The town square had never been so clean. Even the cobblestones had been scrubbed until they shined like wet river stones, which probably meant half the children in town had been conscripted for forced labor. A cheerful sign read, WELCOME TO OUR HUMBLE TOWN, MOST HOLY INQUISITOR, in letters so large they looked afraid not to shout.
Elias squinted at it. "Did they have to use red ink?"
Behind him, Rhea snorted. "It's dried tomato paste. Smells like guilt."
He didn't ask how she knew. These days, Rhea was growing into her strange intuition like it was a second skin—one stitched from old fire and forgotten names.
The bells rang at noon. Not the usual bells either, but the old brass ones no one dared ring unless the mayor's wife fainted—or someone important came to town.
And someone very important did.
A procession marched through the gates, flanked by gold-clad paladins and a banner bearing a blinding white sun against a sea of flame. Horses stomped. The crowd went quiet.
Rhea stiffened beside Elias. "That symbol," she whispered. "It hates me."
"You mean you hate it?"
"No. It hates me."
From the crowd's reaction, that wasn't entirely inaccurate.
At the center of the procession rode a figure draped in ivory robes trimmed with crimson and stitched with runes of judgment. Their face was hidden behind a porcelain mask, serene as death. No eyes, no expression. Just a single vertical slit that ran from brow to chin, like a closed third eye.
"The Inquisitor…" Elias murmured.
He had read about them. Walkers of truth. Detectors of lies. Destroyers of heresy. Their official title was Sanctum Evaluator-Class Two, but everyone just called them "Scourges in White."
The masked figure raised a gloved hand. The paladins stopped in perfect unison.
A sudden warmth bloomed in Elias's pocket.
Rhea clutched his sleeve tightly, her hand trembling. Her voice was thin, nearly inaudible. "Elias… my heart is burning."
He didn't respond. He couldn't. His mind was screaming. The contract mark on his wrist was pulsing—brighter than ever. Faint tendrils of rune-light spread to the back of his hand like a spider's web.
The Inquisitor slowly turned their head. Not toward anyone in the crowd.
Toward them.
Rhea's fingers dug deeper into Elias's cloak.
"I think it's sniffing me," she said.
He forced a shaky laugh. "Well, don't look so edible."
A whisper rippled through the townsfolk. Someone said the envoy was searching for "a source of residual demonic corruption." Another said a cult had been sniffed out in the north, and this was routine investigation.
But Elias knew better.
This was not routine.
This was the hammer of the divine, come down like a polite smile before the execution.
That night, the town held a feast.
Because of course it did. Nothing screamed "please don't smite us" like roasted duck and wine-soaked pears.
Elias and Rhea sat at the edge of the square, far enough from the noise to not attract attention but close enough to blend in. Rhea had a fork in one hand and her other hand planted firmly over her chest, like she expected her heart to leap out and start throwing fireballs.
"I'm not hungry," she said. "My insides are arguing."
"With what?"
"My other insides."
He raised an eyebrow. "That's… biologically confusing."
She smacked her own forehead. "Ugh, I mean—my old instincts. The queen-me. She's mad."
"Why?"
"She thinks this is a trap and we should burn them all."
Elias sipped his water very carefully. "I like to think of this more as a… community dinner. With bonus existential dread."
Rhea didn't laugh.
He turned serious.
"Do you want to run?"
She looked down at her fork, which was now gently melting from the heat in her fingers.
"No," she whispered. "Because if we run now, we'll keep running forever. Won't we?"
"…Yeah."
She finally met his gaze. "Then I'll try to stay calm. Just… if I mess up again—"
"You didn't mess up," he cut in. "You've saved more people than you've hurt. You've grown, Rhea."
"But if I do mess up…"
He smiled gently and flicked her forehead.
"Ow!"
"You're my problem now. Deal with it."
The next morning, a summons arrived.
Elias opened the envelope and stared.
"So. We've been invited to tea."
"With… that thing?" Rhea peeked over his shoulder. "Does it even drink tea? Its mouth was sealed shut!"
"I think that was metaphorical."
"Looked very literal."
Elias sighed. "Anyway, we've got to go. Refusing an invitation from a Sanctum Inquisitor is like… like spitting on a judge during trial. While on fire. In a church."
"I hate those analogies."
The meeting took place at the church hall. Warm light filtered through stained glass windows, painting rainbows on the floor. The air smelled of incense and caution.
The Inquisitor sat at a round table. A teapot—actual porcelain, not symbolic—steamed between two empty cups. A paladin stood nearby, holding what looked like a detector rod wrapped in holy silk.
"Please sit," the Inquisitor said.
The voice was neither male nor female. Flat. Ageless. Like something carved into a tomb.
Elias sat. Rhea did too, but with the stiffness of someone who expected the chair to bite.
"You brought the child," the Inquisitor noted.
"She's my apprentice," Elias said.
The detector rod pulsed. No lies.
"She is powerful."
"Yes."
"Unnaturally so."
"Still yes."
"Do you know what she is?"
Elias hesitated. "She's… someone I'm responsible for."
Again, no lie.
The Inquisitor poured tea into each cup with surgical grace. Then they gestured at the paladin, who stepped forward with the detector.
"May I test her aura?"
Rhea looked to Elias.
He nodded.
"Fine," she said. "But if it buzzes and tries to explode, I will set it on fire."
The paladin hesitated.
Then activated the device.
The rod glowed.
Then pulsed.
Then sparked.
Then cracked down the middle.
The Inquisitor's head tilted slowly. "Curious."
Rhea crossed her arms. "Told you."
The Inquisitor leaned forward.
"She has been cleansed once, hasn't she?"
Elias blinked. "What?"
"A burn. A soul-burn. Someone tried to erase her—yet the seal failed. She survived."
Rhea shrank slightly in her seat.
"She does not belong in the current age," the Inquisitor continued. "Her magic carries an older shape. A forbidden signature."
Elias's voice was soft. "What does that mean for her?"
The Inquisitor paused.
And then—
"…I will not report this."
Elias's heart skipped.
"But," the Inquisitor continued, "I will remain in town. If I detect a surge—a reversion to her original nature—I will act."
"And if she doesn't?"
"Then she lives."
Rhea blinked. "Just like that?"
"No." The Inquisitor's head turned to Elias. "Because he grounds you. Because the tether still holds."
Then, in a voice barely louder than breath:
"Because love is a dangerous magic—but sometimes… it saves."
As they walked back through the quiet streets, Rhea was the first to speak.
"I… didn't explode."
"You didn't."
"They didn't stab us."
"They didn't."
"I was terrifyingly polite."
Elias grinned. "Truly a miracle."
She looked up at him.
"Was that… what mercy feels like?"
He stopped walking.
Kneeling slightly, he ruffled her hair. "That was someone giving you a chance."
Rhea smiled faintly. "Then I'll take it. And prove them right."
She paused, then added—
"…Even if I still hate their mask. It looks like a haunted coconut."
He burst out laughing.
In the distance, the bell rang once.
For now… peace.
To be continued…