Curse of the Sphinx

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Curse of the Sphinx Page 24

by Raye Wagner


  She leaned into him; the swelling in her heart told her she already did.

  “I THOUGHT YOU guys broke up?” Haley frowned. “Not that I wanted you broke up, but Krista’s been telling everyone—”

  Hope rolled her eyes. “You think Krista would know?”

  “I guess not. Did you guys skip together yesterday?”

  Hope blushed. “We just had to figure some things out. Athan’s a little . . .” She searched for the right word.

  “Dramatic?” Haley asked, grinning from ear to ear.

  “Sensitive.” Athan finished, as he wrapped his arms around Hope. “Miss me?” He kissed her.

  Her blush felt like the sun scorching her skin. “I . . . uh . . . yes.”

  “Ugh. I’m going to go find Tristan. You two . . .” Haley waved her hand. “Carry on. I’ll see you at lunch.” She left.

  He laughed. “Did you talk with Mr. Jeffers?”

  Hope nodded. “He was very understanding.” She didn’t bother to say how the principal had stuttered over his “welcome back” speech, and praised her “exemplary study habits.”

  “I’m still going to have to figure out something for next year.” She sighed.

  “Always planning ahead, aren’t you?” He turned her so they were facing each other. “We’ll figure it out. Maybe Myrine could adopt you.” He leaned forward.

  “Eww.” Hope pulled back. “That would be sick.”

  “Shhh. Stop worrying, and let me kiss you.”

  And she did.

  Four days until the change

  HOPE SAT IN chemistry watching Mr. Burgess write his name in alcohol and then set it on fire. There was seriously something wrong with him.

  She closed her eyes and Angela’s excitement burned her ears.

  “No, his name is Tre. And he has two older brothers,” Angela said.

  Hope shook her head and opened her eyes.

  Krista was practically glowing.

  Tre. The new kid. Of course. Hope had only seen the young man from the back. He was tall and blond, and very tan.

  “He is, by far, the sexiest thing I’ve ever seen. Like, so much hotter than Athan.” Krista turned to Hope, and offered a smirk, “No offense.”

  Hope shrugged. “None taken.” Most of the venom from the little cheerleader had dissipated over the last couple of weeks. To have someone else absorb all Krista’s attention? Hope couldn’t be happier.

  “So why isn’t he in school? I saw him yesterday in the hall and he said he was registering.” Krista pouted.

  “Oh, no. He’s not starting school till next year. They moved here from Tennessee, and the school year there gets out in May. He’s already finished.” Of course Angela would know.

  “Really? Dang it. I could really use the eye candy. I’m so over this already.”

  “There’s only three days left,” Angela said in a conciliatory tone.

  Hope smiled to herself thinking of summer plans with Athan, Haley, and Tristan.

  Hope stared out the window at the blue sky, while Mr. Burgess continued to ramble about how chemistry made the world go round.

  The bell rang, and Hope caught the end of Angela and Krista’s conversation.

  “Well, get your mom to get his address, so we can invite them to do stuff. I don’t want to wait till next year.”

  Hope shook her head.

  Poor guys.

  One day before the change

  “MR. STANLEY!” HOPE smiled at the butcher as she walked up to the meat counter. “Why didn’t you tell me Haley was your daughter?”

  The balding man laughed as if she’d cracked a joke. “I knew you’d figure it out. Done with school, eh?”

  She nodded. “I need something to help me celebrate.”

  “I have just the thing.” He turned a grabbed a pair of gloves. “Do you have a riddle for me, today?”

  “Actually, I do. What’s more powerful than Zeus, more evil than Hades, the rich want it, the poor have it, and if you eat it, you’ll die?”

  He laughed again. “I’m not sure I agree, but I know this one: Nothing.” He started packaging up her meat. “Are you and Haley going into Portland to . . .” His eyes narrowed.

  Hope turned to see what he was looking at.

  Three boys—two of them looked more like men—stood at the deli. The tallest one was talking with the man behind the counter, and the other two pushed each other in some testosterone-laden contest. Hope shook her head. She’d seen them a couple of times around town. The three blonds were equally tall, with broad shoulders. These were the guys Krista wanted to get to know, the youngest one would be in their class next year.

