
Eva stood near the front of the ferry, scanning the horizon. Something was wrong. The mist had gradually cleared. The stars had begun to fade. The sky had brightened. No. She was still underground. And yet light streamed from high overhead, bright as day.
One of the passengers approached and came to stand beside her. She turned to face him. He was dressed like the men she had known in Carnal-Policy. He stood straight, carrying himself with confidence.
“You are different,” he said.
“How?”
“You’re not like them.” He gestured toward the other passengers huddled at the back of the boat. A few were engaged in a lively argument. “Charon noticed.”
“You know Charon?”
“Of him,” he corrected. “You and I… we’re different. We’re aware. Not like those sleepwalkers.”
“How do you know this?”
“I didn’t at first. But little things didn’t add up. I was in my bed… and then I wasn’t. Things felt… off. I’d always been here. And yet I knew I hadn’t.”
Eva studied him, tensing slightly.
“Little by little, I woke up. Everything seemed so real, and yet I realized…”
“Realized what?” Eva asked.
“That I was in Hell.”
Eva started.
“It all made sense. The bickering. The fighting. The pettiness. Everyone acting mechanically. Unaware. And yet we remain in Hell by our own choice.”
“What do you mean?”
“Some people have been in the Gray Harbor for centuries. But they always find a reason not to cross over. Not you. Not me. We’re different.”
“How so?”
“They wait,” he said, with emphasis. “But I’ve never waited for anything in my life. And I’m not about to begin here.”
Eva opened her mouth to speak, but the man either didn’t notice or didn’t care. He didn’t care. He kept talking.
“These people…” the man said, nodding again toward the other passengers. “They stumbled into it by chance. But we know.” He smiled with easy confidence. “We know where we are bound.”
Eva could not believe her eyes. Before her, on the distant shore, lay a grand city. Sublime. Vast. Beautiful. Marble glistening in brilliant light. Domes and spires rising above waterfalls and calm, reflective water. This matched nothing she had ever heard about Hell. Ever.
Her world turned upside down. No. This could not be happening. Had Alecto tricked her? Everything she knew—everything she believed—seemed to come crashing down.
“And where is that?” The words caught in her throat.
“Why, Paradise, of course.”














