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Through the Ever Night
Through the Ever Night
Through the Ever Night
Ebook314 pages4 hours

Through the Ever Night

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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A world-defying love is put to the ultimate test in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling sequel to Veronica Rossi's "masterpiece," Under the Never Sky (Examiner.com ). In this second book in her spellbinding Under the Never Sky trilogy, bestselling author Veronica Rossi combines fantasy and dystopian elements to create a love story as perilous as it is unforgettable.

It's been months since Aria last saw Perry. Months since Perry was named Blood Lord of the Tides, and Aria was charged with an impossible mission. Now, finally, they are about to be reunited. But their reunion is far from perfect. The Tides don't take kindly to Aria, a former Dweller. And with the worsening Aether storms threatening the tribe's precarious existence, Aria begins to fear that leaving Perry behind might be the only way to save them both.

Threatened by false friends and powerful temptations, Aria and Perry wonder, Can their love survive through the ever night?

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJan 8, 2013
ISBN9780062072085
Author

Veronica Rossi

Veronica Rossi graduated from UCLA. The first book in her New York Times bestselling Under the Never Sky trilogy was named an ALA Best Fiction for Young Adults selection and an Indie Next List Pick. The second book, Through the Ever Night, was a New York Times and USA Today bestseller. The series has been optioned for film. Veronica lives in northern California with her husband and two sons.

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Reviews for Through the Ever Night

Rating: 4.219827461206897 out of 5 stars
4/5

464 ratings47 reviews

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Readers find this title to be one of the best YA dystopian series. The world created by the author is beautiful yet harrowing, and the characters are well-developed. The pace of the book is steady and the plot is engaging. Overall, readers highly recommend this series.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    BookNook — Young Adult book reviewsSince i wasn't completely sold on Under the Never Sky, I was afraid I would feel the same way about Through the Ever Night, but Veronica Rossi managed to rock my world with this book! It almost makes me wonder if I just wasn't in the right mood or frame of mind when reading Under the Never Sky. If I were to read that book again, would I enjoy it more? Who knows.Through the Ever Night had everything that was missing for me in Under the Never Sky: a gripping plot, characters I cared about, and a story that felt necessary. This book does not suffer from the second-book-in-a-series-syndrome at all! The story is brilliant and has a very strong, clear purpose. Starting at about 50%, each chapter in Through the Ever Night had a little mini cliffhanger. I couldn't stop reading! I just had to find out what happened next!We are finally introduced to Liv in this book, and I loved her! Liv is strong, bold, self-sacrificing, and brave. She's definitely a character who is easy to admire and brilliant to read about. Her relationship with Roar and the tragedy of it is so heartbreaking! Roar is one of my favourite characters EVER! He's the kind of sweet, loyal, caring guy I just want to cuddle! That's why his relationship with Liv breaks my heart so much. They desperately want to be together, but Liv feels like she has a duty to The Tides with her arranged marriage.We also learn a bit more about the Aether and Cinder in this book. Cinder's role really becomes clear in Through the Ever Night, and it's clear that he will be one of the most important characters in the third book—Into the Still Blue.I came to really love Perry's chapters in Through the Ever Night. Perry really had a lot of depth in this book, something I think he was missing in Under the Never Sky. We really watch him struggle with his role as Lord of the Tides. He constantly has to win over the loyalty of The Tides and prove that he's fit to be their leader. And when The Tides don't really accept Aria, he is really torn between his duty to The Tides and his love for her.Part of me wishes that Perry and Aria spent more time together in Through the Ever Night. On the one hand, I love their relationship SO MUCH. It's so sweet when they're together and I love how they love each other so much! But on the other hand, I know why it was necessary for them to be apart, and both of their chapters and the events that occurred in them were so interesting. So I was never bored while I was reading, but I did miss their sweet intimacy when they were apart (which was most of the book).Through the Ever Night really surprised me with how much it affected me. It was full of action, love, heartbreak, loyalty, and survival. There are battles, deaths, conspiracies, starvation, and intimate moments. I have really become attached to this story and I'm now DYING to read the third book!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the kind of love story that I want to read an crave for. Love this series!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A little slower than the first book. Hoping the third book offers a little more. Still, a well-written book and I am enjoying the story.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    OMG! I can't believe that I have to wait to find out the end!!!! This is definitely not one of those sequels that falls flat, rather it is more exciting than the first! Anything Veronica Rossi writes, I will read!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Continues where Under the Never Sky left off. Perry struggles to earn the title of Blood Lord of his tribe, the Tides, especially when Aria returns to him. As a Dweller, she won't easily be accepted, so they decide to hide their relationship and say that Aria is only there to help them find the Still Blue, a place that's supposedly safe from the Aether storms that plague their land. But Aria is also under orders from Hess, a powerful figure from the Inside, to find the Still Blue for him.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Rossi manages to keep this futuristic tale fresh in a market saturated with dystopian trilogies. Aria and Perry are reunited quickly in the beginning of the story, with The Tides worried about the uneasy Aether sky, a result of some sort of sun/star flare up that caused the split between the Outside and the pods of Reverie long ago. The promise of safety lying within the Still Blue appeals to all factions in the book. It's interesting how almost medival the Outside seems, deals between all are brokered and sometimes kept, sometimes not.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This sequel did not disappoint (as sequels usually do!) Perhaps I've had more time with the characters now, but they've grown on me, especially Roar. I really enjoyed the setting of this book. Even though it takes place in post-apocalyptic times (i.e., the future)...it had such a pre-historic feel to it (and I love pre-historic stories like Clan of the Cave Bear.) It is an interesting concept to think that hundreds of years into the past could be so similar to hundreds of years into the future. I'm not sure if it's a statement the author intended to make, but I thought it was a powerful one nonetheless.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    So great, wish I had the last one... because I kind of feel lost without the story being complete!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Loved it! Very good, action packed, non stop! Reminded me of divergent which is equally as good. Better than legend!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    If you haven’t read Under the Never Sky yet, the first in this series, then you definitely should get on that… We return the the story of Perry and Aria–Perry is Blood Lord of the Tides and Aria is searching for a way to the Still Blue and the safety from the Aether it promises in order to save Perry’s nephew, Talon (and all the rest of them). The Aether storms are getting stronger and more frequent, and Perry is trying to keep the Tides together and faces all the struggles that come with leading the tribe. Roar is searching for Liv and through it all, there’s a growing distance in Perry and Aria’s relationship. Can they survive it all? This one is a page-turner for sure, filled with action and suspense and frustrations and loss. I only put it down when I had to go to work, and picked it right up again as soon as I got home. This is a must-read series, and I hear that movie rights are being/have been talked about for it, so keep on the lookout for that:) Positively a 5/5 stars ;)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was slightly worried about delving into Rossi's sequel to Under the Never Sky because I liked the first one so much. It turns out I shouldn't have been afraid. Sure, there's bad stuff that happens, but Rossi did something that many books (YA and non) tend to cling to -- she had her characters talk to each other about their secrets. I find it extremely frustrating to have characters keeping secrets just to create conflict that takes away from the stories (kdramas, I'm looking at you) and I was really worried that Through the Ever Night was going to fall victim to this. But Rossi makes sure this doesn't happen (I don't know if it's on purpose or not, but it doesn't matter, because it just made me like her book more). This is a strong follow up and I'm curious and eager to find out what happens next.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    There's a lot going on in this series, enough to keep me entertained anyways but I'm just not particularly head over heels in love with it. I think mainly because, even though I like the alternate world it's set in, I can't say that I fully understand how the smart eye and the fractioning to the different realms could really work. Maybe if I could suspend my disbelief and ignore those pesky details then I might enjoy it more.

