A Touch of Darkness: Chapter 12
A Touch of Darkness (Hades x Persephone Saga Book 1)
âPersephone!â
Someone was calling her name. She rolled over and covered her head with her blanket to muffle the sound; she left the Underworld late last night and, too keyed up to sleep, stayed awake to work on her article.
She had a hard time choosing how she should proceed after watching Hades help that mother. In the end, she decided she had to focus on the bargains Hades made with mortalsâthe ones where he chose to offer an impossible terms. While she worked on the article, she found she was still frustrated, though she couldnât tell if it was over her bargain with Hades or their time in the stacksâthe way heâd asked her what she wanted and refused to kiss her.
Her skin had prickled with anticipation at the memory, though she wasnât anywhere near him.
Sheâd pressed save on her article at four in the morning and decided to rest a few hours before rereading it. But as she started to drift off, Lexa burst through her bedroom door. âPersephone! Wake up!â
She groaned. âGo away!â
âOh no, youâre going to want to see this. Guess whatâs in the news today!â
Suddenly she was wide awake. Persephone shoved off her blankets and sat up, her imagination already taking holdâhad someone snapped a picture of her in her goddess form outside Nevernight? Had someone caught her inside the club with Hades? Lexa shoved her tablet into Persephoneâs face, and her eyes focused on something much worse.
âItâs all over social media today,â Lexa explained.
âNo, no, no,â Persephone gripped the tablet with both hands. The title across the top of the page was black and bold and familiar:
Hades, God of the Game by Persephone Rosi.
She read the first line aloud, âNevernight, an elite gambling club owned by Hades, God of the Dead, can be seen from anywhere in New Athens. The sleek pinnacle expertly mimics the imposing nature of the god himself and is a reminder to mortals that life is shortâeven shorter if you agree to gamble with the Lord of the Underworld.â
This was her draft. Her real article remained safely on her computer.
âHow did this get published?â she hissed.
Lexa looked confused. âWhat do you mean? Didnât you submit it?â
âNo.â She scrolled through the article, her stomach in knots. She noticed some additions, like a description of Hades she would have never written. Hadesâ eyes were described as colorless chasms, his face callous, his manner cold and boorish.
Boorish?
She wouldnât dream of describing Hades in such a manner. His eyes were inky but expressive, and every time she met his gaze she felt like she could see the threads of his lifetimes there. In truth, his face could be callous at times, but when he looked at her, she saw something differentâa softness to his jaw, an amusement alight in his face. A curiosity that burned, and his manner was anything but cold and boorishâhe was passionate and charming and refined.
There was only one person who had gone with her and seen Hades in the flesh, and that was Adonis. Heâd also invaded her workspace and read her article without permission.
She took a few deep breaths to cool her anger and consciously worked to uncurl her fingers. If she wasnât careful, her glamour would melt away. It always seemed to react to her emotionsâmaybe because her magic was borrowed.
In reality, Persephone didnât want Adonis punished, at least not by Hades. The God of the Dead had made his dislike of this mortal abundantly clear, and bringing him to Nevernight had been a mistake for several reasonsâthat was clear now. Perhaps this was part of the reason Hades had wanted her to stay away from him.
A third emotion rose inside herâfearâand she tamped it down. She wouldnât allow Hades to get the best of her. Besides, sheâd planned on writing about the god despite his threat.
âWhere are you going?â Lexa asked.
âWork.â Persephone disappeared into her closet, trading her nightshirt for a simple green dress. It was one of her favorite outfits, and if she was going to get through this day, she figured she need every arsenal in her toolkit to feel as powerful as possible. Maybe she could get the article taken out of publication before Hades saw it.
âButâ¦you donât work today,â Lexa pointed out from her perch on Persephoneâs bed.
âI have to see if I can get ahead of this.â Persephone reappeared, hobbling on one foot to buckle her sandals.
âAhead of what?â
âThe article. Hades canât see it.â
Lexaâs laugh and then covered her mouth quickly, speaking between her fingers. âPersephone, I hate to break it to you, but Hades has already seen the article. He has people who look for this kind of stuff.â Persephone met Lexaâs gaze, and her friend winced. âWhoa.â
âWhat?â Hysteria rose in Persephoneâs voice.
âYour eyes, theyâreâ¦freaky.â
Avoiding Lexaâs gaze while her emotions ricocheted all over her body, Persephone reached for her purse. âDonât worry about it. Iâll be back later.â
She left her room and slammed the door to her apartment closed as Lexa called her name.
The bus wouldnât run for anther fifteen minutes, so she decided to go on foot. She dug her compact out of her purse and applied more magic as she walked.
No wonder Lexa had been freaked out. Her eyes had lost all their glamour and glowed bottle-green. Her hair was brighter, her face sharper. She looked more Divine than she ever had in public.
By the time Persephone arrived at the Acropolis, her mortal appearance was restored. When she walked off the elevator, Valerie rose from behind her desk.
