Advertisement
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- I didn’t argue too hard. I found the nearest bedroom and crashed on the canopied bed. I thought I was too wired to sleep, but my eyes closed almost immediately.
- In my dream, I saw Nico di Angelo alone in the gardens of Hades. He’d just dug a hole in one of Persephone’s flower beds, which I didn’t figure would make the queen very happy.
- He poured a goblet of wine into the hole and began to chant. “Let the dead taste again. Let them rise and take this offering. Maria di Angelo, show yourself!”
- White smoke gathered. A human figure formed, but it wasn’t Nico’s mother. It was a girl with dark hair, olive skin, and the silvery clothes of a Hunter.
- “Bianca,” Nico said. “But—”
- Don’t summon our mother, Nico, she warned. She is the one spirit you are forbidden to see.
- “Why?” he demanded. “What’s our father hiding?”
- Pain, Bianca said. Hatred. A curse that stretches back to the Great Prophecy.
- “What do you mean?” Nico said. “I have to know!”
- The knowledge will only hurt you. Remember what I said: holding grudges is a fatal flaw for children of Hades.
- “I know that,” Nico said. “But I’m not the same as I used to be, Bianca. Stop trying to protect me!”
- Brother, you don’t understand—
- Nico swiped his hand through the mist, and Bianca’s image dissipated.
- “Maria di Angelo,” he said again. “Speak to me!”
- A different image formed. It was a scene rather than a single ghost. In the mist, I saw Nico and Bianca as little children, playing in the lobby of an elegant hotel, chasing each other around marble columns.
- A woman sat on a nearby sofa. She wore a black dress, gloves, and a black veiled hat like a star from an old 1940s movie. She had Bianca’s smile and Nico’s eyes.
- On a chair next to her sat a large oily man in a black pinstripe suit. With a shock, I realized it was Hades. He was leaning toward the woman, using his hands as he talked, like he was agitated.
- “Please, my dear,” he said. “You must come to the Underworld. I don’t care what Persephone thinks! I can keep you safe there.”
- “No, my love.” She spoke with an Italian accent. “Raise our children in the land of the dead? I will not do this.”
- “Maria, listen to me. The war in Europe has turned the other gods against me. A prophecy has been made. My children are no longer safe. Poseidon and Zeus have forced me into an agreement. None of us are to have demigod children ever again.”
- “But you already have Nico and Bianca. Surely—”
- “No! The prophecy warns of a child who turns sixteen. Zeus has decreed that the children I currently have must be turned over to Camp Half-Blood for proper training, but I know what he means. At best they’ll be watched, imprisoned, turned against their father. Even more likely, he will not take a chance. He won’t allow my demigod children to reach sixteen. He’ll find a way to destroy them, and I won’t risk that!”
- “Certamente,” Maria said. “We will stay together. Zeus is un imbecile.”
- I couldn’t help admiring her courage, but Hades glanced nervously at the ceiling. “Maria, please. I told you, Zeus gave me a deadline of last week to turn over the children. His wrath will be horrible, and I cannot hide you forever. As long as you are with the children, you are in danger too.”
- Maria smiled, and again it was creepy how much she looked like her daughter. “You are a god, my love. You will protect us. But I will not take Nico and Bianca to the Underworld.”
- Hades wrung his hands. “Then, there is another option. I know a place in the desert where time stands still. I could send the children there, just for a while, for their own safety, and we could be together. I will build you a golden palace by the Styx.”
- Maria di Angelo laughed gently. “You are a kind man, my love. A generous man. The other gods should see you as I do, and they would not fear you so. But Nico and Bianca need their mother. Besides, they are only children. The gods wouldn’t really hurt them.”
- “You don’t know my family,” Hades said darkly. “Please, Maria, I can’t lose you.”
- She touched his lips with her fingers. “You will not lose me. Wait for me while I get my purse. Watch the children.”
