I uncurled the scroll, and my eyes nearly popped out of my 					head. The list was endless. “You want me to find every single person on this 					list by tomorrow?”
   				No reply. I looked up, and Zeus’s throne was empty. Perfect. I 					glanced down at the scroll again and scowled. One day. Countless names. And no 					one to help me, because the entire council thought I was the plague.
   				Maybe that’s what Zeus was counting on—I’d fail, and he’d have 					a valid reason to remove me from Olympus. And if that were the case, maybe I’d 					be better off a drifter anyway. If I didn’t fade completely.
   				I wouldn’t go down without a fight, though. Not now, not ever, 					which meant I had one option in the next twenty-four hours: prove Zeus wrong, no 					matter how impossible.
   				* * *
   				Usually I didn’t need sleep. I could go weeks, if not 					months without it when I wasn’t using my powers—all of us could. But before I 					was halfway done with that list, I needed sleep more desperately than I’d ever 					needed anything in my entire life.
   				I leaned against the golden wall of the throne room, struggling 					to keep my eyes open. I couldn’t fall asleep. Time was precious enough as it 					was, and if Zeus knew I’d been sleeping on the job, too—
   				Right. I liked my ass right where it was, thank you. I leaned 					forward and forced myself to focus on the list of names. Next up was Pollux. Not 					too hard to find him and Castor, even though they were on the run, so at least 					this wouldn’t take much effort.
   				“How’re you holding up?” Iris crossed the throne room, 					balancing a tray in her hands.
   				“I’m seriously considering running away and spending the rest 					of eternity holed up in the woods,” I said. “What’s that?”
   				“I brought you some tea. Figured you might need it.”
   				That was oddly nice of her. Maybe Zeus had laid into her, too. 					“Thanks,” I said, stretching. She sat beside me, and I picked up the cup and 					sipped. It wasn’t a solid night’s sleep, but it would do. “I mean it, though. 					There’s no way I’m finishing this list. Ten hours left, and I’m not even halfway 					done.”
   				She smirked, but there was a hint of sympathy behind it, too. 					“When Zeus fires you, make sure to put in a good word for me, would you?”
   				It would’ve been funny if it hadn’t been so true, and I 					glowered into my tea. “Zeus said if I don’t finish in time, I really will be 					kicked off the council.”
   				“Zeus likes to say a lot of things. Most of them aren’t 					true.”
   				“This is, though.” I nudged the list in her direction. “You 					didn’t happen to run into any of these gods on your trip, did you?”
   				She examined the names, and with a wave of her hand, she 					crossed off well over two dozen. “I know where to find loads more. If you want, 					I can check out a few places. That’ll cut your list down, as well.”
   				“You’d really do that for me?” I said. “What about wanting my 					job?”
   				Iris shrugged, and a curl escaped from behind her ear. “I’ll 					take pity on you just this once. Are you serious about running away?”
   				I leaned my head against the wall. If it were possible for 					immortals to have headaches, I would’ve had a raging one right about now. 					“Hermit jokes aside, someone needs to figure out what’s causing all of this. 					None of the others have spent time with mortals like I have.”
   				“And yet Zeus won’t let you go?”
   				“You know how he is. Can’t handle someone else having a better 					grip on things than he does.”
   				Iris gave me a look. “So while gods and goddesses are 					mysteriously dying for reasons the council can’t possibly be sure of, you’re 					going to listen to Zeus for the first time in your life.”
   				“He’d track me down the instant he knew I was gone. You know 					that.”
   				“Unless…” Her fingers danced over the parchment, an inch from 					my knee. “Someone kind, generous, thoughtful and extremely beautiful covered for 					you.”
   				I raised an eyebrow. “Do you think someone like that actually 					exists?”
   				She punched me in the arm. “You’re a jerk. Maybe I won’t help 					you. Bet I could do your job with both hands tied behind my back.”
   				“Right now I’m not sure I can do my 					job, not if Hades keeps acting like this. And not if Zeus keeps giving me 					impossible tasks.”
