I guess my blank expression tells Shayne I need more explanation.
“An old Cretan king. He’s the overlord here in Asphodel.”
“A king from Crete runs Asphodel?”
“An ancient king runs each of the territories. Minos here. Rhadamanthus in the Elysian Fields. And Aeacus in Tartarus.”
“Rhadam is a king?” I guess I never thought to ask this when I met him.
Shayne shakes his head. “Was a king. Here in Hell he’s only an overlord. They all are. I’m the only king in the Underworld.” He scowls. “Which more and more seems to be a point of confusion among the lords.”
I remember Rhadam’s deference to Shayne, so solid a part of their relationship it could never be in question. “Not Rhadam?”
“No, not Rhadam.” Shayne brushes his sleeves, and dirt vanishes off them. “He’s true to me through and through. And as it happens, the only one I can trust.”
We’re at the imposing door now, but Shayne doesn’t open it. Can he sense the evil which touches each and every one of my nerves? He lets go of my hand, and I look at him, ready to open my mouth and ask another question. But I stop. In a single moment, he’s ceased to be Shayne, the guy I’m sure I’m in love with, and has become Hades, supreme King of the Underworld. A force to be reckoned with.
He lifts his hand and knocks on the thick door—a knock so hard I hear the echoes through the windows inside the house. Nobody answers, but Shayne doesn’t knock again. Instead, he waits, and we stand there in silence until, after what feels like eternity, a lock clicks, and the door creeps open. Dead eyes greet us inside.
“I’m here to see Minos.” Shayne doesn’t ask; he states it.
The man who’s opened the door stares at Shayne. He’s got sandy blond hair, and from his engorged biceps, it’s obvious this guy spent way too much time in the gym back when he was alive. But now, here in Hell, does it really matter how much time someone spent in the gym? I wonder if he spent more time with his loved ones and less time working out if he’d have ended up in the Elysian Fields instead of Asphodel—Land of the Walking Dead.
“King Minos is busy.”
It’s the first time someone in Asphodel has spoken. Until this point, I’m not even sure they can speak.
Shayne’s face hardens, and I almost hear electricity sizzle off him next to me. “Tell Minos that King Hades demands to speak with him.” He omits the word
The man doesn’t nod or agree or shake his head. It’s only when he walks backward, away from us, and toward a long hallway that I realize he’s simply obeying Shayne’s command. The command of the King of the Underworld must supersede commands from one of Shayne’s minions.
Shayne and I stand there, still on the doorstep, watching him leave.
I lean close to him and put my lips to his ear. “Why don’t you go in and find him?”
He whispers back, not turning his head away from the room ahead. “Because even here in Hell, we have courtesies.”
“It doesn’t seem like Minos is being very courteous to you.”
Shayne gives his head an almost imperceptible shake. “No, it doesn’t.”
Another ten minutes later, and the blond shell of a man returns. “Follow me.”
Chapter 25
Minos
We follow the steroid-ridden ghost man in silence. He has his back to us as he leads us first down a hallway, then through a breezeway to another wing of the house. Every step I take, a sense of dread weighs heavier inside my stomach. I look down and realize I’m clenching Shayne’s hand so hard my knuckles are white.
But Shayne doesn’t turn to me or comfort me aside from a brief squeeze of my hand. His face is frozen in a hard stare straight ahead. At the end of the breezeway, we stop in front of a glass room overlooking a flat, gray ocean with nothing else in sight.
“King Minos will see you in here.” The man moves aside, and gives us a clear view of the room ahead. Every wall is glass, and in the center is a stone chimney so large a Spanish Oak could burn inside without being cut.
Shayne doesn’t acknowledge our guide as he opens the glass door. He walks in, and I follow. I can’t see anyone in the room, but Shayne doesn’t hesitate. He skirts around the giant fireplace and stops at a chair on the other side. Amber liquid sits in a crystal tumbler on a table next to the chair.
“Minos.” Shayne’s voice sounds like razors slicing glass.
“Hades.” Minos doesn’t turn to face us; instead, he’s facing the windows overlooking the dull ocean. “So you finally decided to grace us with your presence here in Asphodel?” Every word Minos speaks scratches in his throat as it comes out, making it sound like it pains him to speak. A hand reaches from the chair and picks up the glass. He swirls it, making the ice inside clink up against the crystal.
“Unlike you, I have other duties here in the Underworld.” Shayne lets go of my hand and shoves the side of the chair around, causing Minos to spin and face us. The drink flies out of his hand and crashes to the ground, and the air is filled with the sweet smell of alcohol.
Minos looks at Shayne, but manages to keep his face impassive. But when Minos’s eyes see me, they grow as big as the gold coins Charon collects. He half stands up, but Shayne throws an arm in front of me. “Sit down!”
Minos continues to stare at me but obeys the command.
“To what do I owe this honor?” Minos forces his eyes away from me, but his eyes dart back to me every so often as if he can’t control them. Minos gestures toward an empty chair, but Shayne stays standing, and I follow his lead.
“We can start with the escape attempts.” Shayne’s fingers are unclenched, but he shifts them around like they are prepared for battle.
I’m starting to wonder just what Shayne’s gotten into here. What he’s gotten me into.
Minos waves a hand. “A couple restless souls crossing the river. So what of it?”
Shayne grits his teeth. “Why are they crossing the river, Minos? They shouldn’t have anything to cross back for.”
Minos looks at Shayne and narrows his eyes. “You tell me, oh wise ruler of the Underworld. Why would anyone want to leave Asphodel?”
“They wouldn’t.” I can hear Shayne’s breath now, and his presence has shifted to something feral. “Unless someone’s been telling them to.”
Minos spreads his arms wide, palms up. “Why would anyone in Asphodel tell the dead souls about their past? And besides, as we’ve seen from the recent attempts, crossing the River Lethe only results in being devoured by the monsters.” His eyes shift to me again. I meet them, and he stares at me with such cruelty, I’m forced to look away.
Shayne moves in closer to Minos. “I think somebody’s trying to exchange souls. Trying to get people out of Tartarus.”
The silence that descends on the room is so real, it pushes at me from all sides. My heart is beating so fast, I’m pretty sure everyone both below and above ground can hear it.
Neither Minos nor Shayne looks away from each other. The heavy quiet is so oppressive, I feel like something needs to be said, and neither of them is going to say it.
“Nobody can leave Tartarus.” I’m not sure how the words manage to escape my mouth, but when they do, Minos turns his head and looks at me. Shayne leans away from Minos, and the silence is replaced with something even worse. Lies and secrets fill the air around us, so thick they’re like real creatures.
I’m trying not to look at Minos, but I see him still staring at me, and then he licks his lips. “So the beautiful criminal speaks.”
Criminal? He’s talking about me? I glance at Shayne and notice his fingers are now balled into fists. And I’m