    I'm also listening to the audio version of this series and I don't particularly care for either narrators. Now, Michael Goldstrom, the narrator of this second book is better then Bernadette Dunne Flagler, who narrates the first and third books of the series but neither one are great. Both of their voices are monotone and kind of boring with no real emotion behind their narration so that's not helping my experience either.

    Rossi though, is very good with character development. I'm thoroughly invested now in all of the characters, especially Perry, Aria, Roar, Cinder and the Tides so I'm definitely going to continue with the final book. I wouldn't dare miss the outcome of their story for anything. 
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Aww... Well everyone of importance--minus one *sob*--survived and now I cant wait to find out how it all ends
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    How long until the next one comes out??? Really like the characters in this series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The second book in the series, almost as good as the first. A good thing I don't have book 3 on hand because I wouldn't sleep tonight. I would stay up and read straight through the night.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    LOVED it! Can't wait for book 3!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Overall it was pretty good. Bit slow towards the beginning and not a whole lot happened until the last 100 pages and then all the action/big events were kind of jammed in towards the end. I would like to see where the story goes, but I wish there had been more to this book because it felt fairly short. Full review to come later.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is going down as one of my favorite YA series with the last book being the best of the three (a feat in and of itself). Beautiful, funny, sweet, heart-breaking, and thrilling- I devoured it in one day. The thing that surprised me most was that my favorite thing about this series was Aria's and Roar's friendship. Usually I am all about the romance but I felt no need for these two to be together romantically. Their closeness and care for each other was so endearing, their interactions often had me laughing. And the greatest thing was it did not diminish the romance between Aria and Perry but rather enhanced it. It took away the problem that most YA love stories have (the two only caring about each other without friends or interests outside of their relationship).

    The end was good without being too perfect. It was fitting. Aria is a fantastic heroine. She is written as badass but not in a cheesy way. She is smart and funny. She doesn't take anyone's crap but she always willing to forgive and open her heart to people. I wish more leading ladies were written like her.