  Mr. Stanley muttered something under his breath, and then turned back to Hope. His normally jovial face was set in a hard line.

  “I hope they don’t knock something over,” Hope said in an attempt to lighten the mood.

  Mr. Stanley came around the counter and handed Hope the package of meat.

  “Don’t hang out with them, okay?” His gray eyes were hard as stone. “Those guys . . . those kinds of guys are nothing but trouble.” But it sounded like he meant those guys in particular.

  Hope took the steaks, a little freaked out by the butcher’s intensity. He’d never given her advice before. Strange that he thought she needed it now.

  “I wasn’t going to.” She had no interest in the brash trio. “Thanks Mr. Stanley.”

  He nodded, but his eyes stayed on the three young men.

  HOPE WALKED THROUGH her door, and kicked it closed behind her.

  Arms full of groceries, she walked through her living room, pausing to look at the pictures on the mantel—one of Hope and Athan soaking wet laughing after a water fight a week ago and another of Hope and Haley down at the river. There was another of Hope, Athan, Haley, and Tristan outside Stonehenge in Maryhill. The pictures of her mom and Priska were harder to look at. No, not harder, just more bittersweet.

  There were still a few boxes scattered throughout the house. Items she hadn’t needed yet sat neglected in half empty boxes. She’d get to it when she got back this weekend.

  She put the groceries down, and started putting things away.

  In the morning she would change into the Sphinx. There was no dread in her anticipation of the change. It was amazing to think that tomorrow morning she’d be flying through the mountains. And when she got back, Athan would be waiting.

  Her phone rang.

  She glanced at the screen before answering it.

  “Hello. Yes, I will wait for Mr. Davenport.” Hope thought she was being cheeky. She was feeling cheeky. Her smile fell when the woman spoke.

  “Hope is that you?”

  Hades in hell.

  “Aunt . . . Priska?” Her mind spun.

  Priska sobbed into the phone, her words incoherent.

  Hope slumped to the floor. How . . . How could this be? Her heart thundered.

  Unbelievable. “Where have you been?” she whispered. Priska was back!

  Hope said nothing while Priska unfolded the impossible.

  She’d gone to Nashville. There was an Athenian temple downtown, and a conservatory in the suburbs. Priska had convinced a group of demigods that she was one of them. Hades, she was one of them. She moved in, and then fished for information.

  “I thought . . .” Priska hiccupped. “I got careless. I must’ve gotten careless. I thought I was covering my tracks.”

  Silence.

  “What happened?”

  “There were three. Sons of Apollo.” Priska’s voice was little more than a whisper. “They . . . kidnapped me.”

  Hope had no idea what to say. Kidnapped? Thoughts of torture, beatings, and hateful words pulsed in her mind. She wanted to know, and yet . . . She dreaded the information. “What did they do?”

  Priska sucked in a deep breath. “It was Apollo, Hope. Apollo killed your mom. Oh, gods Hope. Your mom . . . She married Paul… the day she died. The wedding certificate was here, in the mail. She fulfilled the curse.”<
br />
  It wasn’t the question she’d asked. Somehow she knew it was horrible. Or Priska would’ve told her.

  But she’d confirmed what Athan had said. He’d been right. She’d accepted his explanation, but to hear it . . . to know it.

  Apollo! She hated him! Hate wasn’t even a strong enough word. How dare he?

  She knew the answer, and it was bitter.

  Hopelessness flooded her heart. Her breathing hitched, and Hope brought her hand to her mouth. Tears leaked in a slow stream, and she scrubbed at her eyes trying to dam them. Fulfillment of the curse, and Apollo had killed her mother. There was nothing she could do.

  “Where are you?”

  The question brought Hope back to the present. “In a small town in Eastern Washington, Goldendale.”

  “Are you safe?”

