
Perry’s hands trembled as he knelt before the Cross. He had almost lost Eva. The thought filled him with despair.
She fingered the silver embroidery of her dress thoughtfully. Then she slipped a brass mirror from her pocket and studied her reflection.
“She’s so beautiful, isn’t she?” Eva whispered.
“No, Eva. Damn it. Not she. You. You’re beautiful.”
Her steel-gray eyes met his. They seemed pleased. Maybe amused. Her bruises were gone, and her face shone with a quiet grace. She rose to her feet. So regal. So unapproachable.
“We begin again, Lord Greycloak.”
“Lady Evadne,” Perry said with a deep bow. “I am forever your devoted—”
“Knight,” she finished, interrupting him.
The reset had restored everything. Except their memories. He couldn’t be sure how much she remembered, or how much she had endured to reach him. And that fang. It was no dragon tooth, but it was no mere trinket either. What had she been through?
Eva gestured toward the oilskin hanging from his belt. He placed it in her hands. She walked over to the Cross and sat down among the lilies at its foot. She patted the ground beside her.
“Sit,” she said. She leaned against the coarse, weathered wood and sighed deeply.
One by one she removed the contents and spread them out before her. A thick golden ring. A deed. Letters. A tattered ribbon.
“Did you know that I stole this?” she asked. A smile tugged at the corner of her lips. She gathered her long, luxurious hair and tied it into a ponytail with the ribbon.
She picked up the deed and studied it closely.
“I thought this was what I wanted.”
Then she read every letter, slowly, carefully. Hours passed, but Perry didn’t mind. More than once she returned to an earlier letter and compared it to another. Her face went through the full range of expressions as she read. Now angry. Now sad. Now amused. Piece by piece, she seemed to be assembling something only she could see.
She placed the items back into the pouch one by one until only the ring remained. She didn’t comment. Barely even looked at it. She placed it at the top and closed the pouch.
She inhaled deeply, savoring the unmistakable fragrance of lilies growing on the hillside around them. Birds sang for joy. She gazed lovingly upon the Cross as tears rolled down her cheeks.
Together they descended into the garden below. The rich scent of olive wood filled the air. Her fingers brushed the large stone that had been rolled away. Then she entered the tomb. The bed, or rock shelf, where a body should lie was empty. She turned and left.
She walked to the cleft in the rock. The earth had been torn apart by an earthquake, and no bottom was visible. She tossed the oilskin pouch in.
“Go to Hell,” she said without a trace of emotion. She turned away, not bothering to watch it fall.
“Come,” she said and started up the hill toward the Narrow Way.
Perry followed after her. He extended his hand to her. She didn’t notice.















