JUST AS I FEARED,” SANDOR muttered as he marched through the main entrance of Elwin’s colorful home.
Sophie peeked around his huge gray body. “Really? You were afraid we were going to find this?”
The downstairs level of Splendor Plains was framed by glass walls with panes in every tint and tone of the spectrum—a giant, empty space, save for a single armchair and table in the center, which were both toppled over. Elwin and Ro were crouched beside them, in the middle of some sort of bizarre showdown. The ogre princess held several stuffed animals with her sword pressed against their throats, while Elwin seemed to be using telekinesis to make a dozen shimmering vials hover around Ro’s head.
“Hey, Dr. Sparkles could’ve spared his snuggle buddies if he’d taken me to find Funkyhair!” Ro shouted, angling her blade to target the stuffed boobrie. “Instead, he chose to be stubborn. So now his little birdie needs to pay!”
“Harm one thread on Boo Boo,” Elwin warned, “and I’ll have glitter pouring out of your body for the next three days!”
Ro gritted her pointed teeth. “I told you, I’m not afraid of your elf-y potions! But it looks like I won’t need your help anymore.” She nudged her chin toward the letter still clutched in Sophie’s hand. “Let me guess. Captain Mopeypants told you he’s running away forever, and you’ve dragged Gigantor here on a quest to save our reckless boy from his terrible life choices.”
“Pretty much,” Sophie agreed. “Any idea where he went?”
“Not at the moment.” Ro sheathed her sword with a little more force than necessary. “I’d been planning to catch him at your place, since I knew he’d never disappear without some sort of mushy goodbye—but someone refused to take me.”
“Refused?” Sophie stumbled back when Elwin nodded.
“It’s not how it sounds,” he promised. “I found Ro crawling around upstairs with two dead legs, and—”
“Dead legs?” Sandor interrupted.
“Hunkyhair commanded me to sleep so I couldn’t stop him from leaving,” Ro admitted. “And his command to wake me up only worked halfway. I was strong enough to sit up and shred his ridiculous bedsheet bonds. But even after I freed my legs, they still dragged for a little while.”
“It was more than a little while,” Elwin argued as the floating medicine vials drifted into the satchel slung across his shoulders. “Took me nearly an hour to get her circulation back to normal. And by then, it would’ve been too late to catch up with Keefe.”
“You didn’t know that! I’m sure he went home to Daddy Dearest’s to pack the rest of his stuff before he went over to Blondie’s—and I’m sure he spent a while at Blondie’s feeling all weepy and conflicted about abandoning her. We should’ve checked!”
“You should have!” Sophie agreed, shooting a death glare at Elwin.
He’d saved her life so many times, she never would’ve expected him to let Keefe down like this.
Elwin scrubbed his fingers through his dark, messy hair. “Pretty sure I can guess what you’re thinking, Sophie. But… I’ve seen how terrified Keefe is to use his voice right now—and how hard he’s fought to stop himself from giving any commands. So if he was willing to tell Ro to sleep and didn’t even stick around long enough to make sure she fully woke up, something big must’ve scared him away. And maybe we should trust that he knows what he’s doing.”
“Except—spoiler alert—Funkyhair never knows what he’s doing,” Ro argued, tossing Boo Boo at Elwin’s head.
Elwin caught the fluffy boobrie with his mind. “I think he actually did this time.”
“Ugh, you sound like Grady,” Sophie grumbled, still not sure she’d forgiven her adoptive father for letting Keefe go. “I had to remind him how little Keefe knows about humans and how easily he could end up in jail—or worse.”
Elwin winced.
Ro muttered a string of inappropriate Ogreish words. “I’m assuming that means our boy’s planning to hide with the only creatures that are even more annoying than goblins?” She flung the rest of the stuffed animals at Elwin. “See what you’ve done?”
Elwin scrambled to catch his fluffy friends. “Hey, we all know that even if we’d dragged Keefe back, he just would’ve run away again—maybe after using commands that caused serious problems.”
“Not if I’d gagged him and chained him up in my father’s dungeon!” Ro snapped back.
“Or if I’d talked to him!” Sophie added—even though some of her recent conversations with Keefe hadn’t exactly gone well.
