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©1986-2007, Sherrilyn Kenyon
Greece, 7382 BCE
Acheron felt a presence behind him.
He spun around, staff ready to strike, expecting it to be
another Daimon attacking him.
It wasn’t.
Instead, he found Simi hanging
upside down in a tree, her long, burgundy bat-like wings
folded in against her child-like body. She wore a loose
black chiton and himation that rippled gently with the night’s
breeze. Her blood red eyes glowed eerily in the
darkness while her long black braid dangled from her head,
down to the ground.
Acheron relaxed and set one end of
his staff against the damp grass as he watched her.
"Where have you been,
Simi?" he asked sharply. He’d been calling for the
Charonte demon for the last half an hour.
"Oh just hanging about,
akri," she said, smiling as she swung herself back
and forth on the limb. "Did akri miss me?"
Acheron sighed. He liked Simi a great deal, but he
wished he had a mature demon as his companion. Not one
that even at three thousand years old functioned on the
level of a five year old child.
It would be centuries before Simi
was fully grown.
"Did you deliver my
message?" he asked.
"Yes, akri," she said,
using the Atlantean term for ‘my lord and master.’
"I delivered it just as you said, akri."
The skin on the back of Acheron’s
neck crawled. There was something in her tone that
concerned him. "What did you do, Simi?"
"The Simi did nothing, akri.
But..."
He waited as she looked about
nervously.
"But?" he prompted.
"The Simi was hungry on her way
back."
He went cold with dread. "Who
did you eat this time?"
"It wasn’t a who, akri. It
was something that had hornies on its head like me. There
were a bunch of them actually. All of them had hornies and
they made a strange moo moo sound."
"Do you mean cows? You ate
cattle?"
"That’s it, akri. I ate
cattle."
"That’s not so bad."
"No, it was actually rather
good, akri. Why didn’t you tell the Simi about cows.
They are very tasty when roasted. The Simi liked them a
lot."
"Then why are you
worried?"
"Because this really tall man
with only one eyeball came out of a cave and was screaming
at the Simi. He say the Simi was evil for eating the cows
and that I would have to pay for them. What does that
mean, akri? Pay? The Simi know nothing about pay."
Acheron wished he could say the same
for himself. "This really big man, was he a cyclops?"
"What’s a cyclops?"
"A son of Poseidon."
"Oh see, that’s what he said.
Only he had no hornies. He had a big, bald head
instead."
Acheron didn’t want to discuss the
cyclops’ big bald head with his demon. What he needed to
know was what to do to make amends for her voracious
appetite. "So what did the
cyclops say to you?"
"That he be mad at the Simi for
eating the cattle. He said the horny cows belonged to
Poseidon. Who is Poseidon, akri?"
"A Greek god."
"Oh see then, the Simi is not
in trouble. I just kill the Greek god and all’s
fine."
"You can’t kill a Greek god,
Simi. It’s not allowed."
"There you go again, akri,
saying no to the Simi. Don’t eat that, Simi. Don’t
kill that, Simi. Stay here, Simi. Go to Katoteros, Simi,
and wait for me to call you." She crossed her arms
over her chest and gave him a stern frown. "I don’t
like being told no, akri."
Acheron grimaced at the ache that
was starting in the back of his skull. He wished he’d
been given a pet parrot for his twenty-first birthday. The
Charonte demon was going to be the death of him...again.
"So why were you calling the
Simi, akri?"
"I wanted your help with the
Daimons."
She relaxed and went back to
swinging on her limb. "You didn’t seem to need any
help, akri. The Simi thinks you did quite well with them
on your own. I particularly liked the way that one Daimon
flipped up into the air before you killed him. Very nice.
I did not know they were so colorful when they
exploded."
She flipped off the limb and came to
stand by his side. "Where we go now, akri? Will you
take Simi somewhere cold again? I liked that last place we
went. The mountain was very nice."
Acheron?
He paused as he felt Artemis
summoning him. He let out another long-suffering sigh.
For two thousand years, he had been
ignoring her.
Still she insisted on calling out to
him.
There was a time when she had sought
him out in the "flesh," but he had blocked her
from that ability.