âPersephone,â she said nervously. âI didnât think you were in today.â
âHey, Valerie.â She tried to keep her voice cheerful and act like nothing was out of the ordinaryâthat Adonis hadnât stolen her article and Lexa hadnât woken her up to shove said angry article in her face. âJust coming in to take care of a few things.â
âOh, well, you have several messages. I, uh, transferred them to your voicemail.â
âThanks.â
But Persephone wasnât interested in her voicemails; she was here for Adonis. She dropped her purse at her desk and stalked across the workroom to his. Adonis sat with his earbuds in, focused intently on his computer. At first, she thought he was workingâprobably editing something he stole, she thought angrily, but as she came up behind him she discovered he was watching some sort of television showâTitans After Dark.
She rolled her eyes. It was a popular soap opera about how the Olympians defeated the Titans. Though sheâd only watched parts of it, sheâd started to imagine most of the gods as they were portrayed on the show. Now she knew Hades was all wrongâa pale, lithe creature with a hollow face. If he were going to seek revenge for anything, it should be how they depicted him on that show.
She tapped Adonisâs shoulder and he jumped, taking out an earbud. âPersephone! Congrââ
âYou stole my article,â she cut him off.
âStealing is a harsh term for what I did.â He pushed away from his desk. âI gave you all the credit.â
âYou think that matters?â she seethed. âIt was In all honesty, she wasnât sure what she expected him to say, but it wasnât the answer he gave. âI thought you would change your mind.â
She stared at him a moment. âI told you I wanted to write about Hades.â
âNot about that. I thought he might convince you he was justified in his contracts with mortals.â
âLet me get this straight. You decided that I couldnât think for myself, so you stole my work, altered it, and published it?â
âItâs not like that. Hades is a god, Persephoneââ
He cringed. âI didnât meanââ
âWhat you meant doesnât matter,â she snapped.
âPersephone?â Demetri called, and she and Adonis looked in the direction of their supervisorâs office. âA moment?â
Her gaze slid back to Adonis, and she pinned him with a final glare before heading into Demetriâs office.
âYes, Demetri?â she said from the doorway.
He was sitting behind his desk, a fresh edition of the paper in hand. âTake a seat.â
She didâon the edge, because she wasnât sure what Demetri would think of the article; she had a hard time calling it hers. Would his next words be âyouâre fired?â It was one thing to say you wanted the truth, another to actually publish it.
She considered what she would do when she lost her internship. She now had less than six months until graduation. It was unlikely another paper would hire the girl who dared call the God of the Underworld the worst god. She knew many people shared Adonisâs fear of Tartarus.
Just as Demetri started to speak, Persephone said, âI can explain.â
âWhat is there to explain?â he asked. âItâs clear by your article what you were trying to do here.â
âI was angry.â
âYou wanted to expose an injustice,â he said.
âYes, but thereâs more. Itâs not the whole story,â she said. Sheâd really only shown Hades in one lightâand that was really in no light at all, just darkness.
âI hope itâs not,â Demetri said.
âWhat?â Persephone straightened.
âIâm asking you to write more.â.
The Goddess of Spring was quiet, and Demetri continued. âI want more. How soon can you have another article out?â
âAbout Hades?â
âOh yes. You have only scratched the surface of this god.â
âBut I thoughtâ¦arenât youâ¦afraid of him?â
Demetri laid the paper down and leveled his gaze with hers. âPersephone, I told you from the beginning. We seek truth here at Demetri made it all sound so innocent, but Persephone knew she would only bring hatred upon Hades from the article published today.
âThose who fear Hades are also curious. They will want more, and youâre going to deliver.â
Persephone straightened at his direct order. Demetri stood and walked to the wall of windows, his hands behind his back. âHow about a bi-weekly feature?â
âThatâs a lot, Demetri. Iâm still in school,â she reminded him.
âMonthly, then. What do you say toâ¦five, six articles?â
âDo I have a choice?â she muttered, but Demetri still heard.
The corner of his mouth quirked. âDonât underestimate yourself, Persephone. Just thinkâif this is as successful as I think it will be, there will be a line of people waiting to hire you when you graduate.â
Except it wouldnât matter, because sheâd be a prisonerânot just of the Underworld, but of Tartarus. She wondered how Hades would choose to torture her.
âYour next article is due on the first,â he said. âLetâs have some variety. donât just talk about his bargainsâwhat else does he do? What are his hobbies? What does the Underworld really look like?â
Persephone felt uncomfortable at Demetriâs questions, and she wondered if they were for him rather than the public.
With that, he dismissed her. Persephone walked out of Demetriâs office and sat down at her desk. Her head felt foggy and she couldnât concentrate.
Then again, he didnât have to.
Perhaps this would give her a chance to bargain with him. Could she leverage the threat of more articles to convince him to let her out of the contract?
And would his promise of punishment turn out to be true?
***
Persephone went straight to class after leaving the Acropolis, and it seemed like everyone had a copy of Someone tapped her on the shoulder, and she twisted to find two girls huddled together in the row behind her. She wasnât sure of their names, but theyâd sat behind her since the beginning of the semester and said nothing until today. The girl on the right held a copy of the paper.