    Highly, highly recommend this series.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    An excellent sequel to an great book. Characters are just more likable, the story progression is even better and the world gets even bigger.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nice 2nd book, ties up some ends and makes new ones. Not a horrible cliffhanger like some other books. Satisfied but still waiting the next installment
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Left me wanting for more.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing. The world Veronica created is beautiful yet harrowing. I felt like I was there and could see it. I loved the characters and felt like I knew them. By the end of the series It felt like saying goodbye to old friends. I highly recommend this series.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I'm new, I read this book when it came out years ago and I remember everything about it, one of the best YA dystopian series. I think this should have gotten the type that divergent received.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is probably my favorite book so far this year. I remembered loving Under the Never Sky but I forgot just how impossible it was to put down. The same thing happened with Through the Ever Night. I started reading it and then just could not stop reading. This was a one sitting book. I loved the characters. Veronica Rossi broke my heart in a couple of places but don't think that I didn't run right out to the bookstore this week to buy the final book because I just have to know what happens next. Wonderful book. I highly recommend it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love this book! The pace was steady and not too slow, the character development also really shows and I love the entire plot of this series!!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    You know how some authors run out of material, and stretch three chapters worth of story into a whole book? This is it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    (This review was originally posted at My Library in the Making.)

    At the time of this writing, it's been a little more than an hour since I finished reading this book, and the only right way I can think of to start this review is by saying Why did I let this sit in my TBR pile?!

    Under the Never Sky ended with Aria and Perry reuniting, but in the first book, it was brief. Through the Ever Night starts with that same scene, but longer and more emotional, and I had to stop myself from rush-reading to the part where they crash into each other's arms. Okay, enough of me. So Perry brought Aria home to the Tides, but as they'd both expected, she wasn't welcomed. But they kept on trying until they realized that, yet again, they had to go on separate paths to do what they had to do.

    I sure hope that last part wasn't spoiler-y.

    I loved seeing how much Aria had grown during her time away from Perry. She's stronger—both physically and emotionally—and wiser, which helped her in dealing with the Tides and other Outsiders. Perry, on the other hand, surprised me because in the first book, he'd been the fierce and mighty one. Here in the second book, we got to see past his strong facade as he led his uncertain tribe.

    With a wider array of characters, there was also a whole lot of created and rekindled relationships. It was fun to see them all because these relationships were, for me, the heart of this story. We saw deeper into what these characters were made of especially when they're up against something worse than each other: Aether.

    As was the first book, Through the Ever Night was a harsh story set in a harsher setting, but lightened up with romance and friendship. There was so much internal and external dilemma for every character, and those were expertly woven together by Rossi's beautiful writing. And I don't know how I missed it before, but I really love how this series combines futuristic with primitive.

    MY FAVORITE PART was right before the Marking ceremony.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Sequels are hard to review - they're a bit hit-or-miss and these days more and more suffer from second book syndrome: they act like a filler book to tide you over until the real action begins again in the concluding book.

    I'm very happy to say that Through the Ever Night doesn't have any of these problems. Authors take note: this is how you write a sequel! The book is an all-round hit - just as riveting and action-filled as the first book, and it sets readers up for what is bound to be a thrilling climax in the final book of the series, Into the Still Blue.

    My one complaint about Under the Never Sky was that the cataclysmic event that forced people into the Pods, and left others to eke out a living in the harsh environment outside, was never explained. This is quickly and efficiently taken care of in Through the Ever Night, with the author briefly recounting the massive solar flare that wreaked havoc on Earth's atmosphere and now causes the brutal magnetic storms that plague our characters. I wonder why this was never mentioned in the first book, it seems the solar flare should have naturally come up whenever Aria was thinking about how her life inside the Pods differed from that of the 'Savages' outside.

    Perry and Aria are breathtakingly realistic characters, and they continue to pull at the heart-strings in this book. The secondary cast, including Roar, Reef, Molly and Bear, add dimension and warmth to the story, and I love that Rossi handled the loyalty of the Six and the mistrust of the rest of the tribe so well. I couldn't really blame any of the characters for feeling what they did, but it frustrated me that they didn't trust Perry as their leader. On the other hand, their blind hatred of Aria disappointed me, and it doesn't seem like this issue is going away any time soon.

    I also liked the tension Rossi created between Perry, Live, Aria and Roar. It was predictable, and a little cruel, but I think anyone in Perry's position would have been susceptible to doubt, and I hope it all gets worked out in the next book.

    Finally meeting Liv, Perry's sister, was one of my favourite things about Through the Ever Night. I felt like I should know her already, after all the stories Perry and Roar tell of her, but she's even more impressive in person. I think it would have been very easy for the author to ask readers to hate Liv because of the decisions she made, but her situation is impossible and my heart was breaking for her.

    Through the Ever Night is a captivating sequel: populated with amazing characters and full of twists and turns that will keep you reading way past your bedtime! Veronica Rossi has quickly become one of my favourite YA authors, and I encourage readers to pick up this brilliant series.

