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Chapter no 82

Apprentice to the Villain (Assistant and the Villain, 2)

Evie

They were in the sky.

The sun set behind them as darkness descended, following them back to the beginning, back to the cave. When they landed, she saw that the landscape was different now: the kissing trees, once whimsical; the land, once vibrant; it was all transformedโ€”and not for the better. Everything was duller, grayer, like someone had come to leach the color away. The kissing trees, once forever touching above the cave, were separated, cracked down the middle.

โ€œWhat happened here?โ€ Evie whispered.

โ€œThe magic is dying, with the guvreโ€™s capture, and Fateโ€™s consequences can only be worsening itโ€ฆ I fear this is only the beginning,โ€ Trystan answered, helping her jump down from the dragon.

โ€œBlade?โ€ Evie called up to him, unsure.

Blade frowned. โ€œYou want me to stay here?โ€

Evie spoke gently. โ€œOur friend in there doesnโ€™t know you, and I donโ€™t wish to startle it.โ€

Blade nodded, rolling his shoulders and then waving a hand. โ€œGo, go! Iโ€™ll be right here.โ€

They approached the cave entrance, where torches were still lit on either side. But twisted brown vines had spread across the opening.

The sentry was gone. All that remained of him was his spear, abandoned on the ground. The magical crisis had clearly seeped through the land, consuming this place and all that it had. The area was run-down, ravaged.

Evie sprinted forward, pulling her dagger out, and began to slash away at the overgrown vines covering the entrance. Trystan, beside her, pulled a long sword from his own belt and brought it down hard against the foliage. He chopped away with furious cries until a path was cleared.

โ€œGo!โ€ he ordered. She dove through, and then she was falling, Trystan right after her. Her scream was swallowed in her throat as she went down, down, down, until she once more bounced on a floating, dewy cloud. But this one was tinged by night. She didnโ€™t hesitate this time, merely hopped off and rolled as the boss tumbled after her.

Evie jumped up, pulling the slab from her pocket. The stars in the cave mimicked the ones now shining from its crystal surface.

A large voice boomed above them as the crown of clouds was revealed even in the darker lighting. The giant gleamed like a star itself, the midnight clouds clustering to form its crown. โ€œEvie Sage. I hoped youโ€™d return.โ€

She stepped forward. Trystanโ€™s hand shot out to stop her on instinctโ€”she could tell by how he coughed when he released her. โ€œGo on,โ€ he said, raking a hand through his hair and looking away. She could see what it cost him to trust her with this, to fight his instinct to protect her. Her heart warmed.

She held up the crystalโ€”the one that she now knew was not merely the magicless slab of rock it appeared to be. It belonged to the creature before them; the rough-hewn edges were an exact match to the gaping hole in the sky of its lair. She offered it up to the creature with a humble bow. โ€œYour missing piece of sky.โ€

The creature was surprised, gasping as it reached down a giant hand and pulled the slab from her fingertips. โ€œMy sky. My beautiful sky.โ€ The creature wept as it held the piece close, like it had been so lost without it. It reached toward the crack in the surface and pushed the slab into place. And the roomย boomed.

The ground shook, the gleaming stars around them dancing and celebrating at being rejoined, at being whole once more.

The creature stared down at her, smiling; its teeth were so large they couldโ€™ve been used as stones to repair the ramparts of the manor. It bowed back to her. โ€œWhatever you want, Evie Sage, it is yours.โ€

She swallowed and breathed out, โ€œYou said that you couldnโ€™t interfere with human affairs. But my motherโ€ฆโ€ Evie looked up through the skylight of the cave to that one bright star, her constant companion beaming down at her. โ€œMy mother is not human now. Her magic enveloped her, and she left behind stardust because she becameโ€ฆโ€

The creature finished with a gentle smile. โ€œA wishing star.โ€

It began twirling its hands about, and air followed its motions, whipping

and growing until an almost cyclone appeared between its giant palms. โ€œNow,โ€ the creature said, โ€œshe will be free.โ€

The creature sent the rush of midnight clouds in its hands up and up and up, through the skylight, out of the cave, soaring all the way to that brightest star aboveโ€”and plucking it from the soft, vast expanse of the night sky.

It swirled down in a whirlwind. The gale was so strong that Evieโ€™s hair flew back, tugging against her scalp, and her yellow dress molded to her. Trystan gripped her hand to steady them both, holding his other palm up to shield his eyes.

When the whirlwind touched down on the grass before Evie and Trystan, a light shined so bright it was warm against her skin, her eyes, as that one shimmering, gleaming star transformed. A flash of silver, white, and then golden light swooped up in a rush of shineโ€”an unearthly, unbelievable sight, impossible to look at. Evie turned her face into Trystanโ€™s shoulder, gripping his hand with all her might.

That flash of light spread in an explosion of multicolored brilliance, and when Evie looked up, it dimmed, fading until it was nothing more than a woman.

Her mother.