Elwin hugged his snuggle buddies. “I know this is hard to accept. I’ve been struggling with it too. But… Keefe needs to take control of his new abilities—and I think he might have to do that on his own. I’d been hoping that Kesler and I could create elixirs to help, or that Dex could build some sort of gadget. But so far we’re getting nowhere—and until we do, Keefe’s going to make himself sick worrying about hurting someone or getting manipulated by his mother or—”
“That’s why the dungeon would be perfect!” Ro interrupted. “I also know a lovely bog that looks and smells like all the vomit in the world went there to die. A few days floating in that sludge and our boy will be begging to head back to Sparkle Town. Except now we have to find him first—and apparently he could be anywhere on the planet, because of course he decided to hide with the species you elves gave way too much land to, but we can discuss your Council’s absurd ruling choices another time. First… let’s think.” She twisted one of her bright red pigtails around her clawed finger. “You lived with humans for a while, right, Blondie? Is there anywhere that’d be a particularly good spot for sitting around, feeling sorry for yourself?”
“You’re not going to the Forbidden Cities!” Sandor reminded Sophie.
“Try and stop us!” Ro countered.
“The problem,” Sophie cut in before Sandor could draw his sword, “is that Keefe spun to a random facet on his pathfinder when he leaped away. Logic isn’t going to help us find him.”
Ro heaved a dramatic sigh. “Then I don’t suppose there’s some fancy mind trick you can use to track him down, is there, Little Miss Moonlark?”
“Not from this far away. I can’t hear his thoughts if he ignores me. And I can’t track his mind if I don’t know where I’m supposed to feel.”
“Ugh. Yet another reason I’ll never understand why you elves care so much about your elf-y abilities.”
Sandor’s snort sounded like agreement—and Sophie didn’t necessarily blame either of them. The Black Swan had modified her genetics and given her more abilities than any elf had ever had before. And still, more often than not, she was outmatched and underprepared.
“Can’t you track your charge?” Sandor asked Ro. “Surely you keep him covered in one of those enzymes you ogres love so much.”
Sophie’s heart did a backflip. “That’s right—I forgot about aromark!”
But Ro shook her head. “My boy made me promise I wouldn’t expose him to anything that would require melting off his skin if we needed to remove it. And after what his mommy’s put him through, I figured… fair enough.”
Sophie couldn’t fault Ro for that—but Sandor apparently could.
“A bodyguard’s job is to keep track of their charge, not cater to their wishes!” he snapped.
“No, our job is to protect our charge, which I can do just fine with these.” Ro waved her hands in front of the rows of daggers strapped to her muscled thighs.
“How are those protecting him right now?” Sandor countered.
“I’ll admit, I wasn’t fully prepared for my boy to learn how to knock everyone out with a single word.” She shuddered. “But you would’ve been just as dead-legged as I was—and if you think those silly disks you like to sew into Blondie’s clothes would’ve changed anything, you’re delusional. He would’ve ripped those out in two seconds.”
“Only if he could find them.” Sandor’s smile was so smug, it made Sophie want to tear through everything she was wearing.
But it didn’t matter. “Fighting isn’t going to help us find Keefe,” Sophie reminded them.
“It isn’t,” Ro agreed. “But for the record, if I have been giving my boy a little more breathing room, it’s only because I could tell he was on the verge of a meltdown. Plus, I was waiting for him to realize that he’s looking at these new powers all wrong. Sure, accidentally numbing his friends is less-than-awesome—but he also doesn’t have to fear Mommy Dearest anymore! Next time she shows up, he can just command her to sleep. Or better yet, tell her to jump off a sparkly building—problem solved!”
Sophie wished it would be that easy. “I’m sure Lady Gisela has a way to protect herself.”
The Neverseen were always five steps ahead.
Sometimes ten.
Or fifty.
Then again, she’d managed to find their secret storehouse and burn it to the ground. That’s why the inferno had felt like Sophie’s first real victory—and why she had to be ready to make lots more terrifying decisions.
“May I?” Ro asked, pointing to Keefe’s letter.
“There’s nothing useful in there,” Sophie warned. But she still handed over the paper as she turned to pace. “Did Keefe say anything before he left?”
“Not that I know of,” Elwin told her. “But I was down here with earplugs in while he tested the Imparter with Dex.”
“They wanted to see if Hunkyhair could talk with a gadget and not feel the urge to give any commands,” Ro explained. “Which totally worked, by the way.”
Sophie halted midstep. “Something happened during that conversation, didn’t it?”