    A copy of this book was provided by the publisher for review.
    You can read more of my reviews at Speculating on SpecFic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    So, I couldn't be happy until I bought and started this book. I was going to wait to get it from the library, so I tried to read 3 other books, and wasn't feeling it. So I put myself out of my misery and bought it.
    Then I read the summary, and I knew that more heartache and trouble were in store for Aria and Perry, but I just had to see more of their romance and find out what happens next. The characters did not let me down, they continued to be amazing and blow me away. I couldn't stop thinking about them and this world. Every time I had to put down the book I was thinking about Aria and Perry and Roar in the back of my mind and this beautiful but dark and treacherous world that Ms. Rossi has created.
    There were times that I wanted to cry, and I couldn't believe the obstacles and heart ache that happened. There were others that made me smile and still others that made me want to fan myself. Or possibly zap myself into Aria's shoes so I am there with Perry. There were other moments that I wanted to smack some sense into them because of the choices, or almost VERY bad decisions made. But luckily my rage wasn't waranted at the specific moment where I was ready to give up on my book boyfriend.
    Here is an example of the swoon worthiness:
    Perry’s hand settled on her hip, his grip firm. She felt their kiss shift into something deeper as his mouth moved with more urgency over hers. Suddenly there was real heat between them, and she had to force herself to draw away.
    When she did, a soft curse slipped through Perry’s lips. His eyes were half-lidded, unfocused. He looked as overcome as she felt.
    Aria leaned by his ear. “We’ll pick that up when we’re alone.
    He laughed. “That better be soon.”
    Yeah. Hose me down now. But I digress.
    The twists were amazing, and I was shocked that the unlikely alliance that formed, and also very glad to see the return of some of the characters that I liked a lot but wasn't sure I would see again after the end of the first book.
    The depth of the characters just really amazes me. They are so complex and they really found a way into my heart. I learned so much more about Perry in this one, and it was such a joy to be in his head. It was difficult watching him grow into the position of Blood Lord, but it was worth every minute.
    I just loved the devotion and loyalty in this book. The measures that Aria and Perry would not only take for each other but their friends such as Roar and Cinder, and the people that they are connected to by leadership, family, or place they grew up.
    And while I loved Roar in the first book, he has gone to a whole other level in this one. He never fails to bring a smile to my face, but knowing he is in so much pain makes my heart hurt too. His friendship with Aria deepens even more in this one, and I really appreciate that. It is not a love thing at all, but shows the depths that you can care for someone without being IN love.
    This series has worked its way into my top ten and maybe even higher. Aria and Perry's romance is up there with my favorite couples and the cast of secondary characters, esp Roar is there as well.
    I appreciated the continuing world building in this one, especially a more detailed description of the aether. I can picture this world in my head and feel myself right in the story with the characters.
    The pacing was great. There was always character development or action to keep things moving, and I almost wanted to press slow motion at times to savor the happy and together moments of Aria and Perry before the next impending disaster. Because you know there will be one.
    While I of course am still craving more of this world and of Aria and Perry, I think that Through the Ever Night ended at a good spot and it didn't make me want to through my kindle because it felt like it stopped in the middle of a chapter, like some books do with cliffies. It was heart breaking though!!

    Bottom Line: Loved it even more than the 1st. Perfection. Lots of character growth, swoon moments and heartache.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Note: There are necessarily spoilers for Book One of this series but not for this second book in the "Under the Never Sky" trilogy.

    I loved Under the Never Sky; it was one of my “top ten” reads of the year. Rossi sets up a fascinating sociological confrontation in her post-apocalyptic world between those who live in sheltered pods (“Dwellers”) and those called "Savages" who were left on the perilous Outside.

    In some future time, a massive solar flare corrodes the earth’s protective magnetic field, allowing violent energy storms called “the Aether” to strike the earth and destroy much of it. The peril-filled landscape inhabited by the survivors is painted by Rossi with swirling Van-Gogh-like storm funnels roiling the exposed atmosphere. Both Dwellers and Outsiders have learned to survive in their own unique ways, but now the storms are intensifying, and both groups are in danger.

    In the first book, Aria, 17 and a pod dweller, gets evicted out into the open to prevent the secrets she discovered from being revealed. Her exposure should have meant her certain death, but she gets rescued by a “savage,” 18-year-old Perry (Peregrine). He was on his way to the pods to try and find his beloved nephew Talon, who had been captured by the Dwellers. Aria also wants to get (back) to the pods; she believes her mother is in danger there. Wary of each other, Aria and Perry reluctantly join forces to reach their common goal of infiltrating the pods. In the process, they come to see that they are not so different after all, and that in fact, they don’t want to be apart.

    This second book begins with Perry, now 19 and leader, or “Blood Lord” of his tribe – the Tides - trying to figure out how to get his people to accept Aria, a hated Dweller, into their midst; they still barely accept Perry as their leader! The two decide to pretend they aren’t involved romantically – that might be too much for the tribe. In fact, Aria fears even her very presence is undermining Perry’s authority, and she takes off in secret with Roar, Perry’s best friend. Roar is searching for Liv, his love who is Perry’s sister. And Aria is being blackmailed by one of the leaders of the pods, Counsul Hess, who is threatening to hurt Perry's nephew Talon if she doesn’t help Hess find a safe haven for the Dwellers.

