
Eva rose slowly to her feet and scanned the abyss. It was as deep as the Hill of Difficulty was tall—perhaps deeper still. The trail of blood ended here. Firelight flickered below, revealing ledges and outcroppings, but the rock walls were sheer—no handholds. Perry was down there. She had no doubt. And she would find a way down.
She retraced her steps to where the fight had taken place—if it could even be called that. The Narrow Way ran along the edge. She followed it.
Her progress was slow, each step placed with care. On the other side lay a bog—but not like the Slough. Heat rose from its surface, carrying the stench of sulfur. The mire seemed to boil from some fire far below—the same fire burning in the abyss. One moment, an unseen force tugged her toward it; the next, it drove her toward the edge.
Nothing lay ahead but inky darkness. She imagined the Bear beyond the smoke and clouds. She imagined Perry’s hand in hers as they walked beneath the moon. But there was nothing. She was alone in the darkness, with nothing but the path beneath her feet.
A faint sound caught her attention. She strained to make it out. Was it music? Singing? Strangely, it seemed to harmonize with the moans and shrieks rising from the abyss.
Something whispered in her ear. She spun—tight, controlled—and drove her dagger forward. Nothing. She turned and kept walking.
“He’s gone, you know.” She wasn’t sure it was a voice—or her own thoughts. There was no one there.
She slipped her daggers back into her sleeves and prayed—not for herself. Keep him safe. Somehow, it made her less afraid.
One foot in front of the other. It was all she could do. Ignore the dizziness. The pain in her ribs. In the darkness, she lost all sense of time. There was only the endless now.
She blinked. The clouds had parted, and the moon broke through. It was no longer full, but it still washed the valley in silver light. Ahead, the way was strewn with bones—snares, traps and pits stretching all the way to the distant mountains. But that was not her destination.
She left the certainty of the Narrow Way and moved along the edge of the abyss to the east, searching for a way down. There should be a way down. There has to be.
Movement in the distance caught her eye. Two shadowy figures hunched over something. Guttural noises. Stories her sisters had told to frighten her when she was little—goblins. She dropped into a crouch. One faced away from her. The other had his back completely turned.
She slowed her breathing, the way she had been taught, and moved forward as quietly as she could. The goblin lifted his head. She froze. He didn’t see her. He gnawed on a bone. Her stomach turned.
She crept closer. The goblins continued eating, unaware of her in the shadows—now only inches away. She steadied her trembling hand, then drove the dagger beneath the goblin’s ribs.
No one had told her about the resistance—how close she had to be to kill with a dagger. The goblin tensed, a gurgling sound escaping him—almost a whimper. She pushed with all her strength, held it a moment longer than she wanted, then let him fall.
The second goblin didn’t react at once. Her heart thundered. For a moment, she froze—caught in the hate burning in its beady eyes. He reached for his weapon. She slashed at his wrist. Then she seized him—harder than necessary, more force than she needed—and pressed her dagger to his throat.
“How do I get down there?” she demanded, her voice ragged.
The hatred vanished—replaced by fear. He began to gibber, harsh guttural sounds spilling from him.
“How do I—” she began again. It was no use—there was no comprehension in his eyes. She pressed the dagger down—then stopped herself and threw him to the ground.
The goblin lay stunned for a moment, then scrambled to his feet and darted away.
Eva didn’t hesitate. This was her chance. She sprinted after him, ignoring the pain flaring in her side.
Eva halted abruptly. The goblin had vanished into the rock face before her. She stepped closer—there, a narrow scar in the stone. An opening barely wide enough for one person. She could have passed it a hundred times and never seen it.
The stone sloped inward. Eva lowered her head and paused, testing her footing. Her hair fell into her face. She twisted it into a bun and tied it back with her sister’s ribbon.
She inched forward, squinting into the darkness. The goblin pounced—almost knocking her off her feet. She swung, aiming for its eye. It screamed.
Pain shot through her head as she was dragged to the ground. Sharp rocks bit into her back. She tried to pull free, but something had her by the hair. Another goblin pounced, claws grazing her chest. She struggled—swinging wildly. Some of her strikes connected.
She scrambled to her feet and spun, swinging both daggers at once. Her hair whipped into her eyes. Something struck her. She drove forward, knocking the goblin to the ground—and stabbed. Over and over.