Her mental telepathy to him was the
only contact he couldn’t sever entirely.
"Come, Simi," he said,
starting his journey that would take him back to Therakos.
The Daimons there had set up
a colony where they were preying on the poor Greeks who
lived in a small village.
Acheron. I need your help. My new
Dark-Hunters need a trainer.
He froze at Artemis’s words.
New Dark-Hunters?
What the hell was that?
"What have you done,
Artemis?" his voice whispered along the wind,
traveling to Olympus where she waited in her temple.
So, you do speak to me. He
heard the relief in her tone. I
had begun to wonder if I would ever hear the sound of your
voice again.
Acheron curled his lip. He didn’t
have time for this.
Acheron?
He ignored her.
She didn’t take the hint.
The Daimon menace is spreading
faster than you can contain it. You needed help and so I
have given it to you.
He scoffed at the idea of her
help. The Greek goddess had never done anything for anyone
other than herself since the dawn of time.
"Leave me alone, Artemis. We
are through, you and I. I have a job to do and no time to
be bothered with you."
Fine then. I shall send them out
to face the Daimons unprepared. If they die, well, who
cares for a human? I can just make more of them to fight.
It was a trick.
And yet in his gut, Acheron knew it
wasn’t. She probably had made more Dark-Hunters and if
she truly had, then she would definitely do it again.
Especially if it would make him feel
guilty.
Damn her. He would have to go to her
temple again.
Personally, he would rather be
disemboweled.
He looked to his demon. "Simi,
I need to see Artemis now. You return to Katoteros and
stay out of trouble until I summon you."
The demon grimaced. "The Simi
don’t like Artemis, akri. I wish you’d let the Simi
kill that goddess. The Simi want to pull out her long, red
hair."
He knew the feeling.
Simi had only met Artemis once, back
when Acheron had been mortal.
The event had been disastrous.
"I know, Simi, which is why I
want you to stay at Katoteros." He stepped away, then
turned back to face her. "And for Archon’s sake,
please don’t eat anything until I get back. Especially
not a human."
"But—"
"No, Simi. No food."
"No, Simi. No food," she
mocked. "The Simi don’t like this, akri. Katoteros
is boring. There's nothing fun there. Only old dead people
who want to come back here. Bleh!"
"Simi..." he said, his
voice thick with warning.
"I hear and obey, akri. The
Simi just never said she would do so quietly."
He shook his head at the
incorrigible demon, then willed himself from the earth to
Artemis’s temple on Olympus.
Acheron stood on top of the golden
bridge that traversed a winding river. The sound of the
water echoed off the sheer sides of the mountain that rose
up all around him.
In the last two thousand years,
nothing had changed.
The entire area at the top of the
mountain was made up of sparkling bridges and walkways,
covered by a rainbow fog, that led to the various temples
of the gods.
The halls of Mount Olympus were
opulent and massive. Perfect homes for the egos of the
gods who lived inside them.
Artemis’s was made of gold, with a
domed top and white, marble columns. The view of the sky
and world below was breathtaking from her throne room.
Or so he had thought in his youth.
But that was before time and
experience had jaundiced his appreciation. To him there
was nothing spectacular or beautiful here now. He saw only
the selfish vanity and coldness of the Olympians.
These new gods were very different
from the gods Acheron had been reared with. All but one of
the Atlantean gods had been full of compassion. Love.
Kindness. Forgiveness.
There was only one time when the
Atlanteans had let their fear lead them--that mistake had
cost all of them their immortal lives and had allowed the
Olympian gods to replace them.
It had been a sad day for the human
world in more ways than one.
Acheron forced
himself across the bridge that led to Artemis’s temple.
Two thousand years ago, he had left this place and sworn
that he would never return to it.
He should have known that sooner or
later she would devise a scheme to bring him back.
His gut tight with anger, Acheron
used his telekinesis to open the oversized, gilded doors.
He was instantly assailed with the sound of ear-piercing
screams from Artemis’s female attendants. They were
wholly unaccustomed to a man entering their goddess’
private domain.
Artemis hissed at the shrill sound,
then zapped every one of the women around her.
"Did you just kill all eight of
them?" Acheron asked.