“I’m assuming so, since Keefe left right after,” Elwin said. “But I wasn’t listening.”
“Hang on! How are we not talking about this?” Ro pointed to a sentence near the end of Keefe’s letter.
Sophie realized what it said the same second Ro shifted to a fairly convincing impersonation of Keefe’s voice.
“ ‘You mean a lot to me, Foster. More than you’ll ever know.’ ”
Sophie lunged for the paper.
“Nope! No destroying the evidence—and don’t even think about telling me you don’t know what he meant by that, Blondie! Your cheeks are way too red!”
Sophie tugged her hair forward.
She’d been so thrown by the rest of Keefe’s message that she’d forgotten that part was in there—and her brain honestly had no idea what to do with it.
It almost felt like Keefe was trying to tell her…
But he couldn’t mean that.
…Could he?
“Whoa. I think the Great Foster Oblivion might actually be over!” Ro pumped her fist. “Now I’m even more excited to drag Hunkyhair home! You two can have the talk and—”
“Are you serious right now?” Sophie lunged for the letter again, managing to snatch it back this time—though part of the paper tore in the process. “Two minutes ago you were threatening to behead a bunch of stuffed animals because Elwin wouldn’t help you find Keefe. And now you’re wasting time teasing me about some throwaway line—”
“That line is not a throwaway! You know it. I know it. Dr. Sparkles knows it. Shoot, even Gigantor knows it—look how intently he’s studying his feet right now. But… I suppose you might have a point about priorities. Sorry. I’m just so excited! Do you have any idea how long I’ve been waiting for this? It’s going to be so adorable when you two finally…”
She made a disgustingly loud smooching sound—and Sophie hated her brain for imagining it.
Hated how sweaty her palms felt even more.
She stuffed the letter into her pocket and crossed her arms, trying to dry her hands on her sleeves. “Can we focus, please? I need to know what happened when Keefe talked to Dex.”
Ro’s smile faded. “You should probably ask your techy friend about that.”
“That’ll waste more time.”
“Not really. I only understood some of the stuff they were freaking out about, and if you’re going to have to cross-check everything, you might as well start at the source, right?”
Sophie really hated that Ro had made a good point—and she was still tempted to whip her Imparter at Ro’s head like a goblin throwing star. But she fought the urge, digging out the small, flat gadget and telling it, “Show me Dex Dizznee.”
The Imparter stayed blank.
Sophie tapped the screen harder. “Dex Dizznee!”
More seconds crawled by.
“Is that thing working?” Ro asked. “Or is he ignoring you?”
“I have no idea.” Sophie held the Imparter closer to her mouth and repeated Dex’s name.
Still nothing.
She rubbed her temples and turned back to Ro. “Okay, why don’t you tell me everything you remember, and if I need clarification, I’ll—”
“Sophie?” Dex’s face flashed across the screen. “Sorry… I was, um… Is everything okay?”
“I was about to ask you the same question.” His periwinkle eyes looked red and puffy, and his pale skin was super blotchy. “What’s wrong? And don’t say ‘nothing,’ because it’s pretty obvious that you’ve been crying.”
“No, I haven’t!” He swiped at his nose and cheeks. “I’m fine.”
It might’ve been the worst lie in the history of lying.
Sophie sighed. “We don’t have time to argue, okay? I need to know what happened between you and Keefe.”
All the color drained from Dex’s face. “Why? What did he tell you?”
“Nothing. But… he ran away.”
Dex closed his eyes and somehow managed to turn even paler. “You’re sure?”
“Unfortunately, yeah.” She stopped herself from mentioning Keefe’s letter—no need to relive that humiliation. “I’m still figuring out how to find him, but—”
“Are you sure that’s a good idea?” Dex interrupted. “I mean… maybe he needs to be alone for a while, you know? Might be safer.”
“Seriously?” Sophie asked.
What was wrong with everybody?
“Keefe needs help!” she snapped. “And to know that people still care about him and believe in him no matter what. It’s also way safer here than with the humans—”
Dex’s eyes popped open. “Wait—he’s in the Forbidden Cities?”
“Yep. And he doesn’t know how to survive there. He also doesn’t have any money—and he can’t accidentally rob an ATM like some people.”
Sophie had hoped the tiny tease might lighten the mood—but Dex just looked away, chewing his lip so hard, his teeth left dents in his skin.
