Field trips weren't supposed to be terrifying.
At least, not to Elias. But as he stood at the gates of the Hall of Reflections—a cathedral-like relic from the pre-Sundering era, all black stone and glimmering mirrored glass—he couldn't help but tug awkwardly at the hem of his overly formal chaperone robes.
"They could've just let us tour a bakery," he muttered, eyeing the looming structure. "Maybe one with those cheese-filled rolls…"
Next to him, Revantra—newly fourteen and still wrestling with her rapidly maturing limbs—stood with arms folded and one eyebrow twitching. Her uniform skirt had been lengthened (under protest), her boots were slightly too tight, and her crimson eyes were narrowed at the building like it had insulted her ancestry.
"It smells like old guilt," she muttered.
"That's the incense," said Theo from behind, nose buried in the trip pamphlet. "They burn basilisk tears and ashroot to thin the veil between soul and shadow. This place is meant to show you... well, you."
Revantra rolled her eyes. "Why does everything in this city reek of melodrama?"
Theo looked like he was about to list several historical reasons but wisely closed his mouth when Revantra's hand began to emit a little warmth.
The head enchantress clapped her hands. "Students will enter one by one. No teachers inside. Your reflections will guide you. Or haunt you. Either way, remember: the hall shows only what lies within."
"Oh joy," Revantra muttered.
The line moved quickly. Theo vanished inside first, with a nervous backward glance. Several students returned pale-faced. One girl was crying. Another was giggling hysterically. No one seemed to be having a good time.
Revantra was next.
Elias reached out instinctively, fingers brushing her shoulder. "You don't have to prove anything in there. Just be yourself."
She turned, stiffened for a moment, then said in a tight voice, "I don't even know what that means anymore."
Then she stepped through the doors.
The Hall swallowed her whole.
It was silent. Too silent. Even her footsteps barely echoed.
Every wall was mirrored glass—softly glowing, never quite showing her reflection. Instead, the panels shimmered with flickers of memory: fire, wings, battlefields under twin moons. Her name echoed—Revantra. Revantra the Tyrant Queen. Revantra the Flame.
She kept walking.
Her boots clicked on marble. The light shifted. Mirrors twisted.
One reflection rippled, and she paused.
It was her. Older. Regal. Terrible. Crowned in smoke and ember. Seated on a throne of scorched bones. Her past self—back straight, face unreadable—lifted her chin and said, in a voice layered with thunder and cruel resolve:
"They will all kneel. Even the stars."
Revantra stared at herself.
The illusion's eyes narrowed. "You are only pretending to be small. You are me."
A long pause. Revantra breathed, once. Twice.
Then she stepped forward and said quietly, "No."
The throne-room image flickered.
"You burned the world once," it hissed.
"I was angry," she replied. "Alone. And very stupid."
"You're still alone."
"No." Her voice rose—steady, but not loud. "I have someone now. And I'm not going to burn that."
With a snap, the reflection shattered. The glass rippled, folding the throne and its queen into fragments of fading light.
She walked on.
More images came—battles, betrayals, her own soldiers crumbling in flame. Once, she saw Elias, bound and bleeding in a memory that never happened. She turned away from that one quickly.
"I'm not that girl anymore," she whispered. "I'm not."
At the center of the hall stood a final mirror. This one was clear, still. She approached, expecting another illusion.
But it only showed her.
Just her. A girl in a school uniform, with fire-colored eyes and too much weight on her shoulders. Not a queen. Not a monster. Just… Rhea.
She stared at it for a long time.
Then, slowly, a small smile touched her lips.
Elias was pacing.
"She's been in there too long," he said for the fourth time.
"She's been in there for seven minutes," Theo replied, checking his pocket watch.
"That's basically an eternity in mirror trauma years."
Theo opened his mouth, then frowned. "Okay, fair."
The doors finally creaked open. Revantra stepped out slowly, hair slightly wind-blown, eyes unfocused. She blinked into the daylight, saw Elias, and walked straight up to him.
"You're right," she said, voice low.
Elias blinked. "About what?"
"I don't have to prove anything." She paused, then added, "But I kind of wanted to."
He gave her a concerned look. "Did you see… anything bad?"
Her eyes darted briefly, then she offered a sharp, tiny smile. "I saw a throne made of bones. And me on it. Monologuing. It was disturbingly on-brand."
Theo perked up. "Was it made of rib bones or femurs? For architectural—"
"Do you want detention?" Revantra snapped.
Theo held up his hands in surrender. "Just curious."
They walked together down the path away from the hall, the noise of the rest of the students gradually returning as the spell of the place faded.
Elias glanced at her. "You okay?"
She didn't answer right away. Then, softly: "I think I'm starting to forgive her."
"Hm?"
"The other me." She looked at her hand—small, even with her growth spurts. "The Revantra who burned everything. She wasn't just power. She was pain. And if I don't hate her… maybe I can finally be more than her."
Elias stopped walking. Slowly, he reached out and brushed a stray hair from her cheek.
"Whoever you were," he said, "you're already more than that."
She looked away, but not before he saw the hint of pink on her cheeks.
"I still might burn soup tonight, though," she mumbled.
"That's expected."
They kept walking.
Somewhere behind them, a mirror cracked in the hall. Silently. Almost reverently.
To be continued…