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Chapter 24 - Ch 24: A Familiar Stranger

Marcus

For a brief

moment, things felt normal again.

It wasn't anything

special- just a small café tucked into a quiet street, the kind of place people

passed by without a second glance. The air smelled like roasted coffee beans

and sugar, the low hum of conversation blending with the soft clatter of cups

behind the counter.

Riley and Noah

were arguing about something pointless, as usual. Ella sat by the window,

staring outside more than she was looking at her phone.

Even after everything,

moments like this still happened- small pockets where the world felt ordinary.

I stood in line,

hands in my pockets, letting the noise settle around me.

"Two black coffee,

one cappuccino and one latte." I said when it was my turn.

Simple, routine,

safe.

Then something

shifted.

It wasn't obvious

at first. No sudden noise, no visible change. Just a subtle distortion, like

the air itself had thickened. My chest tightened slightly, and my breath came

out slower than it should have.

And then the smell

hit.

Rotten, burnt and

familiar.

I froze.

It wasn't just

unpleasant- it was wrong. Like something that didn't belong in this world had

forced its way in and left its mark behind.

My fingers curled

slightly as my sides.

I didn't remember

where from, not fully, but something deep in my mind reacted instantly. A

flicker of heat, smoke and fear.

A memory that

refused to fully surface.

The bell above the

café door rang softly.

I didn't turn.

I didn't need to.

The presence came

with it.

Heavy. Controlled.

Quiet in a way that made it hard to breathe.

Footsteps

approached the counter and stopped beside me.

I forced myself to

look.

At first glance,

he looked… normal.

Dark hair, calm

expression, dressed like anyone else who had just walked in off the street.

There was nothing immediately threatening about him- nothing that would make

anyone else take a second look.

Except his eyes.

They weren't

glowing. They were just.. wrong.

A dull red, steady

and unnatural, as if something was looking through them instead of from them.

The smell grew

stronger.

My body tensed

instinctively. Every part of my screaming to move, react or to do something,

but I didn't.

Because I knew,

without understanding how I knew, that none of it would matter.

"Two coffees," he

said calmly.

His voice was

smooth, almost bored, like this was just another stop in his day.

The cashier

nodded, completely unaffected.

Of course they

were.

He turned his head

slightly. And looked at me.

Really looked.

A faint smile

formed on his lips, not wide, just enough to show he recognized something I

didn't fully understand yet.

"Rocco," he said.

My chest

tightened, a fragment of memory stirring just beneath the surface.

Images flickered-

firelight, shadows moving across walls, a figure standing in the distance,

looking down at my father.

I didn't see his

face clearly, but I remembered the feeling.

That same

presence.

The presence that

killed my parents.

"It's good to see

you again," he continued.

My throat felt

dry.

"I don't know

you," I said, keeping my voice as steady as I could.

The smile didn't

leave his face.

"That's not

entirely true, now is it?"

His gaze dropped

briefly to my wrist.

I clenched my fist

hard.

"You've grown," he

added, almost thoughtfully. "Though not as much as I expected."

"What do you

want?"

He considered the

question for a moment, as if deciding how much of an answer I deserved.

"Curiosity," he

said finally.

"About what?"

"You."

The word settled

heavily between us.

He picked up his

coffee as it was placed on the counter, his movement unhurried, completely at

ease.

"If I intended to

harm you," he said quietly, "this encounter would be far less… civil."

A chill ran down

my smile. Because I believed him completely.

He took a small

step towards me then paused.

For just a second,

the air seemed to tighten again, the weight of his presence pressing in closer.

"See you soon," he

said, a low chuckle sipping into his voice.

Then he walked

away.

Just like that.

No confrontation.

No chaos.

The bell rang

again as he left, and the moment the door closed behind him, the pressure

disappeared.

The café returned

to normal.

The noise. The

people. The smell of coffee.

I picked up our

coffee then head back to the table.

"What's wrong?"

Riley's voice

snapped me back.

I blinked once,

forcing my thoughts into place.

"We need to go," I

said.

The drive back

felt longer than usual.

No one pushed me

for answers right away, but the tension in the car was obvious. Riley and Noah

kept glancing at me, and Ella didn't look away from me at all.

I didn't blame

them.

I probably looked

worse than I felt.

And I felt.. off.

Seraphina was

outside when we arrived.

She always was.

The moment I

stepped out of the car, her eyes locked onto me, and her expression sharpened

immediately.

"What happened?"

she asked.

I walked toward

her slowly.

"I met someone," I

said. "A demon."

Callie frowned

slightly. "You fought it?"

I shook my head.

"No."

That alone was

enough to make her pause.

"He looked human,"

I continued. "But… there was something off. And the smell- it was awful. Like

something burnt and rotten at the same time."

For a moment,

nothing happened.

Then-

Seraphina froze.

Not subtly or

slightly, but completely.

It was the first

real crack I had seen in her composure since we met her.

Her eyes widened

just a fraction, but the shift in her presence was immediate.

"What?" she said.

Callie noticed it

too.

Her gaze flicked

between us, confusion turning into concern. "What's wrong?"

Seraphina didn't

answer immediately.

"Who was it?"

Callie pressed.

A brief silence

followed.

Then Seraphina

spoke.

"That was no

ordinary demon," she said quietly. "If what you're describing is accurate...

then you encountered their ruler."

The words settled

heavily.

Callie blinked.

"Their… ruler?"

Seraphina nodded

slowly.

"The one who

creates them. The who turns them. The one they all answer to."

I felt my chest

tighten slightly.

"He's been

searching for the bracelet for centuries," she added.

Something in her

tone shifted there- subtle, but unmistakeable.

Not fear but

something close.

She didn't

elaborate or explain further.

And for the first

time, it felt like she was holding something back- not because she wanted to,

but because even thinking about it too much carried weight.

"What did he say

to you?" she asked.

I hesitated for a

second, replaying the moment in my head.

"He called me

Rocco," I said. "Said it was good to see me again."

Callie stiffened

slightly at that.

"Of course, he

did," Seraphina muttered.

I frowned. "What

does that mean?"

She didn't answer

immediately.

Instead, she

looked away slightly, her thoughts clearly moving faster than she was willing

to explain.

".. But why

approach you now?" she said quietly, more to herself than to me.

"That's what I was

wondering," I replied.

Callie crossed her

arms, still trying to process everything. "So the strongest demon in existence

just walked up to you in a café… and left?"

"Yes."

"That's … not

normal."

"No," Seraphina

said. "It isn't."

Silence settled

over the group again.

"He's the one who

killed our parents, isn't he?" I asked quietly.

Callie froze

completely, looking at me.

"Yes…" Seraphina

muttered.

Silence fell once

again but this time, it felt heavier.

More real. Because

this wasn't training anymore.

This wasn't just

preparation.

This was contact,

direct and intentional.

And whatever came

next, wouldn't be something we could ease into.

Seraphina looked

back at me, her expression composed again, but not untouched.

"You will not go

out alone again," she said.

Not a suggestion.

A decision.

I nodded.

Because after

that, I didn't argue.

 

That night, I

couldn't sleep

Every time I

closed my eye, I saw that faint smile.

He wasn't rushing

or forcing anything.

Almost like he

didn't see as a threat.

Now I have to get

him before he can hurt my family again.

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