   				“Hades will come around eventually, and we’ll work together on 					this list,” she said. “I’ll go down to the surface and check things out. You 					focus on the names I’ve circled, all right? But on one condition—after you 					finish this, you’re going to sneak off and mingle with mortals. I’ll cover for 					you.”
   				I glanced down at the list. Somehow she’d narrowed it down to a 					manageable number. “Really?”
   				“Really.” She squeezed my arm. “Some things are more important 					than kissing Zeus’s ass.”
   				Coming from Iris, that meant loads. “If we get through this, 					remind me to tell you I love you.”
   				She snorted, though her cheeks turned pink. “Please. I know you 					love me. It practically oozes out of you.” Giving me a pat on the hand, she 					stood. “Don’t fall asleep, lazy, else I really will have no choice but to 					replace you, bloodlines be damned.”
   				“Whatever you say,” I said with a tired grin. But the tea 					helped, and if she stuck to her word, this might be doable, after all. “And 					Iris?”
   				She stopped, inches from the portal. “Yeah?”
   				“Thanks. You’re not nearly as heinous as everyone says you 					are.”
   				Rolling her eyes, she stepped into the crystal circle and 					grinned. “You really are such a jerk.”
   				* * *
   				Together, Iris and I finished the list by the time the 					council reconvened. No idea how we managed it—magic, probably, or some sort of 					tear in time—but we did.
   				Six names were unaccounted for. Older gods and goddesses whose 					roles had been taken over by newer ones. I’d triple-checked those to make sure, 					but it wasn’t good news. Neither of us could find them. I should’ve stayed to 					tell the council; someone had to, after all, but by the time we finished, Iris 					was practically pushing me toward the portal.
   				“Go,” she said. “I mean it. I’ll give the list to Zeus.”
   				“He’ll smite you if he finds out you’re covering for me. Sure 					it’s worth it?” I said.
   				“Yes, I’m sure. Besides, if you figure this out, maybe they’ll 					forgive you for the whole Persephone thing.”
   				I frowned. Right. I didn’t need another reminder, but it was a 					possibility. Maybe they would forgive me. Maybe this 					would be enough to get me back on the council’s good side. Doubtful, but worth a 					shot.
   				Iris sighed dramatically and gave me a little shove. “Why do 					you always have to be so difficult? Get your ass down there before I have to 					drag you to the balcony and throw you.”
   				“Fine, fine, I’m going. Be safe, all right? Don’t disappear in 					a puff of smoke or whatever.”
   				“You, too,” she said. “And don’t come back until you’ve figured 					this thing out.”
   				“Which might be never.”
   				“By then, we’ll all be gone, so it won’t matter.” She stood on 					her tiptoes and brushed her lips against my cheek. Unexpected, and my face grew 					hot. Iris laughed. “For luck, not to feed your fantasies. Now get out of 					here.”
   				Footsteps sounded from one of the hallways, and I didn’t need 					any more encouragement. I hopped onto the portal and gave Iris a halfhearted 					wave. This wasn’t one of our better ideas, but we didn’t have much choice. The 					gods were dying off. Even if we had several eons before the council faded, that 					wasn’t a chance any of us could 
					     					 			 take. Zeus was an idiot for playing it safe.
   				I slid through the portal with ease, and in the midst of 					dropping to the surface, I closed my eyes and relaxed. The solution had to be 					somewhere on the surface. A book, a town, some kind of religious theory—whatever 					it was that would bring me closer to understanding why we were dying.
   				That sort of hazy thought didn’t always work, and when I landed 					in the trees, I cursed. I’d expected to wind up in Rome or a library or 					something—somewhere with books and knowledge and answers, the kind Athena always 					seemed so good at finding. I didn’t have a chance of unearthing anything like 					that in the middle of a forest.
   				But when I started a more focused sweep of the surface, 					something twanged in my core, pulling me south. Not the kind of connection I 					usually got whenever something I was looking for was within reach—instead, it 					was a vague feeling that made me want to kick a tree. Vague wouldn’t solve this 					problem. It wouldn’t give me answers. And it sure as hell wouldn’t save my 					family.