Her panic subsided. Two goblins lay dead beside her—she was sprawled atop the mangled body of the third. A sob escaped her lips. Her blades—and her hands—were slick with blood. Her hair clung to her face, matted with sweat… and perhaps blood as well.
She wiped one dagger on her dress and set it on the ground. Then she reached up, gathered her hair in one hand, and cut it as close as she could with the other. It fell uneven—loose strands slipping free. She no longer cared. She stood, letting it drop at her side. She didn’t look down.
It felt strange—she had never worn her hair short before. But her vision was clear. And there was little now for an enemy to grasp. One less thing to work against her.
The wind stirred. The stone was sharp, recently broken. But the wound itself felt ancient. This was no mere cave, but the beginning of a fall arrested in stages. The way down was no true stair, but a broken ledge road—part natural shelf, part old cut, part the ruin of a greater work.
Eva was afraid. Before her lay shallow shelves, cracks and crawlspaces no one would enter willingly. A thousand places for goblins to crouch in the shadows, waiting. Eva the Fearless? She scoffed. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Thoughts flooded her mind—despair, grief, guilt, shame. From the depths, specters rose: faces of men, half-formed, flickering in and out of existence. The same voices that had plagued her before. Her daggers were no use against them. She closed her eyes and thought of Perry. The Prince. Innocent. Charity. And kept walking.

Fires burned in clusters in the distance. The incessant chattering of goblins filled the air, rising above the wails and moans below. Metal rang against metal in the darkness. Far off, a drake swooped. A shriek—then angry howls.
The ledges began to widen—shelves of stone layered one above another, connected by ladders, crude stairs, rope bridges, pegged ruins, and narrow traverses cut into the rock.
Eva grasped the top of a ladder leading down and began to descend, one step at a time. At the bottom, movement caught her eye off to the left. She dropped into a crouch behind a rock. Several drakes tore at the carcass of a goblin, devouring it.
She tensed and backed away slowly, then turned. She wouldn’t be going that way. Along the shelves stood lean-tos, smoke pits, refuse heaps, hanging racks, and piles of bones.
Across a wooden bridge, a sentry stood guard, a jagged sword hanging slack at its belt. She crept forward, careful not to make a sound. It scanned the sky, searching for drakes. A board creaked under her weight—the goblin spun, surprise flashing across its face. Before it could draw its sword, Eva stepped in and slit its throat. But not before it raised the alarm.
Three goblins stepped into her path. She dropped into a fighting stance. Then four more appeared. She turned—and ran.
Eva bounded across the bridge—she could hear them now, almost feel the goblins at her back. She sprinted toward the ladder. The drakes lifted from the carcass, rearing up with wings spread wide.
She climbed the ladder frantically. Something grabbed at her boot—she kicked free. At the top, she ran the way she had come. A wing brushed her. Can’t slow down. Goblins sprang from the crevasses she had passed on the way down.
Blinding pain shot through her head—she had forgotten to duck on the way out of the cave. She couldn’t stop. Had to stop. Pits. Snares. She cast a hurried glance over her shoulder. They had stopped following. She dropped to the ground, gasping for breath.
A spiked club slammed down beside her. Eva rolled just in time—the blow crashing into the ground where she had been. She scrambled to her feet and ran—straight into a pillar of muscle and flesh. A leg. Bigger than any she had ever seen.
She spun and fled, heedless of pits and snares—and ran straight into a rock wall. Footsteps thundered behind her, the ground shaking beneath them.
Not far ahead, a crack split the stone. If she could just reach it—wide enough to squeeze through, far too small for the giant. She pushed herself harder than she ever had. She slipped inside just as the club crashed down. She stumbled and dropped hard on the stone. She scrambled away as a massive hand reached for her.
Her back hit the wall. The giant peered in at her, its face twisted with rage. The fissure veered sharply to the left. She pivoted and lunged forward just in time. The giant thrust its club in—it slammed against the stone.
The crack opened into a small cave. She was safe—at least from the giant. It couldn’t reach her here.
Then she froze. Eyes glowed in the darkness. It raised a torch, revealing itself—the body of a goat, the chest, arms, and head of a man. Sharp teeth. Curving horns.
A satyr.













