Out of the corner of her eye, Lore caught a certain darkness gathering in the trees just behind Athena’s head. Birds and squirrels packed the branches, perched side by side in unnatural stillness, their eyes glowing gold with Artemis’s power.
They couldn’t even run. The chase would get the hounds’ blood up, and they would tear them apart.
“Ideas?” Castor asked the group. “Anyone?”
All at once, the dogs fell silent. Lore’s scalp prickled and tightened at the feeling of the unseen gazes around her.
Cats began to gather on the grass, the fur on their backs sticking up like knives.
Lore should have known Artemis’s instinct would be to hide amongst the wild things, even within the boundaries of a concrete-and-steel city. They’d be lucky if they even heard the whisper of the arrow before it pierced their hearts.
The dogs circled them. The ones at the back edged forward, closer, while those in front of them turned and started down the trail. Not to guide them, she realized, but to keep them from escaping.
“Are we just standing here like assholes and waiting for her to come kill us?” Lore said, removing the knife from the sheath strapped to her leg. “Come on.”
Her breath was loud in her ears as they followed the trail south. They were surrounded by full-bodied trees and a thick border of shrubs. As the path narrowed, it became claustrophobic. There were more bodies—men and women who had gone out for runs, others clearly coming and going from work or school. Lore’s whole being twisted at the sight of them, feeding her anger.
Artemis would answer for their deaths. Athena had been right all along. Her sister was beyond reason. Castor could try, he could hope, but Artemis would never ally with them, and now Lore would never accept the goddess’s help even if it was offered.
“This is your last chance to turn back, imposter,” Athena warned. “I will waste no breath protecting you from her.”
Lore looked to Castor. “Maybe you should . . .”
He wouldn’t hear it. “I’m here for Miles, and I won’t leave without him.”
“How did she even know he was involved in this?” Lore whispered.
“Isn’t it obvious?” Athena asked. “She has been watching and tracking our movements. She needed a way to draw us out.”
“Is there really no way to get through to her?” Van whispered. “She’s your sister.”
Looking at Athena now, though, Lore wondered if she had made a mistake in bringing her here. Athena wouldn’t do anything to endanger Lore’s life, as it would mean endangering her own, but . . . she hadn’t bound her fate to Castor’s. What was to stop Athena from serving Castor up on a platter to her sister to reignite their partnership?
Me, Lore thought, watching the powerful muscles of Castor’s back work with each step he took.
“She is not a beast to be soothed,” Athena warned. “When Apollo fell, her mind frayed and she became half a soul.”
Castor said nothing as he gazed into the dimly lit park.
By the time they reached the pond and its waterfall, the faint drizzle had picked up into a punishing rain. It slashed down onto the spread of green-tinged water, sending the surface into a frenzied dance. At the very center of it, positioned on his knees and slumped forward until his face was nearly in the rising water, was Miles.
Lore darted forward, but Castor held her back, forcing her to take cover with the others behind a nearby park bench.
She scanned the area around them, searching for any sign of movement. The dogs fell back to line the water’s edge. They sat, obedient, waiting for their next command. Lore followed their gazes across the pond.
“There!” Lore said, pointing. “There she is!”
The archer was balanced on one of the smaller outcroppings between the waterfall and a weeping willow dripping with rain.
Lore shielded her eyes against the onslaught of the storm. The goddess’s face was striped with dirt, and a crown of leaves and thorns rested on her pale hair. Her once sky-blue tunic was nearly black with blood and grime. She raised her bow, turning the nocked arrow toward Miles.
“No!” Van leaped over the bench and ran for the pond, splashing into the dank water as Artemis let her arrow fly.
“CAS—” LORE BEGAN, BUT the new god was already on his feet. Power blazed from his hands, incinerating the arrow and exploding jagged stones around the waterfall.
Artemis leaped away just as Van threw himself over Miles to shield him, disappearing into the trees. Castor and Athena ran around opposite sides of the pond in pursuit of her. The dogs bounded after them, snapping and snarling.
That’s going to get someone’s attention, Lore thought. She jumped over the park bench and splashed down into the pond. “Is he—?”
Van held out a hand, blocking her path. His voice was low with fury. “Don’t touch him.”
Lore froze, her stomach knotting. “We need to . . . We need to get him out of here.”
Van’s voice was low with fury, and his whole body shook with the force of his words. “You always—you always do this. It’s always about what you want and everyone just has to— Just . . . don’t touch him.”
She didn’t know what to do, other than hold herself back as Van dragged Miles out of the pond. He knelt, securing Miles over his shoulder, then ran back into the safety of the nearby streets.
“Godkiller!” Artemis cried out from the darkness. “I’ve waited for this!”
Lore shook herself. She could deal with the fallout of what had happened with Miles later—right now, he was safe with Van, and there was another, more pressing problem at hand.
She ran up the nearest set of stairs, stopping as she reached the narrow walking path. She couldn’t see anyone else through the veil of rain and the thick brush, but she could hear bodiless voices as they echoed off the cliffs. She stopped as she reached the next level’s walking trail, scanning the trees.
“Leave, sister!” Artemis shouted. “You know this kill is mine! If you betray me again, it will be your life I take next!”
Betray her? Lore thought incredulously.
“You wish to speak of betrayal?” Athena thundered back. “After leaving me to become the new god’s prey?”
“And now you betray me with every breath my brother’s killer draws,” Artemis said. “You should have brought him to me. You promised he was mine!”
Lore tried running toward the sound of their echoing voices, but they seemed to come from everywhere at once.
“Listen to me,” Athena called to her. “Control your feelings before they destroy you.”
“Listen, listen, listen!” Artemis snarled back. “I will never again listen to you. You weave lies and spin promises that you never intend to keep. You have done this to us—you! We followed you, and you led us to ruin!”
“Yes, sister, but now we have found a possible end to the hunt,” Athena said. “New instructions. Help us find them and we will return home. The hunt will end.”
“We will never be allowed to return home!” Artemis growled. “When will you see this? We will never bask in our father’s light again. We will never know his favor. All that is left is to kill the hunters and false gods for what they have done to us. To punish them for their lack of faith. If I must die, then so must they—beginning with him!”