  Hope thought about the question. Safe? What did that even mean? Safe from what? Safe from whom? She had friends that cared. A demigod boyfriend that would fight Skia for her. “I think so.” Hope told Priska everything. About Mr. Jeffers, the Skia, Brand, Chelli . . . and Athan. “I haven’t seen a Skia since that attack almost a month ago. I think it’s good. Athan and I—”

  “Aphrodite and Eros. You fell in love.” The words were quiet, but they exploded over the phone. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” Priska seethed.

  The anger burned, and Hope felt raw hurt. “I—”

  “Don’t lie to me. I can hear it in your love-sick voice. How could you be so . . .”

  She didn’t finish, but Hope could fill in the blank.

  “I didn’t mean to, but—”

  “You didn’t mean to?” Priska sounded on the edge of hysteria. “Do you remember what I just told you? I’m sure your mother didn’t mean to fall in love, either.”

  The words were physical blows. “How . . . how could you say that? Athan is—” Who was this woman? Her aunt was never so cruel.

  “I’m trying to protect you.” Priska fumed. “Did you sleep with him?”

  “What? No!” Mortification heated her cheeks. What a nightmare! She could barely listen while Priska lectured on.

  “Well, that’s a mercy. Don’t let infatuation with a cute boy be mistaken for love. And don’t be stupid. Or maybe it’s already too late.”

  Hope wished she’d never answered the phone, and then guilt poked her in the chest.

  Priska sighed. “I want you to come live with me.”

  “In Seattle?” Was she kidding?

  “I’ll move to the Eastside if you like, or even up north, although the commute will kill me. But I can’t have you over there, at the whim of Hermes’s son.”

  “No. I’m happy here.” There was no way that was happening. No way.

  “You can even bring your demigod boyfriend, if he wants to come. I want you close to me.” She sounded exhausted. “Hope, those sons of Apollo are after you. If they find you . . . I don’t even want to think about what would happen.”

  “I’m in the middle of nowhere. They’re not going to find me.” It wasn’t just Athan. She had friends. People that cared about her . . . Haley, Tristan, Mr. Stanley…

  “Hope!”

  “No.” She let out a slow breath. “I’ll come for a visit, but I’m not moving.”

  “Then maybe I’ll move over there.”

  Hope wasn’t sure if it was meant as a threat, a gesture of love, or a gesture of fear. “If that’s what you want.” Priska could make her own decisions, and so would she.

  “Will you come for a visit? Maybe stay the weekend?”

  Hope nodded. “Of course. I’ll come . . . tonight. I have to change into the Sphinx, but I can just stay with you. I’ve missed you.”

  Priska started sobbing again. “I would love that. I’ve missed you, too.” She coughed, then cleared her throat. “For what it’s worth, I’m so grateful you found friends who helped you.”

  A mixture of love and pain crashed through Hope’s heart. “Of course. I’m so glad . . . I’m so happy you’re back.”

  They said their goodbyes, then Hope looked at her watch.

  Athan would be home now. She could just take the steaks over there, and tell him what happened. Because really, it was a miracle.

  She texted him, then took a few minutes to gather up the food before she raced out the door.

  Life wasn’t meant to be lived in perfect safety. Living was all about risks, love, loss, joy, pain, sorrow, and triumph. Hiding was a shallow existence, it wasn’t living. And now that she knew it, Hope wasn’t going to stop living.

  “DAD, YOU’RE ASKING the impossible.” Athan shifted from foot to foot. “You want me to find one person out of millions.”

  Hermes lifted his eyebrows. “It’s your specialty. Finding people.” He frowned. “And, if you haven’t found the Sphinx, then why are you still in this little town?”

  Athan blushed, and, for the first time in his life, he was at a loss for words.

  “Well, well. What did you find? Are you in love, my son?” Hermes laughed and clapped him on the back. “Love is a grand thing, to be celebrated for sure.” He draped his coat over the back of the upholstered chair, and faced his son. “You must tell me all about her, but first let’s talk about the Sphinx. There is word on Olympus that Apollo’s sons are hunting the monster.”

  Apollo’s sons? Could he never catch a break? “What will you do with her? When I find her?”

  “If Apollo wants his monster, surely he will bargain for it.”

  “You would hold her for ransom? Dangle her like bait?” Athan clenched his jaw. Was his dad always this calloused?

