©LightNovelPub
I Raised the Demon Queen (Now She Won't Leave Me Alone)-Chapter 70 : A Whisper in the Wall
Chapter 70 - 70 : A Whisper in the Wall
The broom closet should not have been humming.
Revantra froze with her hand on the knob, one foot already halfway into what she assumed was a perfectly normal utility space. The smell of dust and wood polish hung in the stale air, but underneath it—beneath the broomsticks and spell-patched mops and an aggressively droopy bucket—something else pulsed. Faint. Low. Like a breath being held in the bones of the school itself.
She tilted her head.
Then, barely audible, came the whisper.
"𐤋𐤏𐤓... 𐤀𐤔𐤓... 𐤁𐤀𐤋..."
The voice wasn't speaking any language she knew, which was saying something. She'd once governed six demon dialects and could curse in three of them with flair. This sounded older—not harsh, but woven, like syllables sewn into stone.
And it was under the floor.
She stepped back, slowly, her heel brushing a cracked tile.
The moment she moved, something lit up beneath her boot.
A symbol—simple, circular, etched in lines so fine they shimmered—glowed through the stone tile. For a second, she could swear the magic itself was breathing, like a sleeping eye stirred by a distant dream.
Then the light winked out.
Gone.
The whisper faded.
Just a closet again.
Revantra stood in the corridor, blinking. Not blinking in shock—she didn't do shock—but the kind of thoughtful, annoyed blinking that preceded minor acts of arson.
"...What," she muttered, "in the name of ash-slicked gods, was that?"
"You look distracted," Elias said that evening, nudging a bowl of soup toward her.
She blinked again. "Do I?"
"Yes. You're stirring your dinner counter-clockwise."
"And?"
"You only do that when you're thinking about setting something on fire."
"...I stir soup like this all the time."
"You don't."
"Maybe I'm expanding my aesthetic."
"Is your aesthetic plotting against school infrastructure?"
"Would you stop reading my soup?"
Elias gave her a long, sideways look. It was that healer's gaze again—the one that gently dissected you with concern rather than knives. Normally, it annoyed her. Tonight, it felt like being gently poked in the side by a warm stick.
She went back to stirring. "Everything's fine."
"You sure?"
"Positive."
He didn't press. She could tell he wanted to. He had that edge in his brow—the kind that used to mean "you've dislocated your shoulder again, sit down" but now translated more as "you're not telling me something, and I don't like that."
But he let it go.
That made it worse.
Because the truth was, she had wanted to tell him. That strange chant still rang in her ears, curled like smoke at the edge of her thoughts. The glow under her feet, that almost-sigil—it hadn't been illusion magic. She knew illusion. This was buried. Anchored. Old.
And worse: it had recognized her.
For a heartbeat, she'd felt the strange sensation of being seen—not by the school or the mages or the teachers, but by something beneath it. Something waiting.
But what was she supposed to say?
"Oh, Elias, by the way, I accidentally discovered that the prestigious capital magic academy has cursed basement tiles and invisible wall whispers. Also, the school might be alive. Also, I think it likes me."
No. Absolutely not. He already worried enough every time she left for class with unbrushed hair and the moral flexibility of a highway bandit. She wasn't adding ominous whispers in dead languages to his mental checklist.
So she kept quiet.
A first for her.
The next morning, things didn't improve.
First, she burned her toast. Then she slipped on a soap patch in the bath (she did not shriek, despite what Elias claimed). Then, halfway to school, she accidentally flared her aura near a group of giggling second-years and reduced a bush to ashes.
"Nice new perfume," muttered a passing girl.
"Smells like smoke and self-esteem issues," added another.
Revantra glared but said nothing. She was too busy replaying the whisper in her head, trying to remember the exact sound of the third syllable. It had felt... familiar. Not from her demon days, but from something deeper. Something beneath.
Magic like that wasn't taught in this world.
Which meant someone had buried it.
Or someone had brought it.
She arrived to class ten minutes early—a crime against her personal code—and spent the time pretending to read her incantation textbook while secretly watching the floor.
There were no symbols.
Just stone and dust.
And the whisper was gone.
By lunch, she was starting to feel ridiculous. Maybe it had been a fluke. A residual spell from some ancient enchantment, a misfire in the school's old wards. These places were always layered with centuries of magical lint and forgotten ghosts.
Still, something itched at the base of her neck.
It wasn't until she walked by the art corridor that she heard it again.
Faint.
Low.
"𐤀𐤔𐤓... 𐤁𐤀𐤋..."
She turned sharply. Empty hallway. A cold breeze. Her boots scraped against the floor as she paced forward, pulse thrumming with instinct.
The chant came again.
This time, she recognized the echo. It wasn't being spoken. It was being channeled. Pulled upward through some invisible conduit in the wall.
It was magic.
Old magic.
No—not just old. Hungry.
She backed away. Slowly. Carefully.
The voice faded.
The corridor fell silent.
And when she looked down—beneath her shoes—the faint outline of a glowing symbol flickered, just once.
It winked.
Then vanished.
That night, Elias came home early, smelling of herbs and hospital soap, smiling like he'd just been handed a bonus.
"Guess what?" he said as he set his bag down.
"You finally admitted I'm more magically talented than you?"
"They put me on the emergency rune ward."
Revantra blinked. "That's not what I guessed."
"They think I have a natural talent for stabilizing sigil burns."
"Still not what I guessed."
He grinned. "It means I'll be home earlier most days. Less late-night shifts."
She paused. "You told them about your roommate?"
"Of course."
"And what did you say?"
"That I live with my young cousin who likes to burn soup and threaten nurses."
"Reasonable," she muttered.
He sat down across from her, watching her with that steady calm again.
"You're still distracted."
She lifted her chin. "I'm perfectly fine."
He raised an eyebrow. "Then why are you holding your fork backwards?"
She looked down.
It was true.
She sighed and flipped it around. "Fine. Maybe I'm a little... off."
"Something at school?"
She hesitated.
He noticed.
A flicker of worry passed across his expression.
She opened her mouth.
Closed it.
"...It's nothing," she said. "Probably just school stress."
He studied her for a long moment. Then nodded, leaning back.
"You're allowed to tell me things, you know."
"I'm not hiding anything."
"You're doing that voice thing."
"What voice thing?"
"That voice you use when you say you're not hiding anything."
She glared. "You're insufferable."
"You love me for it."
"I tolerate you."
He smiled softly. "Still. If something's wrong... I want to help."
She looked down at her plate, where the vegetables had formed the shape of something vaguely skull-like.
Her hand twitched.
A tiny flicker of flame curled around the edge of the table.
"I know," she said finally, voice lower. "I know you would."
Then she reached out and stole one of his rolls.
Because that was easier than talking.
That night, in bed, she dreamed of the symbol.
The same one from the floor.
It glowed beneath her, only now it was large—huge—spanning the entire foundation of the school. She stood in the center of it, barefoot, and it sang beneath her. A soundless hum. Not hostile, but curious. Searching.
A voice whispered: She walks among them.
Then a pause.
She is not yet whole.
She turned—but the dream was crumbling, falling like ash between her fingers.
A final word echoed: Soon.
Then darkness.
She woke before dawn, breath caught in her chest.
The city outside was still quiet, muffled in pre-dawn haze.
In the next room, Elias snored softly.
She sat up, staring into the shadows.
Something was happening at that school.
And she didn't know if it was calling to her.
Or calling for her.
But either way... she couldn't tell him.
Not yet.
To be continued...