“How?” I wiped my cheeks with my sleeve. “He knows we’re going 					to Rhea to ask for her help. He knows she can heal Henry, and the first chance 					Cronus gets, he’s going to kill him.”
   				“Probably,” said James. “We’ll make sure he never has that 					chance though, and in the meantime, we have a direct line to Cronus.”
   				“He won’t listen to reason.”
   				“No, but he might listen to you. Especially if you can convince 					him you’re still on his side.”
   				A wave of nausea swept over me. “I was never on his side.”
   				“Doesn’t matter when he doesn’t know that,” said James. “He’s 					always willing to believe the worst in us. Use that against him. Say you want to 					rejoin him, but Walter’s holding you hostage. You want to be with Milo, so it 					won’t even really be a lie.”
   				Unless he could see the lie in a truth, like Henry could. 					“He’ll come after you,” I said. “He’ll attack Olympus.”
   				James chuckled. “Last time Cronus tried, he wound up in the 					hottest, deepest pit on earth. I doubt he’ll give it another go.”
   				But no matter how hard he was trying to convince me that it 					wasn’t a big deal, I heard the worry in his voice. This was his entire family, 					too. This was his home, and he was gambling it all on what? On the slim chance 					Cronus might be willing to listen to me? If James was right and Cronus had heard 					everything that had gone on in the nursery, then he would know I knew. And he 					would know I was angry.
   				“What if it doesn’t work?” I whispered, finding his hand and 					lacing my fingers through his. A friendly touch. Nothing more, but I needed that 					much, and so did he.
   				James rested his head against mine. “Then we’ll just have to 					figure something else out.”
   				Six hours and one connecting flight later, we touched down in 					Zimbabwe. James hailed a cab on the curbside of the airport, and soon enough we 					were on a remote road traveling to a place I couldn’t pronounce no matter how 					many times James tried to teach me.
   				“You’ll get it eventually,” he said with a chuckle, but after a 					moment he turned serious. “None of us have contacted Rhea in a very long time. I 					have no idea how she’ll react, and I can’t make you any promises.”
   				“I don’t need promises,” I said, but my insides churned. What 					if I couldn’t convince Rhea to help us? What if she wouldn’t heal Henry?
   				I straightened in the back of the hot cab. No matter what it 					took, no matter what I had to promise her, I would find a way to make this 					happen. I would find a way to save Henry. If Rhea was really so unconcerned 					about the rest of the world that she wasn’t willing to step up and help us 					fight...
   				She would. She had to.
   				The Zimbabwe landscape, for the most part, looked surprisingly 					familiar. Drier and wilder, with scragglier underbrush, but closer to home than 					I’d expected. I pressed my forehead against the cracked window of the cab. A few 					people walked along the side of the road holding signs made out of battered 					cardboard, but the cabdriver sped past before I could see what they said.
   				We stopped at the edge of a village that looked more like a 					slum than a town. James held my hand tightly as we walked down the narrow way 					between cobbled-together buildings, some of which leaned dangerously to one 					side. Trash lined the makeshift streets, and a few children dressed in worn 					clothes began to follow us.
   				“Don’t we have anything we can give them?” I said. James paused 					long enough to take off his backpack, and he pulled out several apples that I 					was positive hadn’t been in there before. He handed one to each child, but the 					crowd continued to grow, and he frowned.
   				“Kate, I want to help as badly as you do, but we’re on a 					timetable.”
   				“We just wasted over a day flying when you could have dropped 					us off much closer,” I said. “We have a few minutes for this.”
   				James continued to hand them out. “You know how to create. 					Reach in and help me.”
   				“Actually, I don’t,” I said, but I reached into the bag and 					tried anyway. What was I supposed to do, just imagine it was there? I closed my 					eyes and pictured a juicy yellow apple. And then—
   				Nothing. Perfect.
   				James chuckled. “You’re the worst goddess I’ve ever met.”
   				“Calliope’s the worst goddess you’ve ever met. I’m just the 					most incompetent.” I scowled. “It’d help if anyone bothered to teach me how to 					do things, you know.”
   				“Hey, I showed you how to think.” He grinned, and I shot him a 					look. “In all seriousness, everyone’s sort of busy right now, but I’ll see what 					I can do. Most of it takes decades to learn.”
   				We didn’t have decades, not if I had any chance of helping in 					the war. James handed out a few more apples, but the crowd continued to build. 					Were they really so hungry that an apple was enough to stop what they were doing 					and come running?
   				A child shouted in a language I didn’t understand, but 					instinctively I knew what he was saying to the boy he wrestled. Mine.
   				“Whoa, hey, hold up,” called James, trying to wade through the 					wide-eyed boys and girls to reach them. “No fighting, there’s plenty more 					where—”
   				“Calm down, my children,” murmured a voice that seemed to come 					from everywhere and nowhere at once. Immediately the boys stilled, and James let 					out a deep breath. He didn’t need to say a word for me to know what was going 					on. Rhea was here.