    Meanwhile, back at the Tide compound, newcomers arrive, and one of them, a bold and beautiful woman named Kirra, causes Perry to question his faith in Aria. After all, she did run off with Roar, and indeed, she and Roar had undeniably become quite close. But when the compound comes under attack, Perry makes a discovery about himself and Kirra that clarifies to him what being a "Blood Lord" really means.

    Discussion: Book Two is also excellent, although some of the novelty and polarity of Book One is gone. But Rossi makes up for it by enabling us to deepen our knowledge of these very appealing characters, grow closer to them, and watch them mature. As they become stronger, they also learn how to use those strengths. Perry and Aria still have problems communicating, but they are trying to cope with that as well. As Perry remembered his father once advising him:

    "…love [is] like the waves in the sea, gentle and good sometimes, rough and terrible at others, but ... it [is] endless and stronger than the sky and the earth and everything in between.”

    Evaluation: As I noted about the first book, this series has it all: adventure, bravery, danger, suspense, tenderness, devotion, betrayal, and loyalty. Love of family and tribe are as important to this story as romantic love, and any of them can become inextricable by the process of “rendering.” Rendering is getting tied to someone in a bond that makes another’s needs your own, and makes it inconceivable for you not to have that person’s life bound up with your own. This series truly qualifies as a saga, and is one you won’t soon forget!

Book preview

Through the Ever Night - Veronica Rossi

1

PEREGRINE

Aria was here.

Perry followed her scent, moving swiftly through the night. He kept his stride even as he scanned the darkened woods, though his heart hammered in his chest. Roar had told him she was back on the outside, had even delivered a violet with a message as proof, but Perry wouldn’t believe it until he saw her.

He reached a rise of boulders and dropped his bow, quiver, and satchel. Then he jumped up, leaping from rock to rock until he stood at the top. The sky was coated with a thick layer of clouds that glowed softly with Aether light. He scanned the rolling hills, his gaze stopping at a barren stretch of land. Scorched, silver in color, it was a scar left by the winter’s storms. Much of his territory, two days to the west, looked the same.

Perry tensed as he spotted the tail of a campfire in the distance. He inhaled and caught the smoky scent on a cool gust. That had to be her. She was close.

Anything? Reef called up. He stood some twenty feet below. Sweat glistened on his deep brown skin, running along the scar that reached from the base of his nose to above his ear, dividing his cheek, and he was breathing heavily. Just a few months ago they’d been strangers. Now Reef was the head of his guard, seldom leaving his side.

Perry climbed down, landing with a soggy crunch on a patch of melting snow. She’s due east. A mile. Maybe less.

Reef drew a sleeve across his face, pushing his braids away and wiping off sweat. Usually he kept up without any effort, but two days at a driving pace had brought out the decade between them. You said she could help us find the Still Blue.

She will help, Perry said. I told you. She needs to find it, just as we do.

Reef strode up, coming to within a foot of Perry, and narrowed his eyes. You did tell me that. He tipped his head and inhaled, the gesture bold and animal. He didn’t downplay his Sense like Perry did. But that’s not why we’ve come after her, he said.

Perry couldn’t read his own tempers, but he could imagine the scents Reef had taken in. Eagerness, green and sharp and alive. Desire, thick and musky. Impossible to miss. Reef was a Scire too. He knew exactly what Perry felt right now, moments away from seeing Aria. Scents never lied.

It’s one reason, Perry said tightly. He picked up his things, shouldering them with an impatient tug. Camp here with the others. I’ll be back by sunup. He turned to go.

Sunup, Perry? You think the Tides want to lose another Blood Lord?

Perry froze and then faced him again. I’ve been out here a hundred times on my own.

Reef nodded. Sure. As a hunter. He took a water skin from his leather satchel, his movements casual and slow though he was still out of breath. You’re more than that now.

Perry stared into the woods. Twig and Gren were out there, listening and watching for danger. They’d been protecting him since he left his territory. Reef was right. Here in the borderlands, survival was the only rule. Without his guard, his life would be at risk. Perry let out a slow breath, his hope of spending a night alone with Aria vanishing.

Reef stoppered the cork on his water skin with a firm thump. Well? What does my lord command?

Perry shook his head at the formal address—Reef’s way of reminding him of his responsibility. Like he could forget. "Your lord will take one hour alone," he said, and jogged away.

Peregrine, hold on. You need to—

One hour, Perry called over his shoulder. Whatever Reef wanted, it could wait.

When he was sure he’d left Reef behind, Perry firmed his grip on his bow and broke into a run. Scents flashed past as he threaded through the trees. The rich, promising smell of wet earth. The smoke from Aria’s campfire. And her scent. Violets, sweet and rare.