âYouâre Persephone, right?â one of them asked. âIs everything you wrote true?â
That question made her cringe. Her instinct was to say no, because she hadnât written the story, not in its entiretyâ but she couldnât. She settled on, âThe story is evolving.â
What she didnât anticipate was the excitement in the girlsâ eyes. âSo, there will be more?â
Persephone cleared her throat. âYeahâ¦yes.â
The girl on the left leaned farther over the table. âSo, youâve met Hades?â
âThatâs a stupid question,â the other girl chided. âWhat she wants to know is whatâs Hades like? Do you have pictures?â
A strange feeling erupted in Persephoneâs stomachâa metallic twist that made her feel both jealous and protective of Hades. Ironic, since she had promised to write more about him. Still, now that she was posed with these questions, she wasnât sure she wanted to share her intimate knowledge of the god. Did she want to talk about how sheâd caught him playing fetch with his dogs in a grove in the Underworld? Or how heâd amused her by playing rock-paper-scissors?
These wereâ¦human aspects of the god, and all of a sudden she felt possessive of them. They were hers.
She offered a small, unamused smile. âI guess youâll have to wait and see.â
Demetri had been rightâthe world was just as curious about the god as they were afraid of him.
The girls in her class werenât the only people who stopped her to ask about her article. On her way across campus, several other strangers called out to her. She guessed they were testing her name, and once they discovered she was Persephone, they ran up to her to ask the same questionsâ
She made excuses to get away quickly. If there was one thing she hadnât anticipated, it was thisâthe attention she would receive. She couldnât decide if she liked it or not.
She was just passing through the Garden of the Gods when her phone rang. Grateful for the excuse to ignore more strangers, she answered it. âHello?â
âAdonis told me the good news! A series on Hades! Congrats! When do you interview him next and can I come?â Lexa laughed.
âTh-thanks, Lex,â Persephone managed. After stealing her article, it didnât surprise her that Adonis had also taken the opportunity to text her friend about her new work assignment before she even got a chance to tell her.
âWe should celebrate! La Rose this weekend?â Lexa asked.
Persephone groaned. La Rose was an upscale nightclub owned by Aphrodite. She had never been inside, but sheâd seen pictures. Everything was cream and pink and, like Hadesâ Nevernight, there was an impossible waitlist. âHow are we supposed to get into La Rose?â
âI have my ways,â Lexa replied mischievously. Persephone wondered if those ways included Adonis, and she was about to ask as much when she caught a flash in the corner of her eye. Whatever Lexa was saying on the other line was lost as her attention moved to her mother, appearing through the gardenâs foliage a few feet in front of her.
âHey, Lex. Iâll call you back.â Persephone hung up and acknowledged Demeter with a curt, âMother. What are you doing here?â
âI had to ensure you were safe after that ridiculous article you wrote. What were you thinking?â
Persephone felt the shock run deep, like an electrical current splicing through her chest. âI thoughtâI thought youâd be proud. You hate Hades.â
âProud? You thought Iâd be proud?â she scoffed. âYou wrote a critical article on a godâbut not just any god, Hades! You deliberately broke my ruleânot once but multiple times.â Persephoneâs surprise must have shown on her face because her mother added, âOh, yes. I know you have returned to Nevernight on multiple occasions.â
Persephone glared at Demeter. âHow?â
Her eyes fell to the phone in Persephoneâs hand. âI tracked you.â
âThrough my phone?â She knew her mother wasnât above violating her privacy to keep tabs on her; sheâd proven that by having her nymphs spy on her. Still, Demeter hadnât bought her phone, nor did she pay the bill. She had no right to use it as a GPS. âAre you serious?â
âI had to do something. You werenât talking to me.â
âSince when?â she demanded. âI saw you Monday!â
âAnd you cancelled our lunch.â The goddess sniffed. âWe hardly spend time together anymore.â
âAnd you think stalking me will encourage me to spend more time with you?â Persephone demanded.
Demeter laughed. âOh, my flower, I cannot stalk you. I am your mother.â
Persephone glared. âI donât have time for this.â She tried to sidestep her and leave, but she found she couldnât moveâher feet felt as though they were welded to the ground. Hysteria erupted in her stomach and lodged in her throat. Persephone met her motherâs dark gaze, and for the first time in years, she saw Demeter as the vengeful goddess she wasâthe one who lashed nymphs and killed kings.
âI have not dismissed you,â her mother said. âRemember, Persephone, you are only here by the grace of my magic.â
Persephone wanted to scream at her mother, For a tense moment, Persephone waited to see if Demeter would release her or abduct her. Then she felt her motherâs hold loosen around her shaking legs. âIf you return to Nevernight again, see Hades ever again, I will take you from this world.â
Persephone wasnât sure where she gathered her courage, but she managed to look her mother in the eyes and say, âDonât think for a second that I will ever forgive you if you send me back to that prison.â
Demeter gave a sharp laugh. âMy flower, I donât require forgiveness.â
Then she vanished.
Persephone knew Demeter meant her warning. The problem was, there was no way to get around going back to Nevernight; she had a contract to fulfill and articles to write.
Persephoneâs phone vibrated in her hand and she looked down to see a message from Lexa:
She texted back:
She was going to need a lot of alcohol to forget this day.