“Maybe if you tell me why Keefe left, I’ll understand what you’re so afraid of,” Sophie suggested. “Don’t you trust me?”
“It’s not about trust.”
“It’s always about trust—and Keefe’s life is on the line, Dex. I know that sounds dramatic, but it’s true. Every minute we waste is a minute when he could be hurt, or arrested—or things I don’t even want to think about.”
An eternity passed before Dex said, “I might be able to track him down.”
He disappeared from the screen and reappeared holding a small copper cube with twisted wires sticking out of it. “If he’s still wearing his registry pendant, I can find the signal. Just give me a minute.”
Sophie counted every second.
By four hundred nineteen, Dex had rearranged the wires a zillion different ways—and Sophie had tugged out two itchy eyelashes.
“I’m assuming he removed his pendant?” she guessed.
Dex set the gadget aside. “Sorry.”
“Ugh, the one time we needed our boy to be clueless!” Ro unsheathed one of her daggers and stabbed the air. “Got any other techy tricks?”
Dex shook his head. “Keefe doesn’t wear a nexus anymore—”
“What about his panic switch?” Sophie held up her slightly lopsided ring, wishing she’d thought of it earlier. “You put trackers in them, didn’t you?”
“I did. But… I never gave one to Keefe. I made yours first, remember? And then I made all the others while Keefe was off with the Neverseen—and I kept meaning to make him one after he got back, but there were always other projects I had to work on, you know?”
Sophie did know. But she couldn’t quite keep the disappointment out of her voice when she said, “That’s okay.”
“I’m sorry,” Dex mumbled. “I wish I could help.”
“You can. Tell me what happened when you tested the Imparter. If it’s easier to talk in person, I could come there—”
“NO!”
Dex disappeared from the screen, followed by a series of thuds that sounded like he was barricading his door.
“What do you think I’m going to do?” Sophie called after him. “Leap there and drag the secrets out of your mind?”
Honestly, she was tempted to do exactly that when Dex called back, “Just promise you won’t come here, okay?”
“Why not?”
“Because”—more thuds—“it’s… um… chaos right now!”
“It’s always chaos there! I’ve met the triplets, remember?”
“I know. But… Lex and Bex manifested, so it’s extra insane. Lex is covering everything in ice, and Bex is trying to walk through every wall.”
“Then why don’t you come here? Or we can meet at Havenfield. Or—”
“I can’t.”
“Can’t? Or won’t?”
“To save time,” Ro jumped in, “it might help if I mention that I heard your whole conversation with Hunkyhair. I told Blondie to ask you about it because I don’t understand all your elf-y weirdnesses—but if you’d rather be a pain, I can tell her about—”
“STOP!” Dex rushed back into view, and for a second Sophie wondered if he was going to hang up on them. Instead he took a long, shaky breath and said, “The thing is… it’s not really my secret to share.”
“Whose is it?” Sophie asked.
“I can’t tell you that, either.”
“Well then, it’s a good thing I can!” Ro draped her arm around Sophie’s shoulders. “I’ll give him ten seconds to start talking, or I’m taking over. Ten… nine… eight…”
“Please stop.” The crack in Dex’s voice made Sophie’s heart feel twenty pounds heavier.
“I don’t want to hurt you, Dex. Or force you to share something you’re not comfortable with. But Keefe’s out there right now, lost in some human city with no food, no ID, no place to go, and no one to help him. I have no idea how I’m going to find him—but I have to try. And if I do manage to track him down, I need to be able to convince him to come back. He thinks he’s too dangerous to be in the Lost Cities—and I won’t be able to prove him wrong if I don’t know why he believes that. So please, tell me what you know—I promise I won’t tell anyone.”
Dex buried his face in his hands.
It felt like a year passed before he mumbled, “No one else can hear this. In fact…”
He disappeared from the screen again, and a loud click echoed in the background, followed by a steady crackling hum, like static.
“That’s my silencer,” he explained as he stepped back in front of the Imparter. “It guarantees that no one can eavesdrop—over here at least.”
“I guess that’s my cue,” Elwin said, making Sophie jump. “Forgot I was here, did ya? Don’t worry, I won’t mention anything I’ve already heard—not that it’s made a whole lot of sense.” He turned to head for the stairs, shoving earplugs in as he walked. “I’ll be in my room.”
