Chapter 72 The Cost of a Happy Ending
"Fear is a predator that feeds on your future, but gossip is a scavenger that picks apart your past until you don't even recognize the person you used to be."
The quay of the capital was made of cold, white marble, but beneath the elegance, it felt like standing in a graveyard of forgotten thoughts. The woman in the tattered wedding dress, the First Draft, stood before them, her face a shifting screen of scrolling text. Every time she moved, the air smelled of old parchment and bitter ink.
"Delete the Compass?" Evan stepped forward, his silver eyes flashing with a light that made the woman’s paper-thin hands curl. "You talk like we’re nothing but marks on a page. Cass isn't a character. She’s the woman who taught me that a heart is more than a pump for resonance."
"He’s right," Cass said, though her voice wavered as she looked at the scrolling letters where the woman’s eyes should be. "And if you’re the First Draft, you’re just a mistake that was meant to be thrown away. I’ve seen better writing on the back of a fish wrapper in Willow Lane."
A strange, dry sound came from the woman, a rustle like dead leaves. "Humor. A common defense for those about to be erased. But look at your precious diary, Gardener. See what your 'ordinary' life is truly worth."
Evan pulled the diary from his pocket. The list of names from Willow Lane was glowing now, the ink pulsing like a fever.
"Mrs. Gable: 10 years of peaceful sleep. The Cobbler: The memory of his daughter’s first steps. Old Man Jenkins: His sense of humor."
"It’s not just a list," Evan realized, his heart sinking. "This is how Silas and the King are fueling the 'Perfect' world. They aren't creating happiness out of nothing; they're stealing the small, messy joys of our neighbors to power the palace."
Cass leaned over to look at the list, her eyes filling with tears. "Old Man Jenkins? He’s the only one who makes Ben laugh when the storms are bad. If they take his humor, he’ll just be a hollow shell. Evan, we can't let this happen. Mrs. Higgins... she’s a gossip and a terror, but her laughter is the loudest thing in the market. It’s the sound of the town being alive."
"Listen to the Compass," the First Draft whispered, her hand reaching out. "Every step you take toward the Mirror Room, I strike a name. One step for a wedding memory. Two steps for a mother’s lullaby. How many of your friends will you bankrupt to save your own soul?"
Evan froze. This was the ultimate trap. To save the world, he had to destroy the very things that made the world worth saving.
"You’re a monster," Evan breathed.
"I am an Editor," the woman replied. "And I have just struck the first name."
Suddenly, the diary flashed. The entry for Mrs. Higgins blurred.
Back in Willow Lane, in the middle of a heated argument about who had stolen her best knitting needles, Mrs. Higgins suddenly stopped. Her mouth stayed open, but the sharp, witty retort died in her throat. Her eyes went flat. She looked at her neighbor, blinked, and simply walked away, the light of her spirited malice extinguished.
"She’s gone quiet," Cass sobbed, feeling the shift in the resonance. "Evan, I can feel it. The town is losing its voice."
"We have to move, Cass," Evan said, his silver eyes burning with a desperate, cold fire. "If we stay here, she’ll keep striking names anyway. The only way to stop the 'Price' is to break the 'Bank.'"
He turned to Lila, who was standing at the helm of the lugger, her silver eye-patch reflecting the dark palace towers. "Lila! Can you hold her off? Can you keep the First Draft busy while we get to the Mirror Room?"
Lila spat into the black water. "I’ve spent twenty years in the margins, boy. I know how to handle a bad script. You get to the King. I’ll show this paper-doll what happens when you try to edit a woman who’s lived through a real storm."
Lila leaped from the boat, a silver-edged cutlass appearing in her hand. She didn't strike at the woman’s body; she struck at the air, cutting through the scrolling text as if it were physical silk.
"Go!" Lila roared.
Evan grabbed Cass’s hand and they ran toward the palace gates. The city was beautiful, terrifyingly so. Every fountain flowed with clear, sparkling water, every garden was in bloom, but there were no birds. No stray cats. No children playing in the dirt. It was a museum of a city, and they were the only things breathing.
"Evan, look at the bottom of the list," Cass panted as they sprinted past a row of silent, marble statues. "You said there was a name we hadn't seen. The one at the very end."
Evan slowed down just enough to glance at the final page. His breath hitched.
The name wasn't a neighbor. It wasn't even a Keeper.
Lila John: The Truth of the Grave.
"What does it mean?" Cass asked. "Lila is right there! She’s fighting the Draft!"
"If her 'Truth' is the price," Evan said, his mind racing, "then the woman on the boat... she might not be who we think she is. Or the woman in the grave isn't who we were told."
They reached the doors of the Palace. They weren't guarded by soldiers, but by mirrors. Thousands of them, lining the entrance, reflecting Evan and Cass at themselves in a dizzying array of versions.
In one mirror, they were old and gray, sitting on a porch in Willow Lane. In another, they were strangers, passing each other in a crowded market. In a third, Evan was alone, his eyes completely silver, a king of a dead world.
"Don't look at them, Cass," Evan warned, pulling her forward. "They're trying to show us the 'Possible' lives. They're trying to make us choose a different story."
"I don't want a different story!" Cass shouted at the mirrors. "I want the one where I’m a mess and I’m scared and I love this man more than I love my own safety!"
They burst into the Mirror Room.
The room was a vast, circular chamber beneath the throne. In the center was a pool of liquid silver, and suspended above it was Ben. The boy was asleep, his body connected to the pool by thin, glowing threads of ink.
Standing on the other side of the pool was a man who didn't look like a King. He looked like a weary scholar, his robes heavy with dust.
"The Gardener," the King said, his voice was a tired echo. "You’ve come to reclaim the boy. But do you realize that he is the only thing keeping the 'Ache' from overflowing? If I let him go, the grief of ten centuries will hit the coast like a wall of black water. Willow Lane won't just be quiet; it will be drowned in the tears of everyone who ever lost a child."
"Then let it drown!" Evan shouted. "Better to drown in real tears than to live in a lie built on stolen laughter!"
The King sighed and reached into the silver pool. He pulled out a long, shimmering thread. "Then we shall start with the highest price. To save the boy, you must give me the one thing the 'Compass' has left."
He looked at Cass.
"I don't want your memories, Cassia. I want your Future. If you save the boy, you will never be able to touch Evan again. You will see him, you will talk to him, but the resonance will be so different that if your skin touches his, you will both turn to ash."
Evan’s hand tightened on Cass’s. He could feel the warmth of her, the reality of her. The thought of a life where he could never hold her, never kiss her, never feel her heart against his... it was a cruelty he couldn't measure.
"Cass, no," Evan whispered. "We'll find another way."
Cass looked at Ben, then at the King, then at the man she loved. She saw the silver in Evan’s eyes and the love that was trying to survive the myth.
"Is that the price?" Cass asked the King, her voice steady. "To save the child, I have to lose the man?"
"That is the edit," the King replied.
The ultimate choice is on the table: The boy's life or the physical touch of the woman Evan loves. But as Cass reaches out toward the silver pool, Evan notices a reflection in the King's spectacles, a reflection of a woman standing behind them with a silver eye-patch and a finger to her lips. Is Lila playing both sides, or is she the 'Truth' that is about to break the King's bank?