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Chapter no 2 – Evie

Assistant to the Villain

โ€œBend over.โ€

Evie didnโ€™t move. โ€œPerhaps you could buy me dinner first.โ€ Honestly, even a dinner at the nicest tavern wouldnโ€™t entice her to bare her backside to the healer. Surely magic could work through the cloth of her skirtโ€”if she said it in her head, perhaps she could will it to be true.

She sat on the exam table and held back a wince at the pain when she shifted, her gaze holding the healerโ€™s in a game of chicken Evie had no intention of losing.

There wasnโ€™t a day since Evie had known her that the healer did not wear at least some element of pink. Today, the dainty color made its usual appearance in the form of tiny bows pinned throughout her lovely hair, making her look younger than her twenty-seven years but no less tough an adversary. The healer raised one dark brow at Evieโ€™s refusal to move.

โ€œCome on, Tati,โ€ Evie said with a pleading grin. โ€œIโ€™ve already met my humiliation quota today, and Iโ€™m afraid revealing my backside to you would break the meter.โ€

Eventually, Tatianna sighed and pushed a dark braid of hair behind her ear, her large brown eyes narrowing as her hands began to glow a warm yellow.

Oh, thank the gods.

The light drew Evieโ€™s attention to the gauzy sleeves of yet another lavish gown hugging the womanโ€™s generous curves. Evie usually felt too guilty to spend her wages on anything so frivolous as a new gownโ€”but that didnโ€™t mean she didnโ€™t envy the healerโ€™s lovely wardrobe.

Tatianna moved her hands toward Evie, hovering in front of her shoulders without actually touching her, and suddenly Evieโ€™s backside felt like the time she had sat on the hot stones in the village square after a day of summer sun beating down on them.

โ€œYouโ€™ve bruised your tailbone, little friend. Quite badly in fact.โ€ Tatiannaโ€™s voice was like clear water, crisp and smooth, pulling her lightly

from her panic. She exhaled a sigh of relief. A bruise she could afford.

โ€œOf course I have.โ€ Evie rubbed her forehead. โ€œAnd how much is it going to cost me for you to heal it?โ€

A long stretch of a smile spread across Tatiannaโ€™s face, which to those who didnโ€™t know her would set even the most anxious person at ease. But Evie did know herโ€”and that smile was, for lack of a better wordโ€ฆscary.

โ€œHmm,โ€ the healer said, tapping her chin in contemplation. โ€œIf you want it fully healed, I want two secrets.โ€

โ€œWhich means youโ€™re getting two secrets, because in what world would I want to go about my day with a painful bruise on my backside?โ€ Evie rubbed her temples and raised a brow. โ€œHow big of a secret are we talking?โ€ Walking toward her table of salves and potions, Tatianna chuckled as her dress swished back and forth. โ€œNothing blackmail-worthy but better than

idle gossip youโ€™d hear in the kitchen.โ€

Evie dug in her brain for something sufficient as Tatianna sifted through her tinctures and moved her glowing hands over a small bowl as she worked. Sharing secrets was hardly something Evie took issue with; she was an open book for the most part. Sheโ€™d often had trouble keeping overly personal thingsย in, especially with Tatianna.

If she could pay everyone with her private, ridiculous thoughts and habits, sheโ€™d never have to work again.

Hopping off the table with nervous energy, Evie wandered over to the shelf by the door and found a small bottle. It was a charming little thing. Evie thought it would make a good ornamโ€”

โ€œDonโ€™t touch that!โ€ Tatianna screeched, making Evieโ€™s heart race.

โ€œWhat? Why? What is it?โ€ Evie frantically looked at the bottle and the hand that had almost touched it. โ€œDoes it turn people into frogs or something?โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ Tatianna shook her head, confused. โ€œNo, itโ€™s a slow-acting sedative. Itโ€™s very potent.โ€

Evie pulled her hand back as if burned, frowning as Tatianna smiled and said all too casually, โ€œI keep my frog potions in a different cabinet.โ€

A choked noise left Evieโ€™s throat, but before she could ask if the healer was kidding, she continued.

โ€œA secret, if you please,โ€ Tatianna said, turning back to her brewing potion.

Evie paused in contemplation and then grinned. โ€œI had a dream about the boss last night.โ€

A series of crashes and a screech came from the direction Tatianna was standing, but it was so unlike her to lose composure that Evie wondered if there was some other figure in the room she could not see.

Tatianna whirled around then, knocking several more things over in her flurry to face Evie.