- She kissed the lord of the dead and rose from the sofa. Hades watched her walk upstairs as if her every step away caused him pain.
- A moment later, he tensed. The children stopped playing as if they sensed something too.
- “No!” Hades said. But even his godly powers were too slow. He only had time to erect a wall of black energy around the children before the hotel exploded.
- The force was so violent, the entire mist image dissolved.
- When it came into focus again, I saw Hades kneeling in the ruins, holding the broken form of Maria di Angelo. Fires still burned all around him. Lightning flashed across the sky, and thunder rumbled.
- Little Nico and Bianca stared at their mother uncomprehendingly. The Fury Alecto appeared behind them, hissing and flapping her leathery wings. The children didn’t seem to notice her.
- “Zeus!” Hades shook his fist at the sky. “I will crush you for this! I will bring her back!”
- “My lord, you cannot,” Alecto warned. “You of all immortals must respect the laws of death.”
- Hades glowed with rage. I thought he would show his true form and vaporize his own children, but at the last moment he seemed to regain control.
- “Take them,” he told Alecto, choking back a sob. “Wash their memories clean in the Lethe and bring them to the Lotus Hotel. Zeus will not harm them there.”
- “As you wish, my lord,” Alecto said. “And the woman’s body?”
- “Take her as well,” he said bitterly. “Give her the ancient rites.”
- Alecto, the children, and Maria’s body dissolved into shadows, leaving Hades alone in the ruins.
- “I warned you,” a new voice said.
- Hades turned. A girl in a multicolored dress stood by the smoldering remains of the sofa. She had short black hair and sad eyes. She was no more than twelve. I didn’t know her, but she looked strangely familiar.
- “You dare come here?” Hades growled. “I should blast you to dust!”
- “You cannot,” the girl said. “The power of Delphi protects me.”
- With a chill, I realized I was looking at the Oracle of Delphi, back when she was alive and young. Somehow, seeing her like this was even spookier than seeing her as a mummy.
- “You’ve killed the woman I loved!” Hades roared. “Your prophecy brought us to this!”
- He loomed over the girl, but she didn’t flinch.
- “Zeus ordained the explosion to destroy the children,” she said, “because you defied his will. I had nothing to do with it. And I did warn you to hide them sooner.”
- “I couldn’t! Maria would not let me! Besides, they were innocent.”
- “Nevertheless, they are your children, which makes them dangerous. Even if you put them away in the Lotus Hotel, you only delay the problem. Nico and Bianca will never be able to rejoin the world lest they turn sixteen.”
- “Because of your so-called Great Prophecy. And you have forced me into an oath to have no other children. You have left me with nothing!”
- “I foresee the future,” the girl said. “I cannot change it.”
- Black fire lit the god’s eyes, and I knew something bad was coming. I wanted to yell at the girl to hide or run.
- “Then, Oracle, hear the words of Hades,” he growled. “Perhaps I cannot bring back Maria. Nor can I bring you an early death. But your soul is still mortal, and I can curse you.”
- The girl’s eyes widened. “You would not—”
- “I swear,” Hades said, “as long as my children remain outcasts, as long as I labor under the curse of your Great Prophecy, the Oracle of Delphi will never have another mortal host. You will never rest in peace. No other will take your place. Your body will wither and die, and still the Oracle’s spirit will be locked inside you. You will speak your bitter prophecies until you crumble to nothing. The Oracle will die with you!”
- The girl screamed, and the misty image was blasted to shreds. Nico fell to his knees in Persephone’s garden, his face white with shock. Standing in front of him was the real Hades, towering in his black robes and scowling down at his son.
- “And just what,” he asked Nico, “do you think you’re doing?”
- A black explosion filled my dreams. Then the scene changed.
- Rachel Elizabeth Dare was walking along a white sand beach. She wore a swimsuit with a T-shirt wrapped around her waist. Her shoulders and face were sunburned.
- - The Last Olympian, Chapter 12
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement