Goddess of Spring (Goddess Summoning #2)(101)


"Wait!" Persephone said before he could leave the room. "First there is something that Lina and I need to know."

Hades looked at her, careful to keep his eyes focused on her face.

"Just stay where you are, and believe that this is very important - to al three of us."

"What is it you need to know?" Hades asked.

"This," Persephone said. She stood up.

The hot water flushed her slick skin. The ni**les of her br**sts were puckered and looked as if they had just been caressed. Her body was long and lean and as exquisite as Hades remembered it. He stared at her as she stepped slowly and gracefully from the pool and walked with an enticing sway toward him. When she reached him she stopped. Lifting her arms she draped them around his shoulders. Then she pressed her naked body against him and pulled him down to meet her mouth. Hades' lips touched hers and his arms instinctively went around her. But there was nothing there. Oh, he could certainly feel the familiarity of her body, and her mouth was warm and soft, but she did not move him. It was as if he held a mal eable statue. Gently, but firmly, he pulled away from her.

Persephone stepped out of his arms.

"Then it truly is not this body that you desire."

"What I desire has not changed, nor wil it. I desire only one woman. It matters little what body she inhabits."

For a moment, Hades thought he saw sadness in the Goddess's eyes, but the look was fleeting and when she smiled, her air of youthful nonchalance was firmly in place.

"Wel , thank you for answering that question for us."

"You are most welcome." Hades took a robe from the cabinet and Persephone slipped into it. He retrieved the goblet from the floor and picked up the pitcher of wine.

"Now al we have to do is to find a way to make Lina believe it," Persephone said. They walked into Hades' bedchamber.

Persephone stared. "Hades, this is a beautiful room."

"Thank you," he said. "Make yourself comfortable while I find another goblet." Persephone walked to a velvet-swathed window. She pul ed aside the drape and gazed out on a fantastic view of tiered gardens fil ed with statuary, well -tended greenery, and thousands upon thousands of white flowers, al of which were bathed in a soft, unusual light.

"Your wine," Hades said.

Persephone turned from the window. "Lina was right - it does look like a beautiful forgotten dream."

Her words made Hades' heart ache. "Why are you here, Persephone?" The Goddess tossed her hair back and smiled. "I have a proposition for you..."

"I stil do not understand what I can do! Carolina refused your proposition. You cannot force her into this exchange." Hades said as he paced across the floor in front of her. She raised one eyebrow at him. "I cannot?"

"You wil not force her." Hades' words were firm, but he felt his resolve wavering. Carolina could return! He could touch her and talk to her again. Surely he could convince her of his love. He shook himself. No! She had been through enough. He would not al ow her to be forced into something she did not believe she could bear.

"The two of you are mirrors of stubbornness. You refuse to force her; she refuses to go of her own wil ." Persephone sighed. "Then you must find a way to convince her to return without being forced."

"How?" Hades bit the word.

"I don't know that you can," Persephone said sadly. She walked to Hades and placed a hand on his arm. "If you need me, you can cal me through Mother's oracle." On impulse, she kissed his cheek. He patted her hand and gave her an endearingly paternal smile. "Forgive my rudeness to you. Old gods sometimes have cantankerous ways."

Persephone smiled back at the God who was so obviously deeply in love with Carolina. "You are forgiven," she said and disappeared.

The forge glowed with an otherworldly heat. Sweat flew from the God's body in time with the pounding of metal against metal. Hades was hardly aware of his surroundings. She stil loved him.

He had to find a way to repair the damage he had done so that she could al ow herself to trust him again. But how?

"You remind me of a foolish old spinster, Lord of the Dead." Hades whirled around to face the sarcastic voice, and squinted against the glaring light.

"Apol o! You and your garish sun are not needed here," Hades roared.

"Oh, yes, I tend to forget." Apol o passed his hand in front of his face and the brightness of his visage faded. "Better?"

"I do not recal inviting you within my realm."

"I simply had to come and glimpse what the other half of wasted love looks like." Hades swel ed with rage. "Do not presume - "

"And what I see here," the Sun God's voice broke through Hades' tirade, "is much less attractive than the mortal version."

"Of what mortal do you speak?" Hades demanded.

"Carolina, of course. Do you know that she actual y spurned me? She was honestly more interested in my mares than she was me." Apol o chuckled. "When I thought she was Persephone her actions confused me. When I found out she was a mortal clothed in the Goddess's body, I was astounded. And then to learn that she chose you over me? Truly amazing."

Hades narrowed his eyes at Apol o. "I do not think it so amazing." Apol o grinned. "You should. Mortal women find me irresistible."

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