The tunnel stretched endlessly, cold water sloshing around my ankles as Lena led the way through the underground passage. The auction house was behind us, but the danger wasnât gone. If Valcairnâs men had half a brain, theyâd be searching for exits right now.
"How much further?" I asked, my breath fogging in the damp air.
"Another five minutes," Lena replied.
"To where?"
"Safe house. Well, safer than this."
I didnât argue. My legs ached, my shoulder throbbed from the landing back at the auction, and my mind was still spinning from the sheer insanity of the heist. I had written high-stakes thefts before, but living through one?
Not as fun as it sounded.
We emerged through a rusted grate into an abandoned warehouse. Crates and barrels lay scattered around, the scent of old wood and dust heavy in the air. Lena moved swiftly, checking the hidden runes on the doorframeâwards against tracking magic.
"Weâre clear," she said, exhaling as she slid to the floor.
I wasnât convinced.
"And Ryn?"
"If he's not dead, he'll show up," she muttered, closing her eyes.
I hesitated, then sat down across from her, gripping the stolen grimoire tightly. The book felt heavy, not just in weight but in what it represented.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
The High-Level Grimoireâor at least, the incomplete version of it. The real, complete formulas? Locked away in the royal archives, known only to the kingdomâs top court magicians.
Someone had been collecting these grimoires, trying to piece together something that shouldn't exist. And now, I was right in the middle of it.
I let out a slow breath.
"Lena⦠what do you know about these grimoires?"
She opened one eye, watching me.
"Why?"
"Because," I muttered, flipping through the pages, "I wrote them."
Lenaâs gaze sharpened.
"Explain."
I hesitated. Telling her the truthâthat I was the creator of this worldâwas not an option. But I could tell her a version of the truth.
"Before I ended up here, I studied mathematics and physics. I⦠theorized how magic would work using formulas, equations, fundamental laws of energy transfer."
Lena frowned.
"So you just happened to come up with the exact same grimoire that this kingdom considers its greatest magical secret?"
I exhaled.
"Yeah. And the worst part? This isnât even the final one."
Lena straightened.
"The Forbidden Grimoire."
I nodded.
The first grimoire was for basic mathemagic.
The secondâthe one we had nowâcontained incomplete high-level formulas.
But the last one⦠the Forbidden Grimoire⦠was something far worse.
A book that shouldnât exist.
A book that could break the system of this world itself.
And whoever was after these grimoires?
They werenât stopping until they had all three.
The door creaked open.
Lena and I jumped to our feet, hands on weaponsâuntil Ryn stepped through, bloodied but grinning.
"Miss me?"
I let out a breath I hadnât realized I was holding.
"Took your time," Lena muttered.
"Had to make sure Valcairn wasnât on my tail," he said, wincing as he collapsed onto a crate. Bruises covered his arms, his jacket was torn, and there was a deep gash along his side.
"You look terrible," I muttered.
"Yeah, but you should see the other guy."
Lena tossed him a small healing vial.
"So," Ryn said, popping the cork, "did we just make the entire kingdom our enemy?"
I glanced at the grimoire in my hands.
"Not just the kingdom," I muttered. "Whoeverâs collecting these books wonât stop. And now, we have a target on our backs."
Lena exhaled.
"Then weâd better make the next move first."
Ryn smirked.
"Now thatâs what I like to hear."
We couldnât stay here for long. The city was on high alert. Every bounty hunter, mercenary, and soldier would be looking for us.
"We need to figure out who else is after these grimoires," Lena said.
"And where the Forbidden Grimoire is," I added.
Ryn stretched, cracking his neck.
"Then letâs start digging."
I stared down at the stolen grimoire.
This world wasnât ready for the knowledge in these books.
And if we didnât destroy the Forbidden Grimoire before someone else got itâ¦
I might not survive in this world at all or maybe this world might not survive at the end.