   				Not as if I had a lot of leads though, and I needed time to 					cool down before I tried again. With Iris helping me with the list, I’d had time 					for a short nap, but exhaustion did nothing for my temper. And I’d be no good to 					the council pissed off.
   				I took a deep breath. It wasn’t my fault Hades was acting like 					an ass, and it wasn’t my fault Persephone had chosen to give up her immortality. 					Everyone liked to pretend it was, but it wasn’t, and I forced that one simple 					truth down my own throat. I was a scapegoat. And the only way I could make them 					see it was by finding a solution.
   				So I kept walking. The forest grew dim as the sun dipped below 					the horizon, and owls began to call to one another. Most mortals feared night, 					but I loved it. Quiet, dark, gave me time to think, and nothing seemed as bad as 					it did when the sun was out. I relaxed soon enough, letting my anger drain away, 					replaced by determination. I would figure this out, my family would accept me 					again and no one else would fade. I’d be a hero, and not even Hades would be 					able to treat me like the villain anymore. Everything would go back to normal, 					and that’s all I wanted. To act like none of this Persephone drama had ever 					happened.
   				Soon enough, I stumbled onto a trail. It wasn’t much—mostly a 					path that looked wide enough to fit a horse, but that was about it. It looked 					well traveled though, and that tug in my stomach grew stronger with each step. 					Maybe all of this self-loathing had thrown my powers out of whack. I didn’t see 					how the secret to our immortal existence could possibly be hidden here.
   				But I had to find whatever it was that pulled me in this 					direction. Whether or not my inner compass was broken, something was going on in 					these trees, and I needed a bit of fun right about now.
   				I’d been on the trail for five minutes when I heard it—a faint 					crackle, as if someone with loads of experience sneaking up on people was 					walking on dead leaves. Excellent. Things were about to get interesting.
   				The first one appeared seconds later. He couldn’t have been 					older than nine, and he cried out at the top of his lungs as he ran toward me, 					brandishing a stick like a sword. I stopped, bemused. Did he really think he 					could hurt me?
   				To my surprise, he skidded to a stop a few feet away, his eyes 					wide. “What’re you gonna do, just stand there and stare?”
   				“Was there something else you wanted me to do?” I said. Another 					set of footsteps behind me; a third pair to my left, and a fourth to my right. 					It didn’t take an idiot to figure out I was being ambushed. By children, 					apparently.
   				“Yeah,” he said, puffing out his chest. “Hand over your 					things.”
   				“What things?” I held out my arms. I wore a simple tunic, not 					unlike the one he had on, and a pair of trousers. Judging by the style, I was 					in…England. Probably. “My clothes?”
   				“Your valuables,” said a second voice to my left, deeper than 					the first. “Jewelry. Food.”
   				“Does it look like I have any on me?”
   				“Then where did you set up camp?”
   				“Nowhere.” At least that was the truth, even if the look on the 					first boy’s face told me he didn’t believe it. “I’m just walking.”
   				“Where?” said the same deep voice.
   				“Well, that’s none of your business, isn’t it?”
   				“We just made it our business.”
   				The thief behind me shoved me hard, and I landed at the first 					boy’s feet. “Are you sure you want to do this?” I said calmly, making no move to 					stand. They’d just push me down again anyway.
   				The second boy’s answer was a swift kick to my ribs. Perfect. 					Now I was going to have to either fight or run like hell, and I wasn’t in the 					mood to take off like that.
   				Instead I fell over as any mortal would, clutching my ribs 					halfheartedly. It wasn’t much of a ruse, but the second boy continued to kick 					me, while the first screeched, “Your gold or your life!”
   				Good grief. Talk about overkill. “Since—I don’t have any 					gold—guess it’ll be my life,” I said between kicks. Wasn’t doing that great of a 					job imitating wheezing, but I didn’t care too much right now.