“What about Sandor?” Dex asked.
Sandor leaned closer to the screen. “I go where Sophie goes. And I stay where she stays.”
“Aw, come on, Gigantor!” Ro whined. “We’re finally getting somewhere! I can protect Blondie—”
“That’s debatable,” Sandor interrupted. “But I’m far more concerned about the two of you running off to the Forbidden Cities.”
“I won’t go anywhere without you,” Sophie promised.
“Besides, I thought you had trackers sewn into her clothes,” Ro reminded him with a smirk. “Surely Mr. Perfect Bodyguard would be able to catch us if we tried to—”
“We’re not going to try anything!” Sophie cut in. “I swear on Ella—and Wynn and Luna!”
Sandor cracked his knuckles. “I’ll be right outside, watching you through the windows.”
Ro snorted. “Because that doesn’t sound creepy!”
Sandor slammed the door so hard, the glass walls rattled.
“Okay, start talking,” Sophie told Dex.
He turned a vomit-y shade of green. “I… don’t know how to say this.”
“Then blurt it out—it doesn’t have to be a big, fancy speech.”
“The shorter, the better!” Ro added.
Dex swallowed hard and closed his eyes. “Okay… so… Keefe manifested another ability. We’re not a hundred percent sure how it works, but… it seems like he can sense if someone is going to manifest and tell what ability they’ll get.”
Sophie let the words tumble around her head.
“Why is that such a bad thing?” she had to ask.
“THANK YOU!” Ro shouted. “Glad I’m not the only one who thinks Tech-Boy and Hunkyhair are being way overdramatic!”
“You seriously don’t see how scary that is?” Dex asked.
Sophie shrugged. “I can see how Keefe might have a ton of people asking him what their ability is going to be. Kind of like what happened to Councillor Terik with his descrying. But Terik just stopped doing readings.”
“Yeah, well, descrying only measures someone’s potential,” Dex reminded her. “Abilities define us for the rest of our lives.”
“For the record, that’s where you elves lose me,” Ro noted.
“Me too,” Sophie said quietly. “And that still doesn’t sound that bad, Dex, so I’m assuming there’s more you haven’t told me.”
Dex glanced over his shoulder again, then leaned closer to the Imparter and whispered, “We’re pretty sure Keefe can make someone manifest.”
“How would you know…?” Sophie’s voice trailed off as she answered her own question. “You think Keefe made Rex and Bex manifest?”
“Lex and Bex,” Dex corrected, choking strangely on the names. He had to clear his throat twice before he could add, “Keefe was around them yesterday, and he said Lex’s hand felt super cold, and Bex’s hand felt weirdly squishy—and no one else could feel that. Then today Lex manifested as a Froster, and Bex manifested as a Phaser. No way that’s a coincidence.”
Sophie had to agree. But she also wasn’t ready to make as huge of a leap. “Couldn’t Keefe have just been sensing what was about to happen?”
“He could—but given how young they are, it seems more likely that he caused it. And if he did…”
Sophie tried to find an end to that sentence with the right amount of dun dun dunnnnnnn.
“I still don’t get why Keefe ran away,” she admitted. “Even if he can trigger abilities, he’s just speeding up something that’s going to happen anyway, right? And Mr. Forkle has triggered abilities—”
“That’s different,” Dex cut in. “There was no guarantee that what Mr. Forkle did would work—well, except with you, but you’re… you know…”
“Weird?” Sophie finished for him.
“I was going to say unique,” Dex corrected.
“Suuuuuuure you were.”
Her smile faded when Dex didn’t return it.
He looked so serious.
So sad.
So… scared.
“What aren’t you telling me?” she mumbled.
She tried replaying the conversation, looking for any clue she might’ve missed.
The only thing that stood out was Dex saying that Keefe’s ability was different from what Mr. Forkle did to trigger her abilities.
“So… Mr. Forkle can’t guarantee that someone will manifest,” she said slowly. “Does that mean Keefe… can?”
Dex’s eyes welled with tears. “No.”
She was about to ask how he could be so sure when she remembered something he’d told her earlier.
It’s not really my secret to share.
She’d assumed he’d meant Keefe. But now all she could think about was the fact that only two of the triplets had manifested.
A lump lodged in her throat, making it hard to choke out her next question. But she cleared it away and whispered, “Was Rex there when Keefe touched Bex’s and Lex’s hands?”
