Dance With the Devil

 

And today she needed to find something good. Something to remind her that there was beauty in the world. Innocence. Joy. Happiness.

 

 

 

Most of all, she wanted to find hope.

 

 

 

A soft gentle breeze floated off the lilac-scented river, through the marble Doric columns and across the white wicker chaise where she sat. Her three sisters had been here for a little while, but she had sent them away.

 

 

 

Not even they could comfort her.

 

 

 

Tired and disillusioned, she had sought solace in her book. In it, she saw goodness, a goodness that was missing in the people she'd known in her life.

 

 

 

Was there no decency? No kindness?

 

 

 

Had humanity finally managed to destroy both?

 

 

 

Her sisters, as much as she loved them, were as ruthless as anyone else. They were completely indifferent to the pleadings and suffering of anyone not related to them.

 

 

 

Nothing touched any of them anymore.

 

 

 

Astrid couldn't remember the last time she had cried. The last time she had laughed.

 

 

 

 

 

Create PDF files without this message by purchasing novaPDF printer (http://www.novapdf.com) She was numb now.

 

 

 

Numbness was the curse of her kind. Her sister Atty had warned her long ago that if she chose to be a judge this day would come.

 

Young, vain, and stupid, Astrid had foolishly ignored the warning, thinking it could never happen to her.

 

She would never be indifferent to people or their pain.

 

Yet now it was only her books that brought her the emotions of others. Even though she couldn't really

 

 

 

"feel" them, the unreal and muted emotions of the characters comforted her on some level.

 

And if she were capable of it, that would make her weep.

 

Astrid heard someone approaching her from behind. Not wanting anyone to see what she was reading lest they ask her why, and she be forced to admit she'd lost her compassion, Astrid tucked it beneath the chair's cushion. She turned to see her mother crossing the well-manicured lawn where a small group of three dappled fawns grazed.

 

 

 

Her mother wasn't alone.

 

Artemis and Acheron were with her.

 

Her mother's long red hair was left to curl becomingly around a face that looked no older than thirty.

 

 

 

 

Themis wore a tailored short-sleeved blue shirt and khaki slacks.

 

No one would ever take her for the Greek goddess of justice.

 

Artemis was dressed in a classical Greek peplos while Acheron wore his typical black leather pants and a black T-shirt. His long blond hair was loose around his shoulders.

 

 

 

 

A chill went down her spine, but then, it always did whenever Acheron came near. There was something about him that was compelling and irresistible.

 

It was also terrifying.

 

She'd never known anyone like him. He was alluring in a way that defied her best abilities to explain. It was as if his very presence filled everyone with a desire so potent that it was hard to look at him without wanting to rip his clothes off, throw him to the ground, and make love to him for untold centuries.

 

But there was more to him than his sexual appeal. There was also something ancient and primal.

 

Something so powerful that even the gods feared him.

 

 

 

You could even see that fear in Artemis's eyes as she walked beside him.

 

No one knew what the relationship was between the two of them. They never touched each other, seldom did they look at each other. And yet Acheron came often to see Artemis in her temple.

 

When Astrid had been a child, he used to come and visit with her, too. Play games with her and teach her how to manage her very limited powers. He'd brought her countless books both from the past and from the future.

 

In fact, it was Acheron who had given herThe Little Prince .

 

Those visits had all but ended the day she hit puberty and had realized just how desirable a man Acheron was. He had pulled away from her then, leaving a tangible wall between them.

 

 

 

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"To what do I owe the honor?" Astrid asked as the three of them surrounded her.

 

"I have a job for you, dearest," her mother said.

 

Astrid made a pain-filled face. "I thought we agreed that I could take some time off."

 

"Oh, come on, Astrid," Artemis said. "I need you, little cousin." She cast an evil glare in Acheron's direction. "There's a Dark-Hunter who needs to be put down."

 

Acheron's face was impassive as he watched Astrid without comment.

 

Astrid sighed. She didn't want to do this. Too many centuries of judging others had left her emotionally bankrupt. She'd begun to suspect that she was no longer capable of feeling anyone's pain.

 

Not even her own.

 

Lack of compassion had ruined her sisters. Now she was afraid it was going to ruin her, as well.

 

"There are other judges."

 

Artemis let out a disgusted breath. "I don't trust them. They're bleeding hearts who are just as likely to find him innocent as guilty. I need a hard-nosed, impartial judge who can't be swayed from doing what's right and necessary. I needyou .

 

Sherrilyn Kenyon's books