I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 62 : A Room for Two

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Chapter 62 - 62 : A Room for Two

Revantra's first reaction to their apartment was to declare it beneath her. Her second was to immediately lay claim to the only bed.

"I'm older than you, technically," she said, dropping her cloak dramatically over the quilted blanket as if she were spreading her wings. "Therefore, I get the adult privileges. Like... sole bed ownership."

Elias stared at her, arms crossed, the key still dangling from his hand. "You're ten."

"I'm five thousand and ten."

"You're ten."

She rolled to her side and flopped an arm over her eyes like a tragic noblewoman exiled from her ancestral manor. "A cruel injustice. Betrayed by democracy once again."

"You've never lived in a democracy."

"That only makes it worse."

The apartment was small. Not 'charming' small—just actually small. A single bedroom, a cramped kitchen that came with two mismatched forks, and a living space where the couch had exactly one spring working overtime. The walls were the kind of faded beige that made you question if they'd ever been a color at all, and the floor creaked in suspiciously specific places.

Elias had bargained the price down by pretending to be allergic to mold and aggressive lighting.

Still, it was theirs.

For now.

He sighed and set the key on the counter, then turned to Revantra, who was now nestling deeper into the mattress like a nesting bird guarding an egg.

"You do know I'm sleeping in the bed," he said. "We're sharing."

"No," she said, hugging a pillow to her chest. "I've read books. There are couches. Cots. Heroic sacrifices. You take the floor."

"I've read books too. None of them said adoptive guardians need to sleep on the floor because their demon ward has a flair for dramatics."

Revantra squinted at him, suspicious. "That sounded like sarcasm."

"It was sleep-deprived honesty."

For a moment, neither of them moved.

Then she sat up, hugging her knees, and gave the bed a calculating look. "It's not a big bed."

"Nope."

"You snore."

"Sometimes."

"I kick."

"You do. I remember."

Another silence. Revantra looked down at the blanket.

"...Fine," she said, like she was offering him a royal pardon. "But only if we build a barrier. A Great Wall of Pillows."

He blinked. "You want a pillow fortress."

"No, I want a civilized partition to maintain sleeping dignity."

"You're ten."

"You're repeating yourself."

He sighed again but smiled. "I'll grab the couch cushions."

Building the Great Wall of Pillows took longer than expected.

Mainly because Revantra had opinions.

"This one's too lumpy," she said, chucking a pillow at the window.

"That was the good one!"

"It betrayed me with uneven stuffing!"

Eventually, they settled on a stacked arrangement: three pillows tall, stretching the entire length of the bed like a squishy Berlin Wall. Revantra sat cross-legged on her side, inspecting it like a general reviewing battlefield defenses.

"I declare this suitable," she said.

"Glad to know I have your blessing to sleep in my own bed," Elias replied, flopping onto his half.

She smirked at the ceiling. "We'll review your performance in the morning."

He chuckled, pulling a scratchy blanket over himself. The room was quiet now, save for the muffled city noises outside—the clop of hooves, the occasional bark, the distant hum of magical lights.

For all the absurdity of their arrival, for all the bad food and worse furniture, this moment—this stillness—felt real.

Like something they'd built. Even if it was just made of old pillows and tired sarcasm.

"You've never had your own room before, have you?" Elias asked after a while.

Revantra didn't answer immediately.

"...No," she admitted. "Palace chambers don't count. They were too big. Too empty."

He nodded. "Yeah. Empty doesn't mean peaceful."

"Exactly," she said, surprised he understood.

"I've had my share of quiet places that were anything but."

She peeked over the wall. "Did they creak like this one?"

"Worse," he said. "One had spiders." freeweɓnovel.cøm

She shuddered. "You sleeped with spiders?"

"Slept, and yes. One tried to bargain for the bed."

"...Maybe you do deserve this one."

They both laughed.

Later, as the city dimmed and the air cooled, Revantra lay still under the blanket. She hadn't spoken in a while. Elias assumed she was asleep—until she broke the silence with a quiet voice.

"Why did you pick this place?"

Elias shifted, turning to face the ceiling. "Because it's close enough to the academy, but not too close to the central district. It's quiet. Normal."

She was quiet again, digesting that.

"You think I can live a normal life?"

"I think you can live your life. Whatever shape that takes."

"...Even if I'm not what you hoped for?"

He turned his head to look at her. She was curled under the blanket, just her crimson eyes peeking out from the folds.

"I never hoped for anything but you," he said honestly.

The wall of pillows made it hard to see her expression. But the faintest sniffle betrayed her.

"I think I hate this city a little less now," she murmured.

"You'll hate it even less when I buy you a muffin in the morning."

"You'd bribe your queen with baked goods?"

"I'd bribe the whole monarchy if it meant I get five minutes of peace."

She chuckled—sleepy, soft. Her eyelids fluttered.

Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, she said, "Goodnight... Elias."

It wasn't the first time she'd used his name.

But it was the first time it sounded like home.

"Goodnight, Revantra."

Somewhere, beyond their little room, the city pulsed on—full of secrets, villains, and growing shadows.

But in that moment, with a pillow wall between them and the world, a demon queen and a tired man carved out a space just for themselves.

Not perfect. Not grand.

But safe.

And that was more than either of them had ever had.

To be continued...