Artemis rubbed her ears. "I
should have, but no, I merely tossed them into river
outside."
Surprised, he stared at her. How
unusual for the goddess he remembered. Perhaps she’d
learned a degree of compassion and mercy over the last two
thousand years.
Knowing her, it was highly unlikely.
Now that they were alone, she
unfolded herself from her cushioned ivory throne and
approached him. She wore a sheer, white peplos that
hugged the curves of her voluptuous body and her dark
auburn curls glistened in the light.
Her green eyes glowed warmly in
welcome.
The look went through him like a
lance. Hot. Piercing. Painful.
He’d known seeing her again would
be hard on him— it was one of the reasons why he’d
always ignored her summons.
But knowing something and
experiencing it were two entirely different things.
He’d been unprepared for the
emotions that threatened to overwhelm him now that he saw
her again.
The hatred. The betrayal.
Worst of all was the need.
The hunger.
The desire.
There was still a part of him that
loved her. A part of him that was willing to forgive her
anything.
Even his death...
"You look good, Acheron. Every
bit as handsome as you were the last time I saw you."
She reached to touch him.
He stepped back, out of her reach.
"I didn’t come here to chat, Artemis, I—"
"You used to call me
Artie."
"I used to do a lot of things I
can’t do anymore." He gave her a hard stare to
remind her of everything she had taken from him.
"You’re still angry at
me."
"You think so?"
Her eyes snapped emerald fire,
reminding him of the demon who resided in her divine body.
"I could have forced you to come to me, you know. I’ve
been very tolerant of your defiance. More than I should
have been."
He looked away, knowing she was
right. She, alone, held possession of the food source he
needed to function.
When he went too long without food,
he became an uncontrollable killer. A danger to anyone who
came near him.
Only Artemis held the key that kept
him as he was. Sane. Whole.
Compassionate.
"Why didn’t you force me to
your side?" he asked.
"Because I know you. Had I
tried, you would have made us both pay for it."
Again, she was right. His days of
subjugation were long over. He’d had more than his share
of it in his childhood and youth. Having tasted freedom
and power, he’d decided he liked it too much to go back
to being what he’d been before.
"Tell me of these new
Dark-Hunters," he said. "Why would you create
more of my kind?"
"I told you, you need
help."
"I need no such thing."
"I and the other Greek gods
disagree."
"Artemis..." he growled
her name, knowing she was lying about this. He was more
than able to control and kill the Daimons who preyed on
the humans. "I swear..."
He clenched his teeth as he thought
about the early days of his conversion. He’d had no one
to show him the way. No one to explain to him what he
needed to do.
How to live.
The rules that bound him to the
night.
The new ones would be lost.
Confused.
Worst of all, they were vulnerable
until they learned to use their powers.
Damn her.
"Where are they?"
"Waiting in Falossos. They hide
in a cave that keeps them from the sunlight. But they’re
not sure what they should do or how to find the Daimons.
They are men in need of leadership."
Acheron didn’t want to do this. He
didn’t want to lead anyone any more than he wanted to
follow someone else’s orders. He didn’t want to deal
with other people at all.
He’d never wanted anything in his
life except to be left alone.
The thought of interacting with
others...
It made his blood run cold.
Half tempted to go his own way,
Acheron knew he couldn’t. If he didn’t train the men
on how to fight and kill the Daimons, they would end up
dead.
And dead without a soul was a very
bad existence. He of all men knew that one.
"Fine," he said. "I’ll
train them."
She smiled.
Acheron flashed from her temple back
to Simi and ordered her to stay put a little longer. The
demon would only complicate an already complicated matter.
Once he was sure she would stay, he
teleported to Falossos.
He found the three men huddled in
the darkness just as Artemis had said. They were talking
quietly amongst themselves, grouped around a small fire
for warmth and yet their eyes watered from the brightness
of the flames.
Their eyes were no longer human and
could no longer take the brightness that came from any
source of light.
He had much to teach them.
Acheron moved forward, out of the
shadows.
"Who are you?" the tallest
one asked as soon as he saw him.
The man was no doubt a Dorian with
long black hair. He was tall, powerfully built, and still
dressed in his battle armor that was in bad need of care
and repair.
