I rubbed his back.
Festos sighed. “More to the right.” He extended his left leg out, gingerly flexing his twisted foot.
Theo gave him a concerned look but kept quiet. They’d had the argument about Festos using his cane enough times. Theo straddled a chair. “Not being able to take the ward down is not the same as not getting through it. There could be … a back door.”
“That’s brilliant!” I shouted at the same time Kai said, “Absolutely not.”
“Told you,” Festos murmured to Theo.
Confused, I turned to Kai. Festos bumped his shoulder blade against my hand, so I continued the massage. “What’s wrong?”
Kai waved at Theo. “Tell her.”
Theo plucked his glasses off and polished them. “Zeus and Hades placed their ward pretty much butt up against ours. We can’t get through theirs to get to ours. Therefore, we can’t get to the ritual location.”
“Okay.” Still didn’t get it.
Checking to make sure the lenses were clean, Theo put his glasses back on. “The wards surround an area that was once the Temple of Demeter—”
My hands froze, mid shoulder rub. “No way.”
“Told you,” Kai said to Theo.
Theo put on his let’s-be-reasonable voice. “It’s our only hope. Eleusis is like Demeter’s ground zero. She still holds power over that place and if anyone can get us inside, it’s her.”
That may have been true, but it was irrelevant. “At what price?”I yelled. “Felicia already tried to kill me once!”
“Ow! Watch it.” Festos shifted beneath my hands. My massaging had turned to painful excavation as I dug the heels of my palms into his back.
“She’s not going to try and kill you,” Theo said.
Kai made a sound halfway between disbelief and disgust.
Theo rounded on him. “Shut it. You’ve been useless and basically MIA the last couple months. You don’t get a say now.”
“I do when Sophie’s safety is involved.” Kai’s voice had gone scary quiet.
Theo went for his chain.
I held up my hands, not wanting them to start brawling. Again. “Enough.” I turned to Theo. “Why do you think she’d help us? The kindness of her heart?”
“Power.”
“Hell, no!”
“You and Kai take out the big bads and let her rule like Persephone originally promised,” Festos said. “There’s no other way.”
“There has to be.” I jumped to my feet, my mind working furiously. There had to be some other god we could turn to. “What about Jack? Or Pierce?” Anyone but her.
For my entire life, my adoptive mother, Felicia, had made me feel unwanted. She had shipped me off to Hope Park when I was six and spent the next ten years with minimal interaction, and maximum exuding of disappointment, at my existence.
Then I’d learned I was Persephone. How amazing was that? And what was the one thing that even
I
knew about her? Her mother Demeter had loved her so much that she roamed the earth in grief when Hades ordered Persephone’s abduction.
That’s when I’d started to dream of the day that Demeter would come back and find me. I knew there had to be some reason she hadn’t shown up. Knew that she would get to me as soon as she could, and shower me with love.
Two months ago, when I’d realized that Felicia actually was Demeter? That she’d tried to kill Persephone, lied to me, not cared at all about me, and put me at risk by pulling me from the one place where she knew I was safe? The one place where my friends actually loved me? And then for her grande finale, she’d gleefully dropped the bombshell that Kai and I had yet to recover from?
I was not inclined to crawl back to her and ask for help.
I scratched at my arms. “I swore I wouldn’t. To her face.”
“Really?” Theo asked. “This is going to come down to your pride?”
“This is going to come down to her having been a cow to me for my entire life. She doesn’t get to win. Who knows what she’d do with that kind of power?”
“Probably not much,” Festos said. “Demeter has always liked humans. She’s not going to hurt them now.”
How naive. “Yeah, she will. She said as much before. She’ll do whatever is opposite to what I want.”
At which point Kai and Festos jumped in, all three of us arguing.
Theo’s fist slammed down on the table, shocking us all into silence. “I gave up my powers for you. My immortality for you.” His voice was so cold I broke out in goosebumps. He advanced on me steadily. Just as steadily as I retreated.
I was caught in the fury of his gaze. I’d never seen Theo like this and he was scaring me. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Kai rise. Festos locked an iron grip on him, keeping him in place.
Theo’s voice rose to a loud roar. “So maybe you could just
suck it up
?!”
I opened my mouth to fight back. But out of shock, or maybe an iota of wisdom, my brain took a moment to think.
This sucked. I hadn’t asked to be saddled with this responsibility. To save anyone. But since it had happened, I’d stood up and shouted down anyone who doubted me. Every single time. Was I really going to retreat into whiney teendom now? Yeah, I wanted to pout and scream, but I felt the weight of Theo’s words deep in my bones.
I would rather stick knives into my eyes than go back to Felicia, offer her everything she wanted, and face her smugness. Along with whatever other hurts she would force me to endure before oh so graciously accepting my offer. I felt sick at the thought.
I sank back down beside Kai. Theo was right. And I was so very very wrong. If I had to come back and curl into the fetal position for a few hours afterward, well, I’d survive. So all I said was, “Yes, Theo. I can. Let’s go see Felicia.”
Which was the correct answer given the situation, but did nada to ratchet down the tension in the room. I could tell that Theo was still pissed at me. And at Kai. Who returned the sentiment in spades as he yanked his arm free of Festos’ grip with a fierce glower at both of the guys.
Festos’ fingers twitched. He obviously wanted to unleash his fire, as he pointedly stared Kai down.
A cold smile spread over Kai’s face. His fingertips emitted a black glow. “Go for it,” he said.
“Stop,” I said, shoving at each of them in turn as I made my way to the kitchen. I wasn’t mad at anyone, but I was feeling prickly. Ashamed and guilty where Theo was concerned, and still cautious with Kai. He had admitted that he was still mad, which made me nervous about doing the ritual. And, honestly? I was fed up with him being pissed. There was a small, hard festering ball of resentment in the middle of my chest.