Evieโ€™s mouth opened, her hand going to her face as if something was written there she couldnโ€™t see. โ€œWhat?โ€

There were not enough thieves in Rennedawnโ€™s east-village slums to steal the wicked twinkle in Tatiannaโ€™s eyes. โ€œOh, and what did you and the boss do in this dream, you naughty little assistant?โ€

Evie huffed a laugh and attempted to bend over to pick up the discarded parchments but immediately straightened when she felt her injury protest. โ€œYou are very presumptuous to assume it was anything but innocent.โ€

Tatianna scoffed in indignation, sweeping the contents back onto the table with a slight wave of her hand. A rare gift for healers but a useful one for Tatianna, who sometimes needed to use her abilities to mind-bend objects out of a wound without touching them.

โ€œHave you seen the man? As if anything associated with him could ever be innocent.โ€ She paused for dramatic effect, hands coming up with a flourish. โ€œHeโ€™s a walking vice.โ€

Evie circled her hand above her own head in the shape of a halo, but the healer merely laughed and began mixing contents back into the bowl, hands once again taking on their warm yellow glow.

โ€œI adore you, Evangelina, but you are far from innocent.โ€ Turning around and handing Evie a small brown bowl that smelled sickly sweet, she grinned. โ€œYou are corrupt by association, my dear. Now, rub this on your bum and put the gloves on first or itโ€™ll warp the bones in your hands.โ€

Hastily tugging on the gloves, she grabbed the bowl and darted behind a cloth screen in the corner for some privacy. She yanked her skirt down a couple of inches and smoothed the salve between the fabric of her skirt and the bottom of her back. As she did, Evie contemplated her precarious position working here. Sheโ€™d seen truly horrific things in her time thus far, all more jarring than the last. But she never once felt the need to stop anything, just the urge to offer help where she could and distance where she couldnโ€™t.

That was neither here nor there, however. Even the most โ€œstand-up citizensโ€ were capable of terrifying cruelty. She would hardly feel guilty for taking money where it came. Especially from a place where she was never mistreated or looked at like a plaything.

Nausea overtook her as she began to feel the broken piece of bone melding back together, a sickly, unnatural feeling. The body wasnโ€™t meant to heal at this pace, but she didnโ€™t have time to waste on a broken bone.

After the last of the bone fragments slid into place like a puzzle piece, Evie straightened, then turned and bent from left to right to test her mobility. The sharp pain was gone like mist on the wind, replaced with a tight ache that was far preferable.

โ€œItโ€™ll be sore for the next couple of hours, but after that, it should feel normal.โ€ Tossing the rest of the bowlโ€™s contents into the fire of the stone hearth, Tatianna rolled her sleeves up. โ€œJust be carefulโ€”the bones are still pliable. If you sit incorrectly, they could move.โ€

Evie wrinkled her nose, throwing her head from side to side to shake the image. โ€œThat is revolting.โ€

Handing Evie a small capped vial, pink in color, Tatianna said, โ€œThe next time someone asks me to describe my work, thatโ€™s exactly what Iโ€™ll tell them.โ€

Before Evie could ask about the vialโ€™s contents, Tatianna interrupted, her tone taking on a concerned softness. โ€œFor your father.โ€ She rolled her shoulders and looked out the window. โ€œTo manage his pain. Iโ€™m sorry I cannot do more for him.โ€

A hot burning began in the backs of Evieโ€™s eyes, causing her to sniff lightly and clear her throat in an attempt to push it away. She carefully took the bottle and laid it in the pocket of her skirts. โ€œSo if I sit incorrectlyโ€ฆwill my right ass cheek be bigger than my left?โ€

A startled laugh busted through Tatiannaโ€™s mouth as she shoved Evie lightly on the shoulder. โ€œYou are too gullible, little friend. My magic is strong, and all will be fine. Now, get back to work.โ€

Ignoring the lingering melancholy, Evie grinned wide and spun on her heel toward the door. โ€œOh!โ€ she said, spinning back around. โ€œThe second secret!โ€

Tatianna raised a brow, her eyes flashing at Evie for just a moment. โ€œThe second?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Evie said boldly. โ€œThat dream I had about the boss last night.โ€ She leaned closer. โ€œItย wasย dirty.โ€

Giggling at the shock on Tatiannaโ€™s face, Evie spun back around only to halt immediately in her tracks.

Swallowing a lump in her throat, eyes wide as saucers, Evie said, โ€œHello, sirโ€ฆ Any chance youโ€™d like to add my head to the entryway?โ€

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