Perry relished the burn in his legs and the crisp air flowing through his lungs. Winter was a time for holding in place as the Aether storms wreaked havoc, and he hadn’t been in the open like this for too long—not since he’d taken Aria to the Dweller Pod in search of her mother. He’d been telling himself she was back where she belonged, with her people, and he had his own tribe to take care of. Then, just days ago, Roar had showed up at the compound with Cinder and told him she was here on the outside. From that moment he could only think of being with her again.

Perry tore down a slope soft with new grass and recent rain, panning the woods. It was darker beneath the trees, the Aether light filtering softly through the canopy, but every branch and leaf stood in sharp contrast, thanks to his Night-Sighted eyes. With each step, the scent of Aria’s campfire grew stronger. In a flash he remembered her game of sneaking up, silent as a shadow, and planting a kiss on his cheek. He couldn’t keep the smile from coming to his lips.

Up ahead he spotted movement—a blur through the trees. Aria ran into view. Sleek. Silent. Intent as she searched the area. When she saw him, her eyes widened in surprise, but her stride didn’t slow and neither did his. He shed his things, dropping them where they fell, and sprinted. Next thing he knew, she slammed into his chest, solid and fragrant in his arms.

Perry held her against him. I missed you, he whispered in her ear. He couldn’t hold her close enough. I should never have let you go. I missed you so much.

Words tumbled out of him. He said a dozen things he hadn’t meant to say, until she drew back and smiled up at him. Then he couldn’t speak at all. He took in the arch of her slender eyebrows, black like her hair, and the cleverness in her gray eyes. Fair and finely made, she was beautiful. Even more than he remembered.

You’re here, she said. I wasn’t sure if you’d come.

I left as soon as—

Before he could finish, her arms closed around his neck and they were kissing—a clumsy, hasty kiss. They were both breathing too hard. Smiling too much. Perry wanted to slow down and savor everything, but he couldn’t find a scrap of patience. He wasn’t sure if he started laughing first or if she did.

I can do much better than that, he said, just as she said, You’re taller. I swear you’ve grown.

Taller? he said. I hope not.

You are, she said. She studied his face like she wanted to know everything about him. She nearly already did. During their time together, he’d told her things he’d never said to anyone. Aria’s smile faded as her gaze stopped at the chain around his neck. I heard what happened. She reached up, and the weight at his collarbone lifted. You’re a Blood Lord now. She spoke softly, more to herself than to him. This is … It’s stunning.

He peered down, watching her fingers run over the silver links. It’s heavy, he said. This was the best moment he’d had since he’d taken the chain months ago.

Aria met his eyes, her temper cooling. I’m sorry about Vale.

Perry looked across the shadowed woods and swallowed through the sudden tightness in his throat. The memory of his brother’s death kept him awake nights. Sometimes, when he was alone, it kept him from breathing. Gently he took Aria’s hand from the chain and slipped his fingers through hers.

Later, he said. They had months of catching up to do. He wanted to talk to her about her mother. Had wanted to comfort her since he’d heard the news from Roar. But not now, when he’d just gotten her back. Later … all right?

She nodded, her eyes warm with understanding. Later. She turned his hand to see the scars Cinder had given him. Pale and thick as trails of wax, they made a web from his knuckles to his wrist. Does this still bother you? she asked, tracing the scars with her fingers.

No. It reminds me of you … of when you bandaged it. He lowered his head, bringing his cheek next to hers. That was the first time you touched me without hating it. This close, her scent was everywhere, running through him, somehow stirring and mellowing him at the same time.

Did Roar tell you where I’m going? she asked.

He did. Perry straightened and looked up. He couldn’t see the currents of Aether, but he knew they were there, flowing above the clouds. Each winter, the Aether storms were growing stronger, bringing fire and ruin. Perry knew they would only get worse. His tribe’s survival depended on finding a land rumored to be free of the Aether—the same thing Aria was searching for. He told me you’re looking for the Still Blue.

You saw Bliss.

He nodded. They had gone to the Pod together in search of her mother and found it destroyed by Aether. Domes the size of hills had collapsed. Walls ten feet thick had been crushed like eggshells.

It’s only a matter of time before that happens to Reverie, she continued. The Still Blue is our only chance. Everything I’ve heard points to the Horns. To Sable.

Perry’s pulse quickened at the mention of the name. His sister, Liv, should have married the Horns’ Blood Lord last spring, but she’d spooked and run away. Liv still hadn’t appeared. He’d have to deal with Sable soon enough.

The Horns’ city is still locked in by ice, he said. Rim won’t be reachable until the pass to the north thaws. Could be a few weeks before then.

I know, she said. I thought it would have cleared by now. I’ll go north as soon as it does.

She stepped away from him abruptly and scanned the woods, her head angling quick and sharp. He’d been there when she’d learned she was an Aud. Every sound had been a discovery. Now he watched as her attention shifted naturally to the noises of the night.

Someone’s coming, she said.

Reef, Perry said. He’s one of my men. No way had it already been an hour. Not even close. There are more nearby.

Perry caught the steep dive in her temper, a bracing, cool drift. In the next moment his heartbeat faltered. He hadn’t felt tethered to another’s emotions in months. Since he’d last been with her.

