"Still… thank you."
There was a pause. Her breath warmed the fabric of his shirt.
"You didn't ask what the note said."
He looked down at her. "I figured you'd tell me if it mattered."
She hesitated… then said nothing more.
That night, long after the fire had gone low and Revantra had fallen asleep in a nest of blankets and overcooked cookies, Elias stood by the window.
The moonlight touched the windows of the school across the district.
Somewhere out there, the Church was preparing for a quiet war.
And deep in the pocket of his coat, tucked behind the healing scrolls, lay a second note—one Revantra hadn't seen.
This one had arrived days before. It wasn't signed. But the script was the same.
She remembers more each day. Soon she won't need you.
Elias stared at it a long time.
Then folded it carefully and slid it into the fire.
To be continued…