Standing before her in a dress so white, it reminded her of the moon, was a woman she never thought she would see againโ€”but she was there, and she was smiling.

โ€œMama?โ€ Evie choked out, the word foreign on her lips.

Her motherโ€™s golden skin glowed in the starlight, her arms held out as tears glistened in her warm brown eyes. โ€œYou found me, hasibsi.โ€

A sob left Evieโ€™s lips, and in it, every pain, every heartache; all the overwhelming collapse of grief poured into the sound as she bounded for her mother and fell into her arms. Nura clutched her head, whispering soothing words of comfort in her earโ€”ones she hadnโ€™t heard since she was a child.

That comfort unlocked everything. A key to the closed door of her childhood, which had been locked tight since sheโ€™d lost her mother and Gideon, through all those years of torment without them.

But she hadnโ€™t lost them. Not truly. Not anymore.

Fingers raked through her hair, and she felt the warmth of her motherโ€™s neck, smelled the summer air after a rainstorm on her skinโ€”so comforting

she ached. โ€œItโ€™s all right, my darling girl.โ€ Nura shushed her gently, and Evie was finally able to pull herself away, sensing her motherโ€™s attention shifting to the person over her shoulder.

Trystan stood there, hands tucked into his pockets as he frowned down at his wrinkled shirt and then back up to them. Evie smiled. โ€œMama, this is my, umโ€” That is to say, heโ€™s, uhโ€ฆTrystan Maverine.โ€

Her motherโ€™s eyes were kind and delighted, and Evieโ€™s heart swelled with gratitude. Trystan deserved someone who was happy to see him; he so rarely was granted that. Nura reached her hand forward to shake, but Trystan was already bowing deeply over her hand. Ever the gentleman.

โ€œIโ€™m so happy to meet you, Trystan.โ€ Her mother went right into using his name, like sheโ€™d known him far longer than this moment.

Trystan winced, clearing his throat nervously. โ€œIโ€™m afraid you wouldnโ€™t say that if you knew who I wasโ€ฆif you knew what your daughter does for me.โ€ When Nura lifted a brow, he fumbled, and was he blushing? โ€œForgive me. That was poorly worded. I meant to say her profession. What she does in myย offices.โ€

Her mother let out a twinkling laugh as she patted Trystanโ€™s cheek with maternal affection. โ€œIโ€™m afraid I already know. Iโ€™ve been watching you all for quite some time.โ€

Trystan swallowed, blinking fast. โ€œYouโ€™ve been watching?โ€

Nura looked at Evie, then at Trystan, then at the sky, winking. โ€œI had a very good view.โ€

Her mother had seen, had been watching. And so Evie had to ask. โ€œMama, then you know that Gideonโ€ฆ You know that heโ€™s alive?โ€

Nuraโ€™s hand came up to clutch her chest, her smile watery as she replied, โ€œYes. I do.โ€

Evie pressed further, knowing that she probably shouldnโ€™t. โ€œAnd Papa?

You know aboutโ€ฆhim, too?โ€

There was no force in the world, no wrath greater than the burning rage in Nura Sageโ€™s eyes. Her voice was as hard as granite. โ€œI do.โ€

But at that moment, the time for questions had ended, as the cave around them began to rattle and shake like the earth was quaking. โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€ Evie cried, holding tight to her motherโ€™s hand.

โ€œI donโ€™t know!โ€ Trystan answered. He turned to the creature. โ€œWhat is happening?โ€

โ€œThe magic is fading.โ€ The creatureโ€™s voice was booming in its sadness,

and the room seemed to weep with it. The stars surrounding them dripped with silvered drops, almost like tears. โ€œItโ€™s found us. Goโ€”you must go now!โ€

A dark cloud bumped into Evieโ€™s knees from behind, causing her to fall back onto it alongside her mother and Trystan, whose arm wrapped around her, pulling her the rest of the way onto the creatureโ€™s platform. They soared up as the cave shook again, the stars winking, the clouds misting into the air.

The cave was going to collapse, and the creature with it. She couldnโ€™t stand any more destruction, couldnโ€™t bear losing another thing that was pure and good. โ€œStop!โ€ Evie screamed. The cloud halted as she pleaded with the creature, โ€œCome with us. Please.โ€

The creature shook its head. โ€œI will not abandon my piece. Iโ€™m sworn to protect this land for the rest of my daysโ€”no matter how numbered. But please: save Rennedawn, save the magic.โ€ They were lifted higher still, and Evie cried out in despair. As they continued toward the exit, they heard one last refrain from the creature, and Evie knew it would haunt her for the rest of her life. โ€œThink of meโ€ฆwhen youโ€™re with the trees.โ€

The cloud soared out of the cave, back to Blade, back to the dragon. They all fell to the ground, the very air around them shaking with debris and dust. It was impossible to see; Evie clung to Trystanโ€™s arm, to her motherโ€™s hand, and when the smoke cleared and they finally opened their eyesโ€ฆ

The cave was gone.

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