she draped herself in white, an angel among evil, with no adornment.
âHow?â he persisted. âWhy?â
âDoes it matter?â Her gaze lifted, boring into him with the precision of a spear and cutting just as deep.
âTo me, yes.â
She gave a little stomp of her foot. âTo save the wall, I need your help. Let that be enough for now.â Her fingers beckoned him. âCome. I can show you the damage that has been done.â
The goddess did not await his reply. She turned away from him and walked to the far corner of the wall. No, not walked. She glided, a dream of falling stars amid shimmering twilight.
Geryon hesitated only a moment before following her, breathing deeply of her honeysuckle scent along the way.
CHAPTER FOUR
To Geryonâs surprise, no one jumped from the shadows as he walked; no one waited to punish him for daring to leave his post. Was he truly free? Dare he hope?
The goddess didnât face him when he reached her, but traced a fingertip along a thin, jagged groove in the middle stone. A groove that branched into smaller striations, like tiny rivers flowing from a churning ocean.
âItâs small, I know, but already it has grown from what I saw yesterday. If the demons continue their abuse, it will continue to grow until the rock splits completely in two, allowing legions to enter the human realm.â
âWere a single demon released upon the unsuspecting world,â he muttered, âdeath and destruction would reign.â Whether or not a punishment would be delivered to him, he would help her, Geryon decided. He could not allow such a thing to happen. Innocence should never be taken from the undeserving. It was too precious. âWhat would you have me do?â
She gave a startled gasp. âYouâll help me? Even knowing you are no longer bound to the prince?â
âYes.â If she spoke true and he was free, he had no place to go. Too many centuries had passed, his home gone. His family, dead. Besides, he might crave the very freedom the goddess promised but he feared trusting her. She might not intend malice, but Lucifer certainly would.
With the prince, there was always a catch. Free today did not necessarily mean free tomorrow.
No, he dare not hope.
âThank you. I didnât expectâIâWhy did you sell your soul?â she asked softly, tracing the crack again.
There was a beat of silence.
âWhat would you have me do?â he repeated rather than answer. He did not wish to admit the reason for his folly and the subsequent humiliation.
Her arm dropped to her side, and her expression softened. âI am Kadence,â she said, as though he had asked for her name rather than instruction.
Kadence . How he loved the way the syllables rolled through his mind, smooth as velvetâgods, how long since heâd touched a material so fine?âand sweet as wine. How long since heâd tasted such a drink?
âI am Geryon.â Once, heâd had a different name. Upon arriving here, however, Lucifer had dubbed him Geryon. Guardian of the Damned, it translated to, which was what he was and all he would ever be.
Some legends, a demon had once jeered at him, proclaimed him to be a three-headed centaur. Some, a vicious dog. Nothing compared to what he was, so he did not mind the stories.
âI am yours to command,â he said, adding, âKadence.â Tasted even better on his tongue.
Breath caught in her throat; he heard the hitch of it. âYou say my name like a prayer.â There was astonishment in her tone.
Had he? âI am sorry.â
âDonât be.â Her cheeks flushed prettily. Then she clapped her hands and brought the conversation back to what should have been their primary concern. âFirst we must patch these cracks.â
He nodded but said, âI fear the wall is already compromised. Patching will merely strengthen it for a time.â But might not