Dex’s tears spilled over—which pretty much answered her question. But he still said, “Keefe said Rex’s hand felt empty somehow. And… he felt the same thing from my dad.”
“Oh.”
The tiny word seemed to pulse, growing louder with every beat until the sound filled the enormous room.
So did the word none of them said.
Talentless.
More tears dripped down Dex’s cheeks, and Sophie felt her own eyes turn watery.
She wanted to insist it was a mistake. After all, Keefe was barely beginning to understand his power.
But truth always felt different.
It carried a heavier weight.
“Promise me you won’t tell Rex,” Dex whispered, drying his face with his sleeve.
“He doesn’t know?”
Dex shook his head. “He’s already been sobbing most of the day because he’s worried it might happen. Can you imagine how he’d feel if he knew for sure? He still has years before he gets to the point where everyone will give up on him—unless the Council finds out what Keefe can do and makes him start testing everyone in ability detecting at Foxfire.”
Sophie sucked in a breath. “Do you think they’d do that?”
“I wouldn’t put it past them. It’d make it way easier to decide who belongs at Foxfire and who doesn’t. And who knows? They might even start testing everyone at birth. I’m sure they’d claim it’s better for everyone to know as early as possible. But all it would do is make the Talentless be judged their entire lives.”
Chills rippled down Sophie’s spine. “Keefe would never go along with that.”
“He might not have a choice. All they’d have to do is restrain him and have a Telepath read his mind while people touched his hands.”
Sophie wasn’t sure if she could picture the Councillors ordering something so cruel.
But she could imagine his mom doing it.
“Why would Lady Gisela want that?” she said, mostly to herself. “Why endure all the painful experiments on herself and her husband—and everything she put Keefe through—just so Keefe could tell if someone is or isn’t going to manifest?”
“He might also be able to trigger abilities,” Dex reminded her. “Plus, he’s now a Polyglot and can give commands that do all kinds of scary things. And maybe there’s other stuff we haven’t discovered yet.”
“There probably is,” Sophie hated to admit. “But… I still don’t see a connection. She’s trying to rule the world—how does this help with that?”
“I don’t know,” Dex said. “But I don’t want to find out.”
Neither did Sophie.
Keefe clearly didn’t either—which finally explained why he’d fled the Lost Cities.
And this was going to make it pretty impossible to convince him to come back.
“Do you think he’ll ever be able to control this ability?” she asked, staring at her gloveless hands.
She’d found a way to master her enhancing.…
But it had taken her months.
And several special gadgets.
And a strange mental exercise.
And help.
Lots of help.
“I’m working on some prototypes,” Dex said, as if he knew what she was thinking. “And I’ll talk to Tinker—though it’s going to be hard to get her to understand what I need without telling her why. But… there has to be something we can do.”
“I’ll tell Keefe that,” she promised. “Well… if I find him.”
“Oh, we’re finding him!” Ro said with way more confidence than Sophie was capable of mustering. “I don’t care if we have to tear through every human city.”
“Where will you start?” Dex asked.
“Somewhere random, I guess,” Sophie said quietly. “Grady said Keefe spun the blue crystal on his pathfinder and leaped wherever it stopped.”
“Where did he get a blue crystal?”
“Probably from Daddy Dearest,” Ro grumbled. “Hunkyhair was always bragging about how he used to steal it.”
“Do you think Lord Cassius knows which cities his pathfinder can access?” Sophie asked.
“He’d have to,” Dex agreed. “Otherwise he wouldn’t be able to use it.”
A spark of hope flared to life. “Looks like we need to stop by the Shores of Solace.”
Ro sheathed her dagger—then stretched her arms and cracked her knuckles. “I really hope Lord Bossypants decides to be difficult. I’m in the mood to punch something.”
Sophie wouldn’t mind an excuse either.
“If there’s anything I can do, let me know,” Dex told them. “And keep me updated, okay?”
“I will. And… thank you for telling me. I know it wasn’t easy.”
“Nothing’s easy anymore,” Dex mumbled.
“It isn’t,” Sophie agreed, wishing she could reach through the tiny screen and hug him.
She couldn’t.
Just like she couldn’t promise him that everything would be okay.
All she could do was keep going.
Keep trying.
Keep fighting with everything she had.
And always hope for the best.