
The climb up the Hill of Difficulty was every bit as difficult as Perry remembered. Sweat trickled down his brow. But Eva had placed her hand in his once more, and everything seemed right with the world.
Almost.
“So that’s how you did it?” she asked.
“Did what?”
She didn’t respond. He already knew what she meant. The way he had reset time at her party. How she wasn’t supposed to know. The anomaly that she had remembered. It had started her story—their story together. But this time he hadn’t reset it alone.
“We did it,” he said.
She scrambled up a large rock and turned to offer her hand again. He set his staff beside her and took it. A moment later he stood beside her.
“You called me reckless,” she said. “Why?”
“Eva, dearest, how much do you remember?”
“There are holes.” She shook her head slowly. “More than I care to admit. But I remember you. Us.”
“What you did was brave, but…” She shouldn’t have tried what she did. He had caught only glimpses on the way down. The bruises across her cheeks. Her uneven, cropped hair. The uniform of a ship captain. The fang she had held up. Questions he still couldn’t answer.
Just ahead, a trellis opened onto an Arbor. From the overlook, they could see the steep mountainside stretched out below them. A bench nestled among the flowers. Perry sat down. Eva settled beside him, leaning against his shoulder and lightly holding his arm.
“So, what you are telling me,” she said, “is that it had been me—”
“That’s different.”
“How so?”
He hadn’t thought of it that way. He breathed in the sweet air.
“Tell me, dearest,” she said. “What would you have done?”
“I would have sought help. Perhaps Great-Heart. Definitely Discretion’s counsel.”
She nodded, her gaze drifting toward the clouds.
“Promise me, dearest,” he said, “if Apollyon takes me again, you won’t try to save me. Promise.”
“I will not.” She tilted her chin.
“And you ask why I called you reckless.”
“First you promise if I am taken, you will not come to me.” Her eyes shone.
“No.”
“Then neither will I.”
–
The second half of their climb was rockier than the first, but it went quickly. Eva had made up her mind, and Perry knew better than to argue further. Eva stepped over the giant’s footprint, barely seeming to notice it.
Ahead lay House Beautiful and the lions guarding the way. They sprawled lazily beside the path. One yawned as Perry and Eva approached, then rested its head back on its paws.
“The lions are—” Watchful scratched his head. “Welcome to Palace Beautiful!”