The men with him were blond Greeks.
Their armor was no better than the first man’s. The
youngest of them had a hole in the center of his breast
plate where he had been stabbed through his heart with a
javelin.
These men could never go out and mix
with living people dressed like this. Each of them needed
care. Rest.
Instruction.
Acheron lowered the cowl to his
black himation and eyed each man in turn.
As they noted the swirling silver
color of his eyes, the men paled.
"Are you a god?" the
tallest one asked. "We were told a god would kill us
if we were in their presence."
"I am Acheron Parthenopaeus,"
he said quietly. "Artemis sent me to train you."
"I am Callabrax of Likonos,"
the tallest said.
He indicated the man to his right.
"Kyros of Seklos." Then the youngest of their
group, "and Ias of Groesia."
Ias stood back, his dark eyes
hollow. Acheron could hear the man’s thoughts as clearly
as if they were in his own mind.
The man’s pain reached out to him,
making his own stomach tighten in sympathy.
"How long has it been since you
men were created?" Acheron asked them.
"A few weeks for me,"
Kyros said.
Callabrax nodded. "I was
created about the same time."
Acheron looked to Ias.
"Two days ago," he said,
his voice empty.
"He’s still sick from the
conversion," Kyros supplied. "It was almost a
week before I could...adjust."
Acheron stifled the urge to laugh
bitterly. It was a good word for it.
"Have you killed any Daimons
yet?" he asked them.
"We tried," Callabrax
said, "but they are very different from killing
soldiers. Stronger. Faster. They don’t die easily. We
already lost two men to them."
Acheron winced at the thought of
two
unprepared men going up against the Daimons and the
horrific existence that awaited them when they had died.
It was followed by the memory of his
first fight...
He blocked the thought out of his
mind.
"Have the three of you eaten
tonight?"
They nodded.
"Then follow me outside and I’ll
teach what you need to know to kill them."
Acheron worked with them until it
was almost dawn. He shared with them everything he could
for one night. Taught them new tactics. Where and how the
Daimons were most vulnerable.
At the end of the night, he left
them to their cave.
"I shall find you a better
place to hide in daylight," he promised them.
"I’m a Dorian,"
Callabrax said proudly. "I require nothing more than
what I have."
"But we’re not," Kyros
said. "A bed would be most welcomed to me and Ias. A
bath even more so."
Acheron inclined his head, then
motioned for Ias to join him outside.
He stood back as Ias left first,
then directed him away from the others’ hearing.
"You want to see your wife
again," Acheron said quietly.
He looked up, startled. "How do
you know that?"
Acheron didn’t answer. Even as a
human, he’d hated personal questions as they most often
led him into conversations he didn’t want to have.
Pricked at memories he wanted to keep buried.
Closing his eyes, Acheron let his
mind wander out, through the cosmos until he found the
woman who haunted Ias’s mind.
Liora.
She was a beautiful woman, with hair
as black as a raven’s wing. Eyes as clear and blue as
the open sea.
No wonder Ias missed her.
The woman was currently on her
knees, weeping. "Please," she begged to
the gods. "Please return
my love to me. Please let my children have their father
home."
Acheron felt sympathy for her at the
sight and sound of her fears. No one had told her yet what
had happened. She was praying for the welfare of a man who
was no longer with her.
It haunted him.
"I understand your
sadness," he said to Ias. "But you can’t let
them know you live now in this form. They will fear you if
you return home. Try to kill you."
Ias’s eyes welled with tears and
when he spoke, his fangs cut his lips. "Liora has no
one else to care for her. She was an orphan and my brother
was killed the day before I was. There is no one to
provide for my children."
"You can’t go back."
"Why not?" Ias asked
angrily. "Artemis said that I could have my vengeance
on the man who killed me and then I would be alive to
serve her. She said nothing about my not being able to go
home."
Acheron tightened his grip on his
staff. "Ias, think for a moment. You are no longer
human. How do you think your village would act if you
returned home with fangs and black eyes? You can’t
venture out into daylight. Your allegiance is to all
mankind, not just to your family. No one can meet the
obligations of both. You can’t ever go back."
