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I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 69 : The Apology Cookie
Chapter 69 - 69 : The Apology Cookie
The smell of scorched sugar filled the apartment like a declaration of war.
Revantra stood over the tiny stove, brow furrowed, wooden spoon gripped like a battle axe. The mixing bowl beside her looked as though it had been through at least one minor magical explosion, and flour dust clung to her arms and cheeks like the aftermath of a failed summoning ritual.
"I don't understand," she muttered to herself. "I followed the instructions exactly."
To the letter, she had. Which, in hindsight, might have been part of the problem—she'd interpreted "softly fold in the flour" as fold with forceful efficiency and "chill dough for twenty minutes" as skip that, who has time for weak mortal traditions.
The result was an oblong lump of... technically edible material, bubbling on the baking tray with an almost sentient wobble.
It was going to be a cookie.
Maybe.
If the universe was forgiving.
The recipe, she'd found buried in the back of the cupboard, wedged between a crusty tea-stained notebook and an aggressively cheerful pamphlet titled Healthy Meals for Magic Menders! The margins were filled with scribbled notes in Elias's tidy handwriting. Things like "reduce sugar," "bake shorter for softness," and, unhelpfully, "don't stress—just have fun!"
Revantra had taken one look at the last line and scoffed aloud. Baking was not fun. It was alchemy. Precise, delicate, utterly fragile—and she was a fire elemental with the patience of a sleep-deprived hornet.
But after yesterday's... incident, involving a certain red-haired healer and a molten door handle, she'd woken up with an unfamiliar twist in her stomach.
A guilt twist.
Apparently, it had a name.
Apology.
So here she was, armed with an apron that read "Cooking Is Just Another Word For Magic!" (a gift from the landlady downstairs), her pride in tatters, and her dignity slowly dissolving under layers of sticky dough.
She stared at the tray as the misshapen blob continued to sizzle.
"...At least don't explode."
The oven blinked at her. The cookie did not explode.
Progress.
Elias returned home late that evening, coat dusted with frost from the walk, collar turned up against the night chill. The moment he stepped through the door, his nose twitched.
"Is something... burning?"
"It's not burning," Revantra said, appearing in the hallway with suspicious speed. "It's caramelizing."
He gave her a long look. "It smells like a roasted wand core."
"That's part of the flavor profile."
He took off his boots slowly, warily, as if expecting a cake to leap out and attack.
Revantra led him into the kitchen with all the stiffness of someone who had once commanded armies and was now offering up a domestic truce in the form of a very ugly cookie.
It sat in the center of the table like an offering to a vengeful god—brown and crispy at the edges, lopsided in every direction, and faintly steaming. A single chocolate chip had slid to one corner, forming a kind of melted eye.
Elias blinked.
"You baked."
"I created," she corrected. "With ingredients and heat. That counts."
He pulled out the chair, sat down slowly. "Is this... because of yesterday?"
Revantra crossed her arms. "I don't apologize. That's for people who are wrong."
"You melted a public hospital's door handle."
"I had valid concerns about your safety and your... shoulder proximity."
He gave her a tired smile. "And this is your... not-apology cookie."
"Don't label it."
"I think it deserves a label."
She glared. "Eat it."
He picked it up with both hands like it might crumble—or detonate. Then, with the solemnity of a knight facing dragon fire, he bit into it.
There was a crunch.
Then a pause.
Revantra leaned forward. "Well?"
"...It's definitely a cookie."
"That's not an answer."
"It has... texture."
Her eyes narrowed.
"And warmth."
"Warmth," she repeated. "Is that your polite way of saying it's burnt?"
He chewed. "It's not burnt. Just... very enthusiastic."
Revantra threw her arms in the air. "I tried, okay? I read the stupid instructions, I followed your scribbles, I even used the weird softening spell on the butter—do you know how humiliating that is for me?"
Elias blinked. "You used a softening spell?"
"Yes. It backfired and melted half the butter dish. And possibly cursed the spoon."
"That explains the faint scent of brimstone."
Revantra slumped into the chair opposite him, chin in her hand, sulking.
"I just wanted to..." she trailed off, fingers tugging at a loose thread on her sleeve. "I don't know. Show appreciation. Or something. I'm not good at this mortal... gesture stuff."
"You're doing fine," Elias said softly.
She glanced at him. "You're lying."
"I'm sugarcoating."
"I didn't use enough sugar."
"Then you'll improve next time."
"You want more of these?"
He shrugged. "I'll eat anything you make if it means you're still here, slinging insults and threatening coworkers."
There was a beat.
Then, to her horror, she laughed.
A real laugh. Not the dry cackle she used in class, or the amused huff she gave when Elias tripped over laundry baskets. No, this one was full. Soft. From the chest.
It surprised even her.
Elias blinked. "Did you just...?"
"No," she said quickly, trying to cover her mouth with her sleeve.
"You laughed."
"It was a wheeze."
"A delighted wheeze."
She scowled. "Do not catalog my expressions."
He grinned. "I didn't know you could laugh like that."
"I didn't know either."
There was a beat of silence.
Then she looked at the half-eaten cookie in his hand. "Seriously, how bad is it?"
He held it up. "Let's just say I wouldn't serve it at a royal banquet."
She groaned. "Ugh."
"But," he added, "I'd eat it again."
She looked up.
"Really?"
He nodded. "It tastes like fire magic, a grudge, and good intentions."
"...That's probably the ash from the spoon curse."
They both laughed this time.
Later that night, as they finished cleaning up the kitchen (which had somehow gained flour footprints on the ceiling), Elias found a second tray tucked in the oven, forgotten.
"Hey," he called out. "Did you make a second batch?"
Revantra poked her head into the kitchen, cheeks flushed. "Those were... experimental."
"More experimental than the first?"
"Significantly."
He grinned. "Want to share the risk?"
She hesitated. Then walked in, plucked one of the still-warm, questionable cookies from the tray, and handed it to him with mock ceremony.
"To minor domestic disasters," she said.
"And learning how to say sorry without saying it," he replied.
They clinked their cookies together like glasses.
And in that cramped little apartment—surrounded by burnt sugar, laughter, and the soft heat of something new taking root—they sat on the kitchen floor and ate every last one.
Even the ones that tasted vaguely like regret.
To be continued...