When are you going back? she asked.

Soon. Morning.

I understand. She looked from him to the chain, her expression growing distant. The Tides need you.

Perry shook his head. She didn’t understand. I didn’t come out here to see you for a night, Aria. Come back to the Tides with me. It’s not safe out here, and—

I don’t need help, Perry.

That’s not what I meant. He was too skitty to order his thoughts. Before he could say anything more, she took another step away, her hands hovering over the blades at her belt. Seconds later, Reef emerged from the woods, square shoulders hunched as he walked toward them. Perry cursed under his breath. He needed more time with her. Alone.

Reef’s steps caught when he saw Aria alert and armed. Probably not what he’d expected from a Dweller. Perry noticed her wary expression too. With the scar across his face and his challenging stare, Reef looked like someone to avoid.

Perry cleared his throat. Aria, this is Reef, head of my guard. It felt strange introducing two people who meant so much to him. Like they should already know each other.

Reef gave a tight nod, aimed at no one, and then shot Perry a hard look. A word, he said sharply, before he stalked off.

Anger streaked through Perry at being spoken to that way, but he trusted Reef. He looked at Aria. I’ll be right back.

He hadn’t gone far when Reef wheeled around, his braids swinging out. "I don’t have to tell you what your temper’s like right now, do I? It’s the scent of stupidity. You’ve brought us out here chasing after a girl who’s got you so—"

She’s an Aud, Perry interrupted. She can hear you.

Reef jabbed a finger in the air. "I want you to hear me, Peregrine. You have a tribe to think about. You can’t afford to lose your head over a girl—especially not a Dweller. Have you forgotten what happened? Because I promise you the tribe hasn’t."

The kidnappings weren’t her fault. She had nothing to do with them. And she’s only half Dweller.

"She’s a Mole, Perry! One of them. That’s all anyone’s going to see."

They’ll do as I say.

Or maybe they’ll turn on you behind your back. How do you think they’ll take to seeing you with her? Vale might have traded with the Dwellers, but he never brought one into his bed.

Perry shot forward, grabbing Reef by the vest. They stood, locked, inches apart. Reef’s temper brought an icy burn to the back of Perry’s tongue. You’ve made your point. Perry let Reef go and stepped back, drawing a few breaths. Silence stretched out between them, too loud after their arguing.

He saw the problem with bringing Aria back to the Tides. The tribe would blame her for the missing children, regardless of her innocence, because she was a Dweller. He knew it wouldn’t be easy—not at first—but he’d find a way to make it work. Whatever needed to be done next, he wanted her with him and it was his decision as Blood Lord.

Perry glanced to where Aria waited, then back at Reef. You know what?

What? Reef snapped.

You’re a terrible judge of time.

Reef smirked. He ran a hand over the back of his head and sighed. So I am. When he spoke again, his voice had lost its bite. Perry, I don’t want to see you make this mistake. He nodded at the chain. I know what that cost you. I don’t want to watch you lose it.

I know what I’m doing. Perry gripped the cool metal in his hand. I’ve got this.

2

ARIA

Aria stared at the trees, listening to Perry’s footsteps grow louder as he returned. She saw the gleam of the chain at his neck first and then his eyes, flashing in the darkness. They’d come together in such a rush before. Now, as he strode toward her, she took her first good look at him.

He was impressive. Much more than she remembered. He’d grown taller, as she’d first thought, and more muscular through the shoulders, settling into his lanky height. In the dim light she saw a dark coat and pants with fitted, clean lines, not the battered, patched-up clothes of the hunter she’d met in the fall. His blond hair was shorter, falling in layers that framed his face, so different from the long twisting waves she’d known before.

He was nineteen, but he seemed older than her friends in Reverie. How many of her friends had been through what he had? How many had hundreds of people to look after? None. They came from totally different worlds. Aether, she thought. That was the only thing Dwellers and Outsiders had in common. It threatened them both.

Perry stopped a few feet away. Pale light fell on the strong planes of his face, and she noticed shadows under his eyes. He ran a hand over the fine scruff on his jaw. The brushing sound was so familiar, Aria could almost feel the gold bristles beneath her fingertips.

Sorry about Reef.

It’s all right, she said, but it wasn’t. Reef’s words echoed in her mind. Dweller, he’d called her. Mole. Bitter insults. Words she hadn’t heard in months. At Marron’s, she’d fit in like she belonged.

Her gaze dropped to the ground between them. Three paces for her. Two for him. Moments ago they’d been pressed together. Now they stood apart like strangers. Like everything had just changed.

A mistake. Reef had said that, too. Was he right? Maybe I should go.

No—stay. Perry stepped forward and took her hand. Forget what he said. He’s got a temper.... Worse than mine.

She looked up at him. Worse?