The man’s lips quivered, but he
nodded in understanding. "I save the humans while my
innocent family is cast out to starve with no one to
protect them. So, that was my bargain."
Acheron looked away as his heart
ached for the man and his family.
"Go inside with the
others," Acheron said.
He watched Ias return while he
thought over the man’s words.
He couldn’t leave it like this.
Acheron could function alone, but
the others...
Closing his eyes, he willed himself
back to Artemis.
This time when her women opened
their mouths to scream, Artemis froze their vocal chords.
"Leave us," she commanded
them.
The women rushed for the door as
fast as they could, then slammed it shut behind them.
As soon as they were alone, Artemis
smiled at him. "You are back. I didn’t expect to
see you so soon."
"Don’t, Artemis," he
said, curbing her playfulness before she started with it.
"I’m basically back to yell at you."
"For what?"
"How dare you lie to those men
to get them into your service."
"I never lie."
He arched a brow.
Looking instantly uncomfortable, she
cleared her throat and leaned back into her throne.
"You were different and I didn’t lie. I merely
forgot to mention a few things."
"That is semantics, Artemis,
and this isn’t about me. This is about what you’ve
done to them. You can’t leave those poor bastards out
there like you have."
"And why not? You’ve survived
quite well on your own."
"I am not the same as they and
well you know it. I had nothing in my life worth going
back to. No family, no friends."
"I take exception to that. What
was I?"
"A mistake that I’ve been
lamenting for the last two thousand years."
Her face flushed. She came off her
throne and descended two stairs to stand before him.
"How dare you speak to me that way!"
Acheron whipped his cloak off and
tossed it and his staff angrily into a corner. "Kill
me for it, Artemis. Go right ahead. Do us both a favor and
put me out of my misery."
She tried to slap him, but he caught
her hand in his and stared down into her eyes.
Artemis saw the hatred in Acheron’s
gaze, the scathing condemnation.
Their angry breaths mingled and the
air around them snapped furiously as their powers clashed.
But it wasn’t his fury she wanted.
No, never his fury...
Her gaze drifted over him. Over the
perfect sculpted planes of his face, his high cheekbones, his
long, aquiline nose. The blackness of his hair.
The eerie mercury of his eyes.
There had never been a mortal born
who could equal his physical perfection.
And it wasn’t just his beauty that
drew people to him. It wasn’t his beauty that drew her
to him.
He possessed a raw, rare kind of
masculine charisma. Power. Strength. Charm. Intelligence.
Determination.
To look at him was to want him.
To see him was to ache to touch him.
He had been built to please, and
trained to pleasure. Everything about him from the sleek
muscles that rippled to the deep, erotic timber in his
voice seduced anyone who came into contact with him.
Like a lethal wild animal, he moved
with a primal promise of danger and masculine power. With
the promise of supreme sexual fulfillment.
They were promises he delivered well
on.
In all eternity, he was the only man
who had made her weak.
The only man she had ever loved.
He had the power in him to kill her.
They both knew it. And she found the fact that he didn’t
intriguing and provocative.
Seductive and erotic.
Swallowing, she remembered him as he
had been when they first met.
The strength of him. The passion.
Defiantly, he had stood in her
temple and laughed when she threatened to kill him.
There before her statue, he had
dared do what no man before or since had ever dared...
She could still taste that kiss.
Unlike other men, he had never
feared her.
Now, the heat of his hand on her
flesh seared her, but then his touch always had. There was
nothing more she craved than the taste of his lips. The
fire of his passion.
And with one mistake, she had lost
him.
Artemis wanted to weep with the
hopelessness of it all. She’d tried once, long ago, to
turn back the hands of time and redo that morning.
To win back Acheron’s love and
trust.
The Fates had punished her severely
for the audacity.
For the last two thousand years, she
had tried everything to bring him back to her side.
Nothing had worked. Nothing had ever
come close to making him forgive her or to journey back to
her temple.
Not until she thought of the one
thing he could never say no to— a mortal soul in
jeopardy.
Acheron would do anything to save
the humans.
Her plan to make him responsible for
more Dark-Hunters had worked and now he was back.
If she could just keep him.
"You want me to release
them?" she asked.
For him, she would do anything.
"Yes."
