Acheron

"You will be the savior of the pantheon!" they said in unison.

 

Did she really have a choice? Drawing in a deep breath for courage, Artemis nodded. "What do I have to do?"

 

"You will have to get him to drink your blood," Atropos said as if it would be the easiest thing in the world to accomplish.

 

"And just how do I do that?"

 

"With our help."

 

Acheron lay on the floor in calm serenity, finally numb to everything from his past and present. He was at peace in a way he'd never been before. The walls of his cave shielded him from the voices of others. Not even the gods were in his head.

 

For the first time in his life, he had total silence.

 

There was no aching in his body, no grief. Nothing. And he loved this feeling of tranquility.

 

"Acheron?"

 

He tensed at Artemis's voice. Of course the bitch was going to disturb his haven. She could never leave him in peace.

 

Damn her.

 

He tried to tell her to go away, but nothing other than a hoarse croak left his lips. Coughing, he tried to clear his throat to speak.

 

Still no words would come. What was going on? What had taken his voice?

 

Artemis gave him a tender, concerned look as she appeared before him. "We need to talk."

 

He shoved her back, but she refused to go.

 

"Please," she begged with a look that would have weakened his resolve only a few days ago. But that concern for her was now long gone. "Just a few words and I'll leave you. Forever if you wish."

 

How could they talk when he couldn't speak?

 

She held a cup out to him. "Drink this and I'll be able to talk to you."

 

Furious with her and wanting to vent his anger at her, he grabbed the cup and downed the contents without tasting them. "Go to Tartarus and rot," he snarled at her, grateful that this time she could hear the venom in his voice.

 

Then something happened. Pain and fire ripped through his body as if something was setting his internal organs aflame. Panting, he looked up at Artemis. "What have you done to me now?"

 

There was no mercy or remorse in her gaze. "What I had to do."

 

One moment he was in the quiet darkness of Hades's domain and in the next, he was standing on the shores of Didymos, not far from the palace.

 

Or rather what was left of it.

 

Confused, he looked around, trying to understand what had happened to him and the land. But before he could figure it out a searing pain tore through him with such ferocity that it drove him to his knees in the surf.

 

Acheron cried out, wanting it to stop.

 

Suddenly, Artemis was there before him. Gathering him into her arms, she held him close as the waves crashed against them. "I had to bring you back."

 

He shoved her away from him as he looked around at the smoldering remains of Didymos. "What have you done?"

 

"I didn't do this. Your mother did. She's destroyed everything and everyone who ever went near you. And she was coming to kill us on Olympus. It's why I had to bring you back. She would have killed us all had I not."

 

He glared so hard at her, he was sure his eyes were red. "You think I give a damn about that?" He started away from her, only to be frozen in place by the pain tearing at his stomach. The agony caused him to double over as he struggled to breathe.

 

Artemis approached him slowly. She stood above him, looking down. "I'm the one in control here, Acheron. I've bound you to me with my blood. I own you."

 

Those three words set fire to his wrath. He felt the familiar heat ripple over him as his human appearance gave way to that of his god form. Rising against the pain, he held his hand out and brought Artemis into his grasp. "You seriously underestimate my powers, bitch."

 

She clutched at his hand, trying to loosen his feral grip. "Kill me and you'll become the worst sort of monster imaginable. You need my blood to maintain any sort of sanity. Without it, you will become a mindless killer, seeking only to destroy any and everyone you come into contact with . . . just like your mother."

 

Acheron roared with frustration. The bitch had thought of everything. Even as a god, he was still a slave. "I hate you."

 

"I know."

 

He shoved her away from him and turned his back on her.

 

"Acheron, did you not hear what I said? You will have to feed from me."

 

He ignored her as he made the long trek from the beach to the hill where the royal palace had once stood. Now there was nothing left but smoldering ashes and busted stones. There were bodies of servants and merchants everywhere.

 

Tears filled his eyes as he ran through the debris, seeking a sign of Ryssa or Apollodorus. Aching and broken, he used his powers to move stone and marble until he uncovered the room that had been hers.

 

There in the wreckage he found three of the diaries she'd so meticulously kept. They were a little scarred by fire, but miraculously, they'd somehow survived intact. He opened the first one and stared at her childish writing as she described the very day he'd been born and the joy she'd felt at having twin brothers. Wiping his tears, he closed it and held it close to his heart as he heard her voice in her words.

 

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