Chapter 131 New Challenges
Drakon's POV
"Three days to surrender myself or everyone dies?" Elara read Ravenna's message again. "Why does it always come down to this?"
"Because they know you will," I said bitterly. "They know you'll choose your people over yourself every time."
"Of course I will!" She turned on me. "That's what a queen and a leader does!"
"A dead leader helps no one!" I grabbed her shoulders. "We find another way. We always find another way."
"In three days?" She gestured at the crowded healing wards. "Look at them, Drakon! Hundreds sick! More falling ill every hour! We don't have time for another way!"
She was right. The plague spread faster than we could treat it. Our healers worked themselves to exhaustion and still couldn't keep up.
"There has to be a medical solution," I insisted.
"We've tried everything!" A healer said desperately. "Every healing spell, every herbal remedy, every technique we know! Nothing works! This plague was designed to be incurable!"
"Designed by who?" Elara asked. "Ravenna's many things, but she's not a plague expert."
"She had help," Faye said, joining us. "I've been analyzing the plague magically. It's a combination of dark magic and biological components. Someone with expertise in both created it."
"So we need expertise in both to cure it," I reasoned.
"But who has that knowledge?" Elara asked. "We don't have time to search for experts!"
A dying woman called out weakly. "Your Majesty... please... my children..."
Elara ran to her, holding her hand. "I'm here. I'm trying to help."
"I know..." The woman coughed blood. "You were... like us... once. Poor. You understand..."
She died before finishing. Elara stared at the body, tears streaming.
"She's right," Elara whispered. "I was poor once. I used to make remedies from whatever herbs I could find. Couldn't afford real medicine, so I learned to use what nature provided."
"Folk remedies?" I asked. "Against magical plague?"
"Why not?" She stood abruptly. "This plague combines magic and biology. What if we need to combine magical healing with natural herbs?"
"That's... actually brilliant," Faye said. "Magical healing targets the magical component. Herbs could target the biological part. Together, they might work where each fails alone!"
"What herbs?" I asked.
"I don't know," Elara admitted. "I'd need to examine the plague closely. Figure out what's causing the physical symptoms. Then match herbs to counteract them."
We brought her a plague sample. She studied it carefully, not with magic, but with the practical knowledge of someone who'd survived poverty through cleverness.
"The fever comes from inflammation," she said, thinking aloud. "We used to treat that with wintermint and cooling moss. The breathing problems are from fluid buildup. Father used to use clearlung root for that."
"Those are peasant remedies," a noble healer scoffed. "Surely sophisticated magical plague requires sophisticated cures!"
"Or it requires practical ones," I said firmly. "Continue, Elara."
She listed five herbs. Common plants that grew everywhere. Things poor people used because they couldn't afford better.
"We combine these with purification magic," Faye said excitedly. "The herbs handle the biological symptoms while magic destroys the dark magic component!"
"Will it work?" I asked.
"Only one way to find out."
We created the cure frantically. Gathered herbs from gardens and fields. Faye mixed them with magical components. Created a potion that looked simple but was actually ingenious.
We tested it on the sickest patient, a young boy who had hours left at most.
The potion worked. Within minutes, his fever dropped. His breathing eased. Color returned to his face.
"It's working!" Elara sobbed with relief. "It's actually working!"
We mass-produced the cure. Every healer, everyone who could hold a spoon distributed it.
By nightfall, patients were recovering. By dawn, the plague was contained.
We'd saved thousands. Maybe tens of thousands.
"You did it," I told Elara. "Your common knowledge combined with Faye's magical expertise. Different perspectives creating better solutions."
"We all did it," Elara corrected. "Together."
But our celebration was interrupted. A guard ran in with terrible news.
"Your Majesties! Ravenna! She's here! At the gates! Demanding to know how we cured her 'incurable' plague! And she's not alone! She brought an army!"
We ran to the ramparts. Ravenna stood at our gates with hundreds of soldiers. But something was wrong. She looked scared. Desperate.
"HOW DID YOU CURE IT?" She screamed up at us. "THAT PLAGUE SHOULD HAVE KILLED EVERYONE! HOW DID YOU SOLVE IT IN THREE DAYS?"
"We worked together," Elara shouted back. "Used all our knowledge, magical and practical. Why do you care? You wanted us to fail!"
"NO! I needed you to surrender to me!" Ravenna's voice cracked. "Because I'm dying! The plague I created, it infected me too! I was supposed to be immune but I'm not! I need the cure! PLEASE!"
She collapsed. Her army looked at each other uncertainly.
"Should we help her?" Elara asked me. "After everything she's done?"
"That's your choice," I said. "You're the one she's tried to kill repeatedly."
Elara stared down at Ravenna's dying form. Our enemy. Our tormentor. The woman who'd caused so much suffering.
"Save her," Elara said firmly. "Give her the cure."
"What? After everything..."
"Because that's what we do," Elara interrupted. "We save people. Even enemies. Especially enemies. Because that's how we break cycles of hatred."
We brought Ravenna inside. Gave her the cure. She survived.
"Why?" She whispered weakly. "I tried to kill you. Why save me?"
"Because someone once showed me mercy when I didn't deserve it," Elara said quietly. "I'm just paying it forward."
Ravenna started crying. Real tears. "I don't deserve this. I don't deserve any kindness. I'm a monster."
"Maybe," Elara agreed. "But monsters can change. If they choose to."
We expected Ravenna to betray us again. To attack as soon as she recovered. Instead, she did something unexpected.
"I'll help you," she whispered. "The First Chaos. The ancient evils. All the threats coming for you. I know things about them. Secret weaknesses my father discovered. I'll tell you everything. As payment for saving my life."
"And the army you brought?" I asked suspiciously.
"They're not mine. They're prisoners. Forced to fight for me by dark magic. I'll release them." She looked at Elara. "I'll try to be better. I don't know if I can. But I'll try."
Over the next days, Ravenna shared invaluable information. Weaknesses of ancient evils. Secret defenses. Ways to protect the kingdom.
She was helping us. Genuinely helping.
"Can we trust her?" Thorne asked privately.
"I don't know," I admitted. "But Elara's mercy may have just turned our worst enemy into our greatest ally."
Then, one week after the plague cure, Ravenna came to us urgently.
"I need to tell you something," she said, face pale. "Something I learned from my father. Something terrible."
"What?" Elara asked.
"The cure you created? The one that saved everyone? It has a side effect. A delayed side effect." Ravenna's hands shook. "Everyone who took it will develop abilities. Magical abilities. Even humans who never had magic before."
"That's... that's impossible," Faye gasped.
"The herbs you used combined with the magical component created a mutagen. Everyone who was cured is going to develop powers within a month."
I stared at her. "You're saying we just accidentally gave thousands of non-magical humans magical abilities?"
"Yes. And some of those abilities will be unstable. Dangerous. People will hurt themselves. Hurt others. The cure saved them from plague but it's going to create chaos."
Elara looked at me with horror. "We were trying to save people. Instead, we might have just created the biggest magical crisis in history."
And outside, the first transformed human screamed as uncontrolled magic erupted from their hands.
The cure had worked. But at a terrible, unforeseen cost.