For her, he would do nothing.
Not unless she forced him to it.
"What will you do for me,
Acheron? You know the rules. A favor requires a
favor."
He released her with an angry curse
and stepped back from her. "I’ve learned better
than to play this game with you."
Artemis shrugged with a nonchalance
she didn’t feel. At this moment everything she cared
about was on the line.
If he said no, it would destroy her.
"Fine, they will continue on as
Dark-Hunters then. Alone with no one to teach them what
they need to know. No one to care what becomes of
them."
He released a long, tired breath.
She wanted to comfort him, but knew
he would reject her touch. He’d always rejected comfort
or solace.
He was stronger than anyone had a
right to be.
When he met her gaze, it sent a raw,
sensual shiver over her.
"If they are to serve you and
the gods, Artemis, they have things they need."
"Such as?"
"Armor for one. You can’t
send them out to fight without weapons. They need money to
procure food, clothes, horses and even servants to watch
over them in the daylight while they rest."
"You ask too much for
them."
"I ask only for what they need
to survive."
"You never asked any of that
for yourself." She was hurt now at that fact.
He never asked for anything.
"I don’t need food and my
powers allow me to procure everything else I need. As for
protection, I have Simi. They won’t last alone."
No one lasts alone, Acheron.
No one.
Not even you.
And especially not me.
Artemis lifted her chin, determined
to have him by her side no matter the consequences.
"And again I say to you, what will you give me for
what they need?"
Acheron looked away, his gut tight.
He knew what she wanted and the last thing he wanted was
to give it to her. "This is for them, not me."
She shrugged. "Fine then, they
can do without since they have nothing to barter
with."
His fury ignited deep at her casual
dismissal of their lives and well-being.
She hadn’t changed at all.
"Damn you, Artemis."
She approached him slowly. "I
want you, Acheron. I want you back like you were
before."
He inwardly cringed as she cupped
his face in her hand. They could never go back as they had
been. He’d learned too much about her since then.
He had been betrayed one time too
many.
He would say he was a slow learner,
but that wasn’t true. What he’d been was so desperate
for someone to care about him that he had ignored the
darker side of her nature.
Ignored it until she’d had turned
her back on him and left him to die.
Some crimes were even above his
ability to forgive.
His thoughts turned from himself, to
the innocent men who were living in a cave. Men who knew
nothing of their new existence or enemies. He couldn’t
leave them there like that.
He had cost enough people their
lives, their futures.
There was no way he could let them
lose their souls and life too.
"All right, Artemis. I will
give you what you want, if you give them what they need to
survive."
She beamed.
"But," he continued,
"my terms are this: you are going to pay them every
month a wage that will allow them to buy whatever they
need or desire. As stated earlier, they will need
shield-bearers to care for them personally so that they
won’t have to worry about scrounging for food, clothes
or arms. I don’t want them to be distracted from their
work."
"Fine, I will find humans who
will serve them."
"Living humans, Artemis. I want
them to serve of their own free will. No more
Dark-Hunters."
"Four of you are not enough. We
need more to keep the Daimons in check."
Acheron closed his eyes as he felt
the endlessness of this relationship. All too easily he
could see into the future and where this was headed.
The more Dark-Hunters, the more he
would be locked to her. There was no way to keep her from
tying him to her forever.
Or was there?
"All right," he said.
"I’ll give on this, if you will agree to provide
them a way out of your service."
"What do you mean?"
"I want you to establish a way
for the Dark-Hunters to regain their souls so that they
are no longer bound to you if they so choose it."
Artemis stepped back. This wasn’t
something she had foreseen. If she gave him this, then
even he would be bound by it.
He could leave her.
She’d forgotten just how devious
Acheron could be. How well he knew the rules of the game
and how to manipulate them and her.
He was truly her equal.
And yet if she failed to give him
this, then he would leave her anyway. She had no choice
and well he knew it.
However, there were still things
that could keep him by her side.
One way she knew that would ensure
his presence in her life for all eternity.
"Very well. Let us make the
rules to govern them, then." She felt his thoughts
drift back toward Ias.
He pitied the poor Greek soldier who
loved his wife.
Pity, mercy and compassion would
always be his downfall.
