âThis is it.â I nodded towards the pale stone building ahead. âThis is where weâll find the forger.â
Callan gave me a curt nod while his dark eyes shifted from the area around us to the house. Oil lamps burned in their glass domes along the street, helping the pale moonlight illuminate the otherwise dark city. We were close to one of the parks, and crickets chirped their nightly songs in the thick green bushes a short distance away. I drew in a calming breath of clear night air and then flicked my gaze towards Callan.
I didnât want him with me when I talked to Paige. Mostly because I didnât want him to know more about me or my contacts than was absolutely necessary. But also because he had laughed at Paigeâs name, and if he were to mock Paige to her face, I would kill him where he stood. And we still had a mission to finish before I could get to that part.
A wicked plan formed in my mind.
âCallan.â I raised a hand and pointed towards the street that would take him to the other side of the building. âGo to the back door and make sure she doesnât run. We have a complicated history so Iâm not sure how sheâll react to seeing me.â
For a moment, it looked like he was about to argue, but then he just nodded again and started in the indicated direction. An evil smile spread across my lips. Oh, he was in for a surprise.
I closed the final distance to the door and rapped my knuckles against it in a predetermined pattern. Or at least, that was the pattern it had been last time Iâd seen her.
Seconds passed.
Then the door was edged open and a blond woman peered out. Shock pulsed in her blue eyes as she met my gaze.
âAudrey,â she pressed out. Before I could reply, she opened the door wider and motioned for me to get inside. âCome in.â
I moved into the darkened hallway while she closed the door behind me. There was candlelight coming from a room up ahead, so I started towards it when Paige nudged me forwards.
A cozy study met me as I crossed the threshold. There was a beautifully carved desk and a comfortable-looking chair by the wall, and a couch in front of a small fireplace. Potted plants with thick green leaves dotted the room and a plush carpet covered the stone floor.
Stopping in the middle of the room, I turned around to face Paige.
âYouâre alive,â she said before I could open my mouth.
âYeah.â
âI hoped you were, but I was never sure.â Her eyes searched my face. âWhatâs it been? Five years?â
âSix.â
âYouâve grown up.â
âSo have you.â
She held my gaze for another few seconds, her expression neutral. Then a wide smile lit up her face and she closed the distance between us, wrapping me into a hug. Warmth swirled in my chest as I hugged her back. For a moment, we just stood there. Locked in an embrace that was long overdue.
Paige ran her hands down my arms as she released me and stepped back. âI knew that you made it out, but I never knew what happened afterwards.â
âYeah, Iâm sorry. I couldnât risk contacting you.â
âI know.â
âDid you go through with theâ¦?â
âYeah.â When she saw the sadness that blew across my face, she just gave me a small smile and shrugged. âOh, donât worry about me. This was the path I chose, and I donât regret it for a second.â
Paige was a water mage. Or she had been when I escaped Eldar. I had always suspected it, but now I knew for certain that she had stayed at the academy and gone through with the graduation ceremony. So now she was just a mediocre mage with access to a little bit of everything through the Great Current. However, her true skills had always lain elsewhere.
âYour parents used our story, by the way,â she continued. âThey twisted it so that it sounded like you moved to Castlebourne to start a new life after a serious falling out with your sister.â
âYeah, I heard.â
âShe has started a school for troubled kids. To help them get back on the right path.â
I snorted. âOf course she has.â
Paige laughed too. Then she turned serious as she once more searched my face. âBut you didnât risk your life coming here just to say hi. You need my help with something. Were you caught? Do you need me to help you get out again?â
Gratitude warmed my wicked heart. Even after all these years, Paige was still ready to help me with my illegal acts. A wistful smile blew across my lips. Dark mages didnât have friends, but I had always considered Paige to be a small exception to that rule. After all, she was the reason Iâd even managed to escape Eldar in the first place.
Weâd been friends back at the academy. Early on, she had realized that she was really talented at copying peopleâs handwriting. That had later led to her starting up a small side business as a forger while we were still in school. In each other, we had recognized the same need to excel at whatever we did, along with a certain penchant for breaking the rules, so weâd become friends. When I at last made the decision to run, Paige was the one who forged the documents that allowed me to just walk right out the gate. If she hadnât done that, I wasnât sure how I would have escaped.
âIâm in serious trouble,â I answered. âIn fact, all dark mages are in serious trouble.â
âBecause of Lance Carmichael and his campaign?â
âYeah.â
She nodded and then held up a hand. âDonât tell me any more than I need to know. Itâs safer that way. For both of us.â
I inclined my head in acknowledgement before saying, âI need two documents of citizenship.â
âFrom which city?â
âCastlebourne, and I need them as fast as possible.â
Rubbing her arm, she glanced over at the clock on the mantelpiece before nodding to herself. âTwo, you said? I should be able to get that done tonight.â She waved a hand towards a notepad on the desk. âJust write down all the information there.â
I moved over to the indicated notepad. Paper rustled faintly as I pulled it closer and began writing down all the information that needed to be included in the documents, and also where to deliver them once they were done. When I was finished, I straightened and turned back to Paige.
âThank you.â Reaching into my pocket, I pulled out the stack of cash I had put there before Callan and I stashed our packs at the end of Johnâs smuggler tunnel. I held it out to her. âFor this. And for last time.â
She let out a light laugh and waved me off. âNah, you get the friends and family discount.â
I kept holding out the rather large pile of money, but she still refused to take it so I placed it on her desk instead. Another huff of amusement escaped her lips as she shook her head at me. Leaving the cash on the smooth tabletop, I closed the distance between us again.
âThank you for what you did for me back then.â I held her gaze. âIâm sorry I couldnât return the favor.â
âDonât be.â She smiled back at me. âIâm happy with my life just the way it is. I could never have been a dark mage. Itâs too lonely. And violent.â
Tangled emotions blew through my soul. Well, she was right about that. Dark mages always had to fight each other for the limited territory in the hills and grasslands outside Eldar. And because of that, trust was scarce and the most respected currency was power. Dark mages had enemies and people who served them. But not friends. Not lovers. No one who wasnât bound to them by either threat or money. That was how we survived.
âIâm glad youâre happy,â I answered, and gave her arm a gentle squeeze. âYou deserve it.â
âSo do you,â she said as she reached up and squeezed my hand back.
Stepping back, I just smiled at her in response. âBy the way, bold move setting up shop in this particular house.â
âI know, right?â Mischief glittered in her eyes as she grinned at me. âAnd thatâs why it works. The constables donât think anyone would ever be stupid enough to run an illegal business right next to their favorite break area.â
âYou always were a clever one.â
âWell, I wonât argue with you on that.â She laughed again before turning serious once more. âGood luck, Audrey. With everything.â
I nodded back at her.
After one final smile, I turned around and strode towards the door, leaving Paige behind. Clear air enveloped me as I walked back out into the night.
A malicious grin tugged at my lips.
Now, I only had to find a certain force mage and see just how badly Iâd managed to screw him over this time.