  “It almost sounds like you care, son.”

  The door slammed.

  “Athan?” Myrine’s muffled voice came from down the hall.

  “Be there in a minute,” he called back. He had to get his father out of here before Hope arrived. He looked at his watch.

  Hermes snorted. “How do you stand living with her? The visions must have driven her crazy by now.”

  Athan nodded, thinking of the oracle. “She’s not lucid very much, but she’s hardly dangerous.” And she was usually spot on, if you understood her.

  The sound of crashing pans echoed from the kitchen, and Athan winced.

  Hermes sat and put his head in his hands. “Athan. I need to you to find the monster. Your love . . . she’ll understand.”

  Athan faced his father. “I can’t do what you’re asking me. I . . . I don’t want to hunt down the Sphinx.”

  Hermes looked up and frowned. “You are the best, and I need this.” He stared at Athan, probing. “Have you already found it?”

  Athan willed his face blank, and shook his head.

  Hermes sucked in his breath. “You would lie . . . to me?” He stared at Athan, and his gaze seemed to pierce Athan’s mind. His jaw dropped. “You fell in love with her?” he whispered.

  Silence descended.

  There was nothing Athan could say.

  Hermes sat back in the chair and exhaled long and slow. “How long?”

  Athan collapsed into the other chair. “A month.” He offered a wan smile.

  Hermes shook his head. “You do not know . . . Apollo will never let you have her.”

  Just his name set Athan on edge. “Why would he get to decide? Has he not done enough?” It was bad enough that Hope was cursed to be a monster. But to not let her love who she wanted?

  The floorboards creaked and both men stood as footsteps approached the door.

  Hermes leaned forward. “Apollo will kill you,” he seethed. “The curse is to ensure that he gets the Sphinx, and no one else. If he even finds out you are courting her, he will kill you.” Hermes stood and grabbed his coat. “You need to break it off, son. Now. End it. Please. Understand, I would not lose you, too.”

  “Dad—”

  Both men heard the gasp on the other side of the door, and then the rapid retreat of footsteps.

  Hermes frowned.

  The front door slammed again, and Athan felt fear roil thro
ugh him. He stood and looked out the window.

  It wasn’t Myrine’s car in the driveway. Myrine hadn’t come home.

  Hope’s green Civic was pulling out of the driveway like a bat out of Hades.

  Skata.

  GLASS SHATTERED, FOLLOWED by a thud. In one fluid movement, Athan slid his hands under the pillow, grabbed the matching silver blades, and sat up. The thin sheet fell from his shoulders, and he shifted to the edge of the bed.

  The night was dark and thick with humidity. The ceiling fan continued to whir despite the escalating tension in the small motel room. Through the broken window, the sour stench of rotten humanity wafted from the street. Athan waited to hear what, if anything, else was coming.

  He’d been following a lead, a mere rumor from an acquaintance of a friend. The message came via text a week ago and spoke of a golden girl at Athena High in Seattle. Thought to be a demigod, the girl didn’t blend in with the rest of the senior class and made no attempt to. By the time he’d arrived, the mysterious girl had disappeared. Vanished. No forwarding address. No next of kin listed on the records, no emergency contact. Just gone. The apartment was vacant despite the rent being paid through the end of the six-month lease. Even more frustrating, the girl had withdrawn from school weeks ago. Any trail she’d left was now cold. Bitterly so.

  Desperation made a foolish companion, and he wore his recklessness like a heavy cord, tangling his intuition and instinct into a messy knot. Regardless, he’d spent the next several days talking to students, searching popular hangouts, even going so far as to call the conservatory. Unfortunately, he’d gotten voicemail. Not too surprising. Most demigods carried their own cell phones. It was rare to use the conservatory’s line, and even more rare for someone to call it. Perhaps it would be worth a brief visit to see if there was any news of Hope, or rather the Sphinx. The thought of a visit to the demigod residence made his stomach roll. But if it led to finding Hope, it would be worth it.

  No sound came from the small sitting room on the other side of the bedroom door. If there were visitors, they weren’t human. He stood and crossed the room.

 

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