"Number one, is that they must
die to reclaim their souls."
"Why?" he asked.
"A soul can only be released
from a body at the moment of death. Likewise, it can only
return to a body that is no longer functioning. So long as
they ‘live’ as a Dark-Hunter, they can never have
their souls again. That’s not my rule, Acheron, that is
simply the nature of souls."
He frowned at that. "How do you
kill an immortal Dark-Hunter?"
"Well, we could cut off their
heads or expose them to daylight, but since that damages
their body beyond repair, it rather defeats the
purpose."
"You’re not funny."
And neither was he. She didn’t
want to release them from her service.
Most of all, she didn’t want to
release him.
"You have to drain out their
Dark-Hunter powers," she told him. "Make their
immortal bodies vulnerable to attack, then stop their
hearts from beating. Only then do they die in a manner
that will enable them to return to life."
"Fine, I can do that."
"Actually, you can’t."
"What do you mean?"
She fought the urge to smile. Here
was where she had him.
"There are a few laws you need
to know about souls, Acheron. One is the owner must freely
give it up. Since I own their souls..."
Acheron cursed. "I will have to
barter with you for every soul."
She nodded.
He looked less than pleased by the
knowledge. But he would come around in time.
Yes, he would definitely come
around...
"What else?" he asked.
Now for her one rule that would bind
him to her forever. "Only a true, pure heart can
release the soul back into a body. The one who returns the
soul must be the one person who loves them above all
others. A person they love and trust in return."
"Why?"
"Because the soul needs
something to motivate it to movement, otherwise it stays
where it is. I use vengeance to motivate the soul into my
possession. Only an equal and as powerful an emotion will
motivate the soul back into its body. Since I can choose
that emotion, I choose it to be love. The most beautiful
and noble of all emotions. The only one worth returning
for."
Acheron stared at the marble floor
as her words whispered around him.
Love.
Trust.
Such simple words to say. Such
powerful words to feel. He envied those who knew their
true meaning.
He had never really known either
one. Betrayal, pain, degradation, suspicion, hatred. That
was his existence. That was all he'd ever been shown.
Part of him wanted to turn about and
leave Artemis forever.
"Return my beloved to me.
Please, I will do anything to have him home..."
Liora’s words rang in his head. He could hear her tears
even now. Feel her pain.
Feel the pain of Ias as he thought
of his children and wife. His worry over their welfare.
Acheron had never known that kind of
unselfish love. Neither before nor after his death.
"Give me Ias’s soul."
Artemis gave him an arched look.
"Are you willing to pay the price I ask for it, and
to the terms for their release?"
His heart shrank at her words. He
remembered the youth he had been long ago.
Everything has a price, boy.
Nothing ever comes to anyone for free. His uncle had
taught him well the price of survival.
Acheron had paid dearly for
everything he’d ever had or wanted. Food. Shelter.
Clothes.
Paid with flesh and blood.
Some things never changed.
"Yes," he said. "I
agree. I’ll pay."
Artemis smiled. "Don’t look
so unhappy, Acheron. I promise you, you’ll enjoy
it."
His stomach tightened even more. He’d
heard those words before too.
###
It was dusk when Acheron returned to
the cave.
He wasn’t alone as he walked up
the small rise. He led two men and four horses.
"What is all this?"
Callabrax asked.
"These are to be the
shield-bearers for you and Kyros. They’ve come to show
you both to the villas where you will live. They will see
to anything you need and I will come by later to finish
our training."
"What of me?" Ias asked.
"You’re coming with me."
Acheron waited until the other two
had mounted their horses and left before he turned back to
Ias. "Are you ready to go home?"
Ias looked surprised. "But you
said—"
"I was wrong. You can go
back."
"What of my oath to
Artemis?"
"It’s been taken care
of."
Ias embraced him like a brother.
Acheron cringed at the contact,
especially since it aggravated the deep welts on his back.
The even deeper welts that resided in his soul.
He’d always hated for anyone to
touch him.
Gently, he pushed Ias away.
"Come, let us see you
home."
Acheron flashed them back to Ias’s
small farm where his wife had just sent their two children
to bed.