   				The crowd parted, and a girl who couldn’t have been older than 					thirteen walked barefoot down the path. Her eyes stood out against her dark 					skin, and she wore a colorful scarf around her head. She moved with inhuman 					grace, and though she blended into the crowd purely by her appearance, she 					radiated warmth and comfort. Not power and pain like Cronus. As she passed, the 					children reached out to touch her, as if that alone could cure illness or bring 					them luck.
   				“Grandmother,” said James reverently, and as she approached us, 					he knelt down. “I’ve missed you.”
   				Rhea touched his cheek. “Hermes,” she murmured. “I have been 					waiting for you. It has been far too long.”
   				“I meant to come sooner, but...” James trailed off. There was 					no excuse for not coming to see this girl. This Titan. “I’m sorry.”
   				“No need to apologize. You’re here now. Stand,” she said, and 					James did so, slipping his hand into hers. “Let us speak privately.”
   				They walked past me as if I weren’t even there. James seemed to 					be in a trance, and I hesitated. Should I follow?
   				“You, too, daughter of Demeter.” Rhea’s words whispered through 					the air, and my feet moved without me telling them to. In that moment I would 					have followed her off the end of the world if she wanted me to.
   				“We don’t go by those names anymore,” said James, and I trotted 					to catch up to them as they rounded a corner. None of the children followed, but 					every person we passed stared at us openly. Because of Rhea? Or because James 					and I were strangers?
   				She led us to what amounted to a large blue shanty with a white 					cross painted on the sign above. We entered, and James had to duck to avoid 					hitting the top of the doorway. Inside, instead of the church I expected, was a 					hospital.
   				Over two dozen men, women and children rested in cots and 					makeshift beds shoved so close together that the doctors and nurses—or at least 					I assumed they were doctors and nurses—had no room to slide between them. 					Instead, each patient was faced with their head near the aisle and feet to the 					wall. Several were coughing, and a few looked so frail and close to death that I 					tried to memorize their faces. Would I see them in the Underworld? Would I even 					have the chance to return if Henry didn’t make it? What 
					     					 			 would happen to the dead 					then?
   				No. I couldn’t think like that. Rhea would help us.
   				“This way,” she said, and we walked through the narrow aisle to 					a door toward the back. I expected an office, but instead we stepped into a 					cramped garden blooming with all sorts of flowers and herbs I didn’t recognize. 					My mother would’ve loved this place. “Now, why have you come?”
   				“You know why,” said James, albeit respectfully, and he sat 					down on a crate that served as a bench. “Cronus has destroyed Athens. Hera has 					abandoned us to fight with him. Hades is on the brink of fading. We are 					desperate, and we need your help.”
   				Rhea began to tend a bush with tiny white flowers. “You know my 					stance on war,” she said. “I cannot support it in any way.”
   				“Please.” James screwed up his face. Going against her was 					clearly painful for him. “If you don’t help us return Cronus to Tartarus, he 					will destroy humanity and kill us if we’re lucky. If we’re not, we’ll spend the 					rest of eternity as his slaves. Without Hera, we aren’t strong enough to fight 					him on our own.”
   				Placing the blossoms she picked into a basket, Rhea said 					nothing. After nearly a minute, James’s shoulders slumped, and I knew it was 					hopeless. Not even the threat of extinction was enough to convince Rhea.
   				I scowled. It was one thing to not want to fight on either side 					of a war—I wasn’t crazy about wielding a sword and running screaming out onto a 					battlefield either. But this was different. “We’re not asking you to fight,” I 					said. “We’re asking you to help us prevent more deaths.”
   				“I know my husband,” said Rhea. “If I were to get involved, I 					would be forced to fight, and I will not hurt a living creature no matter their 					intentions. That includes Cronus.”
   				“Even though he’ll kill billions of people and nearly the 					entire council in order to get what he wants?” I took a deep breath, forcing 					myself to stay calm. Getting upset wouldn’t help matters. “You know as well as I 					do that inaction isn’t supporting peace. It’s turning a blind eye to what’s 					really going on. And without your help, we will 					lose.”
   				James reached for my hand, but I pulled away. If he wasn’t 					willing to fight, then I would.
   				Rhea slowly turned toward us. Her serenity vanished, replaced 					with frigid disapproval, and I steeled myself against it. She could dislike me 					as much as she wanted. I wasn’t going to back down.
   				“I would be no help to you regardless of what I did. My husband 					will not listen to reason,” said Rhea. “I will not raise a hand against anyone. 					My children are much better served by what I do here.”
   				“But your children are dying,” I 					said. “You could stop that. You could save their lives—you’re the only one who 					can. If you don’t, they’ll die, and it’ll be because of you.”
