Ashvale's spring fair had two flavors: over-salted food and underwhelming illusions.
A makeshift banner reading "ANNUAL FRIENDSHIP FESTIVAL" sagged over the town square like it, too, had given up on making friends. Streamers drooped. A trio of musicians valiantly butchered a local folk song. And somewhere, a fire juggler set his own pants alight.
Elias chewed a suspiciously crunchy candied apple and eyed the situation with mild dread.
"This might be a mistake," he muttered.
Beside him, Rhea stared in open-mouthed wonder. Her small fingers gripped the hem of his cloak like it was the only thing tethering her to reality.
Her cloak swished behind her. Her red eyes darted from booth to booth. A sugar-glazed twist of bread stuck out of her mouth like a cigar.
"Best. Mistake. Ever," she mumbled around it.
Elias sighed. "Try not to threaten any vendors this time, okay?"
"I didn't threaten them. I implied consequences."
He gave her a side glance. "You turned a man's root vegetables into snakes."
"He yelled at you."
"He asked me to move. Politely."
Rhea blinked. "Still rude."
Elias decided now was not the time for morality lessons from a demon child with world-ending powers and a protective streak wider than the continent.
They passed a booth where a pair of elves sold music crystals. Rhea leaned in, entranced by a high-pitched melody looped in a tiny gem. Elias tugged her back before she could start licking it.
A few steps ahead, a crowd had gathered around a low stage. Curious, Elias picked Rhea up—she still barely reached his shoulder—to see what the fuss was about.
Atop the stage, a puppet show was beginning.
Two puppets—a knight and a dragon—flopped onto the tiny stage, both moved by a hunched puppeteer who grunted exaggerated voices behind the curtain.
Rhea tilted her head. "What's this?"
"It's called a puppet show. They tell a story with dolls."
"That sounds dumb."
The knight puppet galloped in, complete with coconut clacking.
The dragon followed—its wings made of bright cloth, its eyes crossed. It tried to fly, bonked into a castle prop, and fell over backward, limbs twitching.
The knight shouted, "Victory is mine!"
The dragon responded by breathing a sparkly ribbon out of its mouth and then burping loudly.
Rhea blinked.
Then giggled.
Elias froze.
She giggled again. Higher this time. Her hand flew to her mouth, as if startled by the sound that escaped.
Then came the laugh.
A full, bubbling, breathless little-kid laugh. The kind that started in the belly and made the whole body bounce.
Her eyes glowed—not red. But soft, molten gold.
Not threatening.
Not dangerous.
Just… warm.
Elias forgot to breathe.
He stared, helpless and awestruck, as she doubled over in his arms, laughing so hard she hiccupped. He'd seen her cry. He'd seen her angry, afraid, even confused. But this?
This was joy.
And he'd never seen her like this before.
People around them turned, smiling at the sound. A few kids laughed too. An elderly couple behind them beamed.
The show continued—now involving a pie fight between the dragon and a troll—but Elias barely registered it. All he could see was her face, lit up with golden light and something purer than magic.
She clutched his tunic. "He got bonked in the butt!"
"You noticed that, huh?" Elias said, voice thick.
She looked up at him. "That's funny, right?"
He smiled. "It is."
She stared at him seriously. "I liked it. I like laughing. Can we do that more?"
"Absolutely."
She hesitated. "Does that mean I'm not evil?"
Elias blinked. "Why would you think that?"
"Because… I don't feel red right now." She touched her chest. "It feels… yellow. Like honey and sun."
He knelt, hands on her shoulders. "That means you're happy. And no, being happy doesn't make you evil."
She looked doubtful. "But… I still have the power."
"That doesn't change this moment. Doesn't change who you're trying to be."
Her lips curled into a small, shy smile. "Then I wanna be someone who laughs."
"Then you already are."
He stood, brushing dirt from his knees. "Come on. Let's go find more things to bonk butts."
She cackled. "You said butts."
The two of them wandered deeper into the fair. They tried glowberry juice (too sour), magical popcorn (popped mid-air and exploded twice), and watched a duck with a monocle perform arithmetic.
Rhea held Elias's hand the entire time.
As the sun began to dip, they sat by the fountain eating honeyed flatbread. Rhea swung her legs, humming. Occasionally, she'd laugh to herself and whisper "bonk" under her breath.
Elias glanced at her.
Her eyes had dulled back to their usual red—but he knew the gold was in there now, too.
She looked up. "Can I tell you a secret?"
"Of course."
"When I laughed, I heard someone in my head."
His heart skipped. "What did they say?"
She tilted her head. "They said, 'Don't lose this. Not again.' It was my voice. But older."
Elias went still.
"That's… interesting," he said cautiously.
"I think it was dream-me. From the other nights."
"The one in chains?"
She nodded. "She wasn't scary this time. She sounded… happy. Like she forgot how."
Elias exhaled slowly. "Let's remember for her, then."
She smiled.
And for the first time in days, Elias didn't feel like he was carrying a secret—he felt like he was sharing one. With her.
As the stars bloomed overhead and the fair lights flickered to life, Rhea dozed against his side. A smear of honey still clung to her cheek.
He brushed her hair back gently.
From demon queen… to puppet-laughing kid.
Maybe the world didn't need to know.
Maybe it just needed to let her be.
To be continued…