Evie
โWhat are you doing here?โ Evie asked incredulously.
She hadnโt seen or heard from her cousin in years. She remembered so well how she used to wait by the mailbox for Helenaโs letters every day, just in case a new reply to her missives arrived, but after two years, sheโd had to give up hoping.
Helena glided toward the bars, dressed in a lovely sapphire gown that floated behind her as she took a seat in the roomโs only rickety old chair. She tapped her finger against her chin thoughtfully. โI work here.โ Her cousinโs eyes flitted to her and then her boss, keen interest playing in them. โAnd what areย youย doing here?โ The finger stopped tapping her chin and now pointed around the cell.
Suddenly, Evie felt angryโsoย angry. Sheโd had no idea Helena ended up in the Heart Village, had no idea she worked in a playhouse, had no idea ofย anythingย her cousin was doing. Because sheโd simply disappeared, like everyone else in her life.
โYou didnโt hear?โ she asked with an eye roll. โI had too much to drink and tried to strip naked on your stage.โ
Her boss choked behind her, slamming a fist against his chest. Heโd been doing that a lotโperhaps she should have Tatianna make him something for heartburn.
Helena laughedโa lovely, lilting sound that matched her countenance. Evie wondered if her boss noticed that loveliness. The thought sent a pounding ache through her skull. โYou are still most amusing, cousin.โ
โIncarceration really tickles my funny bone,โ Evie said pointedly, looking at the bars and then the keys hanging on a hook by the door.
Helena followed her gaze, nodding, unhooking them from the wall. Both Evie and The Villain stood on edge in preparation for the cell door opening.
โBefore I do you any favors, perhaps you could tell me what brings you to the Heart Village,” she smirked, “wicked woman?โ
The Villain grimaced, but Evieโs eyes lit up as she clapped her hands. โOh, the wanted posters of me are spreading, sir! How thrilling.โ
โWe have very different definitions of that word,โ he grumbled, rubbing his temples.
Evie shrugged, deciding that directness was the best approach. โWeโre looking for my mother, Helena, and judging by the ghastly look on your face, Iโm guessing youโve seen her recently.โ
Helena flinched. Got her. โYes,โ she admitted, not bothering to hide it. โAunt Nura was here for a time.โ
But not anymore, Evie realized. The silence wore through the last of her patience. โHelena, as much as Iโve missed our correspondence, Iโm done with pleasantries. Tell me.โ
โShe stayed here for a few months. Maybe two or three years ago,โ Helena said, looking haunted. โI had just moved to the village after my father remarried.โ
Evie hadnโt known that Uncle Vale had remarried. โAnd his new wife?โ
โOh, my stepmother is lovely, if a bit dull. I think thatโs what my father needed. I just didnโt want to be in the way while they started their new life, and I heard the Heart Village was a bustling hub of opportunity.โ Helena scoffed at the words as if they were a joke.
The Villain, who had been letting Evie lead the conversation, spoke up, his voice quiet but steady. โI take it you donโt feel that way anymore.โ
Helenaโs eyes flashed. โI work with method kidnappers. What do you think?โ
He clicked his tongue as if to say point taken and stepped back, allowing Evie to continue.
โDid my mother say where she was going or why she came to you in the first place?โ Evie asked, growing desperate.
Helena shook her head, almost looking sympathetic beneath her indifference. โI think she thought it safer to come to me than to my father. He loves his sister, but you know as well as I do that he wouldโve sent her straight back to Uncle Griffin.โ Her gaze grew distant, brows knitting together as if trying to recall something. โShe wanted to know more about the stars, I think? What my father had taught me. It was the only time sheโd speak. Mostly, she was a ghost, Evie. It wasnโt pleasant. When she did talk, it was incoherent muttering about wanting to disappear. To be no one. She wanted to be swallowed by midnight. I thought sheโd gone mad.โ
Evie had maintained a certain detachment in her quest to find her mother, but now she could see itโremember itโthe lost look in Nuraโs eyes. It had been ingrained in Evie since she was too young to understand its meaning. She had watched her mother fade from a vibrant, beautiful woman who ruled her childhood to a hollow shell of a person, and then to nothing.
Evie had inherited many things from her motherโthe length of her fingers, the curl in her hair, the bow of her lipsโbut she hadnโt expected to inherit her motherโs ability to bury anguish beneath the surface. And like her mother, Evie feared that one dayโฆ she, too, would break. A tragic inheritance, seeing your motherโs flaws in yourself and knowing theyโre there but having no idea how to stop them.
โI imagine the guilt drove her to it, over killing Gideon,โ Helena said, snapping Evie out of her thoughts.
Her eyes burned. โHe isnโt dead.โ
This surprised her cousin but didnโt seem to shock her. โOh, how wonderful! He owes me money.โ
โTake heart,โ the Villain said to Helena, though his eyes were on Evie; she could feel his gaze.
Helena laughed, twirling the keychain around her finger. โI wonder if the rumors about the Villainโs brutal, destructive magic were exaggerated, if rusty metal bars can hold you.โ
The Villain didnโt reply, just glared and stepped subtly closer to Evie. โLet us out, and Iโll be happy to demonstrate.โ
Helena grinned before tossing the keys across the room, where they landed on a small table near the door. โUnfortunately, I canโt do that.โ
Evie gripped the bars, furious. โHelena, weโre family. Youโre not really going to let your boss sell us out to the king, are you?โ
Helena tsked, the train of her dress floating behind her as she glided to the door. โOh, darling. You think any of those fools upstairs could run anything? Other than their hopeless careers into the ground?โ Helena finished with a flourish, sealing Evieโs and the Villainโs fate.
โThe Deadlands Theater is my playhouse, and I am the boss.โ