I flung the fridge door open. “What’s the best way to approach Felicia?” I grabbed a small hunk of white cheddar, ripped off the plastic wrap, and bit into it.
Festos limped over to me, his cane thumping with each step.
He shut the fridge door. “Honeybunch?”
“Yes, Fee?” I smiled at my friend as protein flooded my body and kept me from going postal.
Festos boffed me across the top of the head in a stinging smack. “You’ve never heard of a phone? Next time, don’t disappear from your own birthday party leaving us searching the place like crazy people. We practically got our favored status revoked.”
“Ow!” I rubbed my head.
Festos’ eyes narrowed. “Pull a stunt like that again and you’ll really understand the meaning of the word ‘hurt’. Also, you’d better apologize to Hannah when you see her.”
“Huh. She noticed I was gone?” My tone was indifferent but my heart was not. I focused my attention on Festos’ cupboards, rummaging around until I found a box of crackers to pull out. When I faced Festos again, I held the box to my chest, as if holding it tight enough could keep my heart from splintering because I missed Hannah so much.
Festos’ expression softened. “She’s in love.”
I simultaneously smiled, shrugged, and nodded. She was. That was good. What was I supposed to say?
Festos watched me for a moment, but he didn’t push it. He limped over to Theo and placed his hand on his boyfriend’s shoulder. “Can I keep Sophie tonight?” he asked. “I need to run some tests and figure out how to sustain her power. Can she go see Demeter tomorrow?”
Theo thought it over, then nodded his agreement. Guess I wasn’t getting a say in this.
I was about to head into my bedroom and strip off my superpower T-shirt and Kai’s jeans in exchange for something loose and stretchy, when Kai stopped me.
“Admit it,” he said to Festos, gesturing at my T-shirt. “You covet. And hate the fact that I’m so cool and clever.”
Festos gave a dismissive shrug, but he did glance longingly at the shirt.
Kai smirked and motioned for me to go. “That’s all.”
“I admitted nothing,” Fee retorted.
“You want a made up superpower name?” Theo asked Festos.
“Have you not met him?” asked Kai.
I stuffed my hands in the pockets of Kai’s jeans and looked between them. Kai was right. Of course Festos wanted a shirt like mine. But why would Kai, his kinda-enemy, know that?
“Go.” Festos ordered me out, pointing toward my room.
I went. But it didn’t stop my curiosity. I absolutely did not understand Kai and Fee.
***
“Ready,” I said as I re-entered the living room, a few minutes later, in exercise clothes.
“Follow me,” Festos said, standing by the door. He exited the apartment and I scrambled after him with Kai in my wake.
Festos took us down to the second floor. It was an open, unfinished space, like all the floors except the top one. In one corner, Festos had set up his work space, consisting of a large stainless steel table flanked by heavy, metal floor-to-ceiling cabinets.
A bank of large light therapy boxes dominated the middle of the room. They were stacked three high and fifteen wide, their white light angled slightly downward.
“Detonate,” Festos instructed me.
I looked between him and Kai, anxious.
Kai smiled. “I’m harder to destroy than that.”
“More’s the pity,” Festos said.
“Brace yourselves.” I sent out a full body shockwave, feeling my usual utter exhaustion at the end. On the upside, a quick glance showed that I hadn’t destroyed my friends, which boded well for the big day. Yay!
“Again,” Festos said.
I shot out a puny vine of light that fluttered and disappeared.
Festos nodded and motioned for me to go stand in front of the wall of light boxes. After much trial and error, we discovered that I required ten minutes of light box rays to recharge enough for another full body shockwave.
This was great to know, but I had no clue how Festos would translate that knowledge and the light energy into something I could use. Kai and I would have every last minion attacking us from the second we showed up to perform the ritual, until Festos finished cleansing the location.
Not to mention, that they weren’t going to stop trying to kill us and stand there respectfully while we chanted. We’d have to hold them off then as well.
We spent the rest of the day on the second floor. I fired my power any way I could while Festos paced around me making notes and taking measurements, talking under his breath.
Occasionally, Festos would wander over to his work area and pull something out. Sheets of sterling silver, buffers, soldering irons, jewelers’ saws, wire, lighting tubes, everything ended up tossed on the table.
My eyes slid to Kai, sprawled against the wall the whole time. We may have made up, but neither of us was the type to just move on. There was still all this lingering baggage between us, and I wanted to speed up time to a point when all that festering emotion had finally worked its way through our systems.
Kai met every look with an encouraging smile. He also kept me fueled with food and water. On the surface we were great. In my gut, I still felt that we weren’t.
I was acutely aware of the disconnect.
Eventually, I really had nothing left, light boxes be damned. Sweat matted my hair and my body felt rubbery with exhaustion.
Festos rubbed the back of his neck, his eyes blurry. “Scamper off. You’re done for the day.”
I shuffled over to his work table. “Can I stick around and see what you do?”
“No.” As if that wasn’t pointed enough, he gestured toward at the stairwell door with his cane.
“He’s worried that if we see what he does, we’ll realize any half wit could do it,” Kai said, pushing to his feet.
“Or you,” Festos shot back.
“Nah, I’m just charmingly decorative,” Kai said, totally unfazed.
I was too tired for these two to get into it. Visions of pillows danced in my head. I tugged on Kai’s hand and started walking. “Good night, Fee. And thank you.”
“Yeah, yeah,” he muttered, already lost perusing his supplies.
“I hate your friends,” Kai said, as we headed back up the stairwell.
I patted his cheek. “I know, godling. But you’ll make nice for my sake.”
Kai hmmmd noncommittally.
I pulled open the stairwell door on the top floor and we stepped into the foyer outside the apartment.