
Perry stared in amazement at Eva. This plain, unadorned woman—moonlight catching the curve of her cheek—bore little resemblance to the elegant Madame he’d danced with earlier. And yet… she held herself with the same grace. The same quiet poise.
His mind flooded with questions.
Would the Author allow this? Perry wanted it—more than anything. He closed his eyes and breathed. Yes. It wasn’t approval. It was delight. The Author wanted this too. Perry could feel it—unbridled excitement, mixed with… surprise?
Where would they go? He didn’t know. He hadn’t even looked. Strange—he’d never truly looked inward. He barely knew who he was. And the night loomed out there—wide, dark, waiting. But they couldn’t turn back now. She stood before him, quiet, steady. Watching. Waiting for his answer.
Her comment about the daggers made him laugh. He hadn’t even said the word aloud. But she’d known. Of course she had. They had a connection that didn’t need words.
“The more daggers, the better, my dearest,” Perry said at last. “That leaves only one question…” He smiled. “Do you need to pack for the journey?”
Eva blinked—startled, then laughed. “The daggers stay,” she said. “They’re a part of me now.” She glanced down at her patched dress, then at the oilskin bundle in Perry’s hands. “I have nothing to pack.” Her eyes found his. “That’s why I can finally leave.”
She stepped toward him, the muddy bank sucking at her shoes, and offered her arm—not her hand this time, not as a lady, not as a lover, but as a companion on the road. “So let’s walk, Perry. Before I start thinking I have something worth staying for.”
Perry still had questions. “Tell me… what’s your plan?” She would know. Just like when they’d danced, he let her take the lead. “Do we sleep under the stars… or do we walk by them?”
Eva gazed at the stars—hard, ancient points of light, void of comfort but shining with direction. The Hunter’s bow dipped below the horizon. “We walk,” she said. “If I stop moving, I might start thinking again.” Then she added, with a crooked smile: “That’s usually when I go back.”
After a while, she spoke again. “Perry… do you believe someone like me can change?”
“I don’t need to believe,” he replied without hesitation. “You already have.”
Eva stopped. She didn’t stumble, she simply halted—mid-step, as if the ground had crumbled beneath her. She turned to him, her tired eyes clear beneath her scarf. “Don’t say things like that,” she said. “Not unless you mean them.” She wasn’t angry. She looked afraid. “You make it sound like I’ve already left her behind,” she whispered. “Madame Wanton.”
“But I still hear her voice. She tells me I’ll be forgotten if I go. That no one will remember who I was before her. And that…” She hesitated, breath catching. “That the King only remembers the ones who never put on masks.”
“We walk then,” he said. “And then we sleep. But we never go back.” He paused. “Only… I don’t know the way. I don’t even know who I am. I was created to find truth in others. But I just now realize — I don’t even know myself.”
She nodded. “Good. Then we’re starting from the same place.” She stepped closer. “Perry… you always seemed like you knew everything. Everyone. Like you could see straight through the layers I spent years building.” Her voice softened. “But maybe that’s what you are. A man made to see others… because you’ve never been allowed to see yourself.”
She glanced toward the horizon. “Then maybe this journey is for you too. We walk until we remember who we are.”
She looked back, finally. “And if we don’t—then maybe we become it instead.”
She took his arm. Then, with a whisper of courage—the first step. “Come on. Let’s walk while it’s still dark enough to forget what we’ve been.”
“Vain Delights lies to the south,” he said. “And so does the sea. There’s no future that way.” He paused. “We do not go to Stupidity,” he said, emphatically. “Beyond Carnal Policy lies Morality. Our road does not lie there either.”
He pointed to the tail of the Bear, tracing its arc in the sky. “We follow him.” Then, more softly, “Or…” He glanced at Eva, sheepish. “We look at your invitation.”
She listened as he spoke—His compass laid out not in maps, but in rejections. When he traced the Bear in the stars, she didn’t look up. She looked into him. “I always knew you were watching the stars,” she said.
She reached into her dress—plain, patched, but with a hidden lining stitched carefully, discreetly. She pulled out the parchment again and unfolded it. The wax was broken. The lettering, blurred. But something new was there. In the soft light of the stars, a second line was visible.
“You were not made for this place.” And then— “…but you are made for the road.”
She handed it to him, her hands trembling. “I thought it was just a warning,” she whispered. “But it’s a calling, isn’t it?”
It was Perry’s turn to lead the dance. He felt her arm relax in his. “We follow the Bear until we reach the road. There’s a thicket just beyond where we can rest. I’ll stand watch while you sleep. We cross the Slough in the morning. I will not risk losing you there tonight.”
Eva nodded. Not with gratitude, but with trust. She didn’t protest. I will not risk losing you there tonight. She looked at him a long moment, as if memorizing the shape of those words.
“I’ve never had anyone say that to me.” And she followed him.