His mouth lifted into the crooked smile she’d missed. Almost worse. He shifted closer, his expression growing serious. I didn’t come here to see you for a night, or to offer to help you. I’m here because I want to be with you. It could be weeks before the pass to the north thaws. We’ll wait until it does, then search for the Still Blue together. He paused, his gaze focused completely on her. Come back with me, Aria. Be with me.

Something brilliant unfolded inside of her at the sound of those words. She memorized them as she would a song: every note, unhurried, spoken in his deep, warm timbre. Whatever happened, she’d keep those words. She wanted nothing more than to say yes, but she couldn’t avoid the anxiety that swirled in her stomach.

I want to, she said. But it’s not just the two of us anymore. He had his responsibility to the Tides, and she had her own pressures. Consul Hess, Reverie’s Director of Security, had threatened Perry’s nephew, Talon, if Aria didn’t bring him the location of the Still Blue. It was the reason—one of the reasons—she’d come back to the outside.

Aria looked into Perry’s eyes and couldn’t bring herself to tell him about Hess’s blackmail. There was nothing he could do. Telling him would only make him worry. Reef said the tribe would turn on you, she said instead.

Reef’s wrong. Perry’s gaze flicked to the woods in annoyance. It may take them some time to adjust, but they will. He squeezed her hand, a smile lighting in his eyes. Say yes. I know you want to. Roar will beat me if I show up without you, and there’s another reason you should come. Maybe it’ll help you decide.

He slid his hand up her arm and ran his thumb over her bicep. The feel of his archer’s calluses, somehow both rough and soft, sent a thrill through her. She heard the trees rustle with a breeze, and then felt it brush cool against her cheeks. No one planted her as firmly in her skin as he did.

Perry was talking. She had to backtrack in her thoughts to catch up. You need Markings. It’s dangerous not to have them. Concealing a Sense is deceitful, Aria. People are killed for hiding them.

Roar told me, she said. She’d been hiding out in the woods since leaving Marron’s, so her lack of Markings hadn’t been a problem yet. But once she went north, she’d come across other people. She couldn’t deny that she’d be much safer with the Audile tattoos.

Only a Blood Lord can warrant them, Perry said. I happen to know one.

You’d support me getting Markings? Even though I’m only half Outsider?

He tipped his head to the side, blond waves falling across his eyes. Yes. I very much want to.

Perry, what about … Aria trailed off, not sure she wanted to voice the question that had plagued her for months, but she had to know. Even if it meant hearing something that would crush her. You told me you’d only be with another Scire, and I’m not … She bit her lip and finished the sentence in the safety of her thoughts. I’m not like you. I’m not what you said you wanted.

Her face warmed as he watched her. No matter what she said or didn’t say, he’d scent the depth of her insecurity.

He shifted closer, tracing the line of her jaw. You changed the way I think about a lot of things. That’s only one of them.

Suddenly she couldn’t imagine leaving him. She had to find a way to make this work. The tribe would hate her for being a Dweller—she was sure of that. And if she and Perry arrived at the compound hand in hand, the Tides would lose all faith in his judgment. But what if she and Perry turned the focus onto something else? Onto something they both needed? An idea took shape in her mind.

Did you tell the Tides anything about me? she asked.

He frowned. The question seemed to catch him off balance. I told a few people you’d help find the Still Blue.

That’s all?

"I haven’t talked about us with anyone, if that’s what you mean. He shrugged. It’s private.... Between us."

"We should keep it that way. I’ll go back with you as an ally, and we’ll keep us out of it."

He laughed, the sound flat and humorless. "You’re serious? You mean lie?"

It wouldn’t be lying. It’s no different from what you just said: keeping it private. We could ease the tribe into it that way. We won’t talk about us until we have a better idea of how they’ll take it. Roar would keep quiet if we asked him. Would Reef?

Perry nodded, his jaw clenched. He’s pledged to me. He’ll do anything I ask of him.

The sound of a branch snapping pulled her attention to the darkened woods. Three distinct strides took form, one heavier than the others. The rest of Perry’s guard was on the way. They spoke in quiet tones, yet each voice was unique to her ears, as singular as the features of a person’s face. The others are coming.

Let them come, Perry said. They’re my men, Aria. I don’t have to hide anything from them.

She wanted to believe him, but they had to be smart. As a new leader, he needed his tribe behind him. But she couldn’t deny that being Marked would improve her chances of finding the Still Blue, to say nothing of the advantage Perry would provide on her journey to Rim. He was a hunter, a warrior. A survivor. More at ease in the borderlands than anyone she knew. All good reasons to go to the Tides for a few weeks before searching for the Still Blue. She and Perry would get everything they wanted if they just showed a little caution.

Perry’s guards were closing in, their footsteps growing louder by the second. Aria stood on her toes, resting her hands on his chest. This is the best way—the safest, she whispered. Trust me.

She pressed her lips quickly to his, but it wasn’t close to being enough. She took his face between her hands, feeling the soft scruff she’d missed, and kissed him again firmly, fiercely, before she backed away.

When Reef and two other men appeared, she and Perry stood several paces apart—the distance between strangers.

3

PEREGRINE

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