   				Behind the second boy, a third joined, this one much bigger 					than the other two. He had a baby face though, and he held his weight awkwardly, 					as if he wasn’t used to being so large. Even though he had to be the strongest, 					he didn’t join in, and I liked him instantly. Unless he was the brains of the 					operation, but he didn’t hold himself like an authority figure, either.
   				The second boy knelt down in the dirt and began to pummel me, 					and I sighed inwardly. They really weren’t going to give it up, were they?
   				“Stop.”
   				A fourth person, and a voice that was definitely not male. I 					raised an eyebrow, and despite the beating I was supposedly enduring, I lifted 					my head. A girl around seventeen stepped onto the trail, wearing the same tunic 					as the boys. But unlike them, her bright blue eyes sparkled with intelligence 					and cunning, and as the second boy reluctantly stopped hitting me, she began to 					circle us.
   				“Notice anything unusual, Sprout?” she said, and the hitter 					pulled back enough to eye me.
   				“He’s not bleedin’. They always bleed when I get to ’em.”
   				“The small ones, anyway,” said the leader, and she bent down. 					“Why aren’t you bleeding?”
   				I sat up. She was pretty for a mortal, even with dirt smudged 					on her cheek and her black hair pulled back into a braid. But pretty didn’t mean 					much when she was the sort to sic her goons on unsuspecting travelers, 					especially when they weren’t carrying anything of value.
   				Then again, she had stopped him, so there was that. Though had 					I been mortal, I would’ve been unconscious for sure by now.
   				“My secret,” I said. “Mind if I go?”
   				“Not yet.” She leaned toward me, scrunching her nose. “You 					don’t smell bad, either. And you’re clean.”
   				“Is that a crime?” I said.
   				“No, but it means you’re not what you look like,” she said. 					“Where are you going? Tell me, or I’ll let Mac have a go at you.”
   				The big guy with the baby face cracked his knuckles. Mac, then. 					“I don’t know where I’m going,” I said. “That’s the truth. I don’t even know 					where this path leads.”
   				“So you’re a drifter,” she said. “Fair enough. But where are 					your things?”
   				“I live off the land. I figure if humans did it for ages before 					us, I can, too.”
   				“But no tools? No water pouches?”
   				I shrugged. “I have good luck.”
   				The girl leaned toward me, her face an inch from mine. The tug 					in the pit of my stomach urged me forward, almost painf 
					     					 			ully insistent. I had to 					get going before anyone else disappeared.
   				Before I could move, however, the girl touched my chin. A 					familiar sizzle jolted through me, and as it always did when I found what I was 					looking for, that tug instantly vanished.
   				She was the answer? Now I was damn 					sure my powers were messed up. She probably couldn’t even read—had likely never 					held a book in her life. And she certainly didn’t have the secret to our 					eternity locked in her head. That just wasn’t something a single mortal could 					know.
   				But I stayed put, allowing her to tilt my head from one side to 					the other as she examined me. She was entrancing. No surprise that she’d managed 					to rope three boys into doing her bidding. And not everything was what it 					seemed. Maybe there was something special about her. Maybe she was one of Zeus’s 					many bastards. The possibilities were endless, and as I stared at her, I gave 					her a grin. Whatever it was I was looking for could wait a little while 					longer.
   				“You really aren’t hurt at all,” she said, stunned, and she 					stood abruptly, exchanging looks with the three boys. I expected amusement or 					curiosity, but all I saw was fear. “All right, so—you can go, then,”
   				I stood, brushing off my tunic. “Finally decided I don’t have 					anything worth stealing, did you?”
   				“Just go,” she said, paling as she took a step away from me. 					“Before I change my mind.”
   				That was a new one. Usually mortals didn’t try to push me away. 					Even when I didn’t admit who I was, there was a natural connection between gods 					and mortals. Sort of like the food chain. We’re dependent on them, they’re 					dependent on us—
   				So why were we dying off when they were still here?
   				As the girl started down the trail, flanked by her three 					henchmen, my stomach grew hollow. I’d known her for all of two minutes, and 					seeing her walk away made me ache. So maybe my powers weren’t completely out of 					whack. Maybe she did know something.