little puppy with a full tummy.
I squirmed.
I trusted my Seth.
There was that pleasant and heady fog again, invading me.
I opened my eyes and stared at the bars. Would Hephaestus need to reinforce the bars soon? Gods, I hoped so. If they weakened, then so would the wards. Then I could get out.
Seth said something that caused my toes to curl so I would pay attention to him again.
I showed him the bars and my thoughts. He was doubtful. Hephaestus’ work rarely weakened, but I was hopeful… for a hot second. This… this bond wasn’t the real deal. Even though my Seth was inside me, he really wasn’t here. I was alone—alone in a cell.
Part of me warmed in response. And part of me, the source of the other voice whenever Aiden was around, tucked away and hidden from my Seth, recoiled as I fingered the crystal rose around my neck.
CHAPTER 2
SOMETIME LATER—I HAD NO IDEA IF IT WAS NIGHT, DAY, or how long I’d slept—I was alone. There was no Aiden sitting in the chair watching me. No Seth at the end of the amber cord. This was a treat.
My head was somewhat clear.
I stood and stalked toward the bars. They looked normal—silvery titanium—but it was the fine mesh circling them that was the problem.
Hephaestus’ chain was a real bitch.
Taking a deep breath, I grabbed the bars and squeezed. A flash of blue light volleyed up the bars, billowing along the ceiling and over the mark like smoke full of glitter.
“Dammit,” I muttered, backing away.
I tried calling on
I called upon fire.
Aaaaaand… there was nothing.
When I’d Awakened, the power that had broken open and flooded my veins had been a rush—a high so great I could have licked the ceiling, a high of no equal. I got why daimons yearned for aether. I’d had just a taste of it. And I hadn’t felt it since Apollo had knocked me into next week with a freaking god bolt.
Jerk.
He was also on my to-kill list.
I went to the bathroom and cleaned up. Freshly showered and attired, I returned to testing out the bars. The shimmering blue light was sort of pretty. At least it was something to stare at.
I sighed, about ready to put my head through the wall. I searched for my Seth at the end of the cord—still gone. I could call out to him and he would respond, but I was sure he was busy trying to free me. With nothing left to do, I returned to testing sections of the bars.
What seemed like hours later, a door opened upstairs. There were voices. One of them was Aiden’s, but the other…
“Luke?” I called out.
“Leave,” was Aiden’s harsh reply.
The door shut, and one heavy set of footsteps came down the stairs. I swear to the gods the sound that came out of my throat was an animalistic growl.
Aiden came into view, holding a plastic plate of eggs and bacon. One eyebrow was arched. “Do you really think I’m going to allow a half-blood near you?”
“A girl can hope.” Halfs were more susceptible to compulsions, and I now packed one on steroids.
He held the plate through the space in the bars. The last time I’d done the whole not-eating thing, it hadn’t worked. I’d pretty much starved and ended up on the Elixir because of it. Food was my friend this time around.
I reached for the plate.
Aiden’s empty hand snaked out and wrapped around my arm. His hand was so large it swallowed my wrist. He said nothing, but his thundercloud eyes willed me to do
I remembered all those things in detail.
But the emotions that belonged to those events and memories weren’t there. They were cut off completely. Gone with the whims of the past… Aiden was my past.
Aiden let go, his eyes as hard as these cement walls. He backed away while I took my food to the mattress. Surprisingly, he let me eat in silence.
Afterward, not so much.
Today Aiden wanted to talk about our first training session and how much I’d apparently annoyed the crap out of him because I hadn’t stopped talking. When he got to the part when I’d mimicked his voice, I started to smile. He
Aiden’s eyes flared the same moment my lips twitched. “You said I sounded like a father.”
I had.
“You also said you were going to have to drop your crack habit when I went over the rules.” Aiden smiled.
My lips almost answered in kind. And I didn’t like that. Time to change the topic. “I don’t want to talk about this.”
Aiden leaned back in the metal folding chair. The thing had to be uncomfortable. “What do you want to talk about, Alex?”
“Where has Apollo been? Since he’s my great-whatever, I’m feeling unloved.”
He folded his arms. “Apollo won’t be around.”
Oh, interesting development. My little, old ears perked right up. “And why not?”
His stare was level. “And do you really think I’m going to tell you when you’ll run right back to tell Seth?”
I put my bare feet on the cold floor and stood. “I won’t say a word.”
Aiden shot me a bland look. “Call me crazy, but I don’t believe you.”