Her beautiful face paled as she saw
them by her hearth.
"Ias?" She blinked.
"They told me this morning that you were dead."
Ias shook his head, his eyes bright.
"Nay, my love. I am here. I’ve come home to
you."
Acheron took a deep breath as Ias
rushed to her and hugged her close. It went a long way in
ebbing the pain of his back.
"There’s still a couple of
things, Ias," Acheron said quietly.
Ias pulled back with a frown.
"Your wife will have to release
your soul back into your body."
Liora scowled. "What?"
"I swore myself to serve
Artemis," Ias explained, "but she’s going to
let me go so that I can come back to you."
She looked baffled by his words.
"What must we do?" Ias
asked.
"You’ll have to die
again."
He paled a bit. "Are you
sure?"
Acheron nodded, then handed his
dagger to Liora. "You’ll have to stab him through
the heart."
She looked horrified and appalled by
his suggestion. "What?"
"It’s the only way."
"It’s murder. I’ll be
hanged."
"No, I swear it."
"Do it, Liora," Ias urged.
"I want to be with you again."
Her face skeptical, she took the
dagger in her hand and tried to press it into his chest.
It didn’t work.
All the blade did was prick the
skin.
Acheron grimaced as he remembered
what Artemis had said about Dark-Hunter powers. An average
human wouldn’t be able to hurt a Dark-Hunter with a
dagger.
But he could.
Taking the dagger from Liora, he
drove it straight through Ias’s heart.
Ias stumbled back, panting.
"Don’t panic," Acheron
said, laying him down on the floor before his hearth.
"I’ve got you."
Acheron reached up and pulled Liora
down by his side. He took the stone medallion that
contained Ias’s soul from his satchel. "You have to
take this into your hand when he dies and release his soul
back into his body."
"How?" she asked.
"Press the stone over his bow
and arrow brand mark."
Acheron waited until the moment
right before Ias died. He handed the medallion to Liora.
She screamed as soon as it touched
her hand, then dropped it to the floor.
"It’s on fire!" she
shrieked.
Ias gasped as he struggled to live.
"Pick it up," Acheron
ordered Liora.
She blew cool air across her palm as
she shook her head no.
"What is wrong with you,
woman?" Acheron asked. "He’s going to die if
you don’t save him. Pick up his soul."
"No."
"No? How can you not? I heard
you praying for him to return to you. You said you would
give anything for your beloved to return."
She dropped her hand and eyed him
coldly. "Ias is not my beloved. Lycantes is. It was
he whom I prayed for and he is dead now. I was told the
ghost of Ias murdered him because he killed Ias in battle
so that the two of us could be together to raise our
children."
Acheron was dumbstruck by her words.
He looked at Ias and saw the pain in
his eyes before they turned blank and Ias died.
His heart hammering, Acheron picked
up the medallion and tried to release the soul himself.
It didn’t work.
Furious, he froze Liora into place before he killed
her for her actions.
"Artemis!" he shouted
at the ceiling.
The goddess flashed into the hut.
"Save him."
"I can’t change the rules,
Acheron. I told you the conditions and you agreed to
them."
He motioned to the woman who was
now a human statue. "Why didn’t you tell me she
didn’t love him?"
"I had no way of knowing that
anymore than you did." Her eyes turned dull.
"Even gods can make mistakes."
"Then why didn’t you at least
tell me the medallion would burn her?"
"That I didn’t know. It doesn’t
burn me and it didn’t burn you. I’ve never had a human
hold one before."
Acheron’s head buzzed with guilt
and grief. With hatred for both himself and her.
"What happens to him now?"
"He’s a Shade. Without a body
or soul, his essence is trapped in Katoteros."
Acheron roared with the pain of what
she was telling him. He had just killed a man and
sentenced him to a fate far worse than death.
And for what?
For love?
For mercy?
Gods, he was such a fool.
Better than anyone, he should have
known to ask the right questions. He should have known
better than to trust in the love of another person.
Damn it, when would he learn?
Artemis reached down to him and
lifted his chin with her hand until he looked up at her.
"Tell me, Acheron, is there anyone you will
ever trust enough to release your soul?"
©1986-2007, Sherrilyn Kenyon
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