   				The moment the words left the tip of my tongue, I knew it was 					the wrong thing to say, but I couldn’t take it back now. I glanced at James, a 					silent apology and plea for him to help me. He stayed silent.
   				Rhea straightened, her powerful gaze focused directly on me. 					“No, daughter of Demeter. They will die because of you.”
   				My face burned, and it took everything I had not to run out of 					there as fast as I could. How did she know? Could she sense the guilt floating 					inside me, buoyed by every life already lost because of my stupidity? “My name 					is Kate. And I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I didn’t 					know—”
   				“Ignorance is not an excuse for the consequences that result 					because of it.”
   				“You don’t think I realize that?” Hot tears stung my eyes. I’d 					never hated anyone as much as I hated Rhea in that moment. Not Walter. Not 					Calliope. Not even Cronus.
   				No, that was wrong. I hated myself more than I could ever hate 					any of them.
   				“He has my son.” My voice grew thick, and my hands trembled. 					“For some unfathomable reason, he wants me to be his queen—”
   				“It is not unfathomable,” said Rhea with unnerving calm. “You 					showed him kindness and understanding when no one else has in millennia. Even 					the most blackened and twisted of souls cannot help but respond to 					compassion.”
   				I hesitated. “How do you—”
   				“I know everything I wish to know.”
   				I bit my lip. “Then you must realize why this is so important 					to me. You know what I promised Cronus. You know what he’s been doing to me, the 					sick—”
   				“I am aware,” said Rhea. “And you have my sympathy. Standing at 					his side does not make you his equal in his eyes, and it is a hard life, one you 					do not have the power to fight.”
   				“I don’t, but you do,” I said. “Henry’s your son, right? He’s 					dying. He needs you, but instead you’re here with strangers—”
   				“No one who walks this earth is a stranger to me.” Her eyes 					flashed, a strange combination of the sun and the ocean. “I am not neglecting my 					son. He knew the consequences of his actions when he committed to them, and it 					was a risk he was willing to take to save you.”
   				I exhaled sharply. She wasn’t listening. She didn’t 					understand—or maybe she did, and she just didn’t care. “What about my son? He’s 					Henry’s, too, you know. And he’s your grandson. His name’s Milo, and he’s not 					even a week old. Why does he deserve to be raised by Cronus?”
   				Rhea said nothing, and I couldn’t stop the flow of words that 					poured from me now.
   				“He’ll never know me. He’ll never know his father. He’ll grow 					up calling the bitch who kidnapped him his mother, the egomaniac who’s killed 					millions of people his father and he’ll never know that I’m out here loving him 					more in a moment than they could in an eternity. What could he have possibly 					done to deserve that?”
   				“Nothing,” said Rhea softly. “Your son has done nothing to 					deserve that, as the people of this village have done nothing to deserve 					brutality and starvation.”
   				“Then help him like you’re helping these people,” I begged. 					“Please, I’ll do whatever you want—”
   				“I want you to leave me in peace.”
   				“Okay.” I took a shaky breath. She wasn’t going to help the 					council with the war. If she wouldn’t do it for the billions of helpless people 					in the world, then nothing I could possibly say or do would change her mind. 					“I’ll go away, I promise. Just—please. Help Henry. At least give my son a chance 					to know his father.”
   				Once again, Rhea was quiet. Her eyes grew distant the same way 					Cronus’s had in the nursery, and her hand stilled halfway to the basket. I 					glanced at James. Was that our cue to go? He shrugged, and together we 					waited.
   				“Very well,” she said at last, breaking the silence. “It is 					done.”
   				“What’s done?” I said, giving James another bewildered look, 					but his brow knitted in confusion. “Rhea, please—what’s done?”
   				“Give your mother my love,” she said, touching my shoulder. The 					pain in my arm from the dagger vanished. “You are strong, Kate. Stronger than 					you know. As long as you resist my husband, you do not need me to have what you 					most desire.”
   				“It isn’t about what I want,” I said, seconds from bursting. 					How could she heal me but not help save the people who really needed her? “He’s 					going to kill everyone, this village included.”
   				She didn’t respond. Instead she picked a few more blossoms and 					turned to reenter the clinic. I started to go after her, and James grabbed my 					wrist with an iron grip.
   				“Don’t,” he said. Before I could protest, another voice 					whispered through the garden, hoarse and cracking. But real. So, so real.
   				“Kate?”
   				My heart hammered, and I spun around, yanking my hand from 					Jam 
					     					 			es’s. Nestled between a gnarled tree and a patch of ferns stood Henry.
   		 			 				Chapter 7
   				Athens
   				I flew across the garden and into Henry’s arms, kissing 					him like it was the last chance I’d ever get.
   				It was really him. His skin was warm, his moonlight eyes 					focused on me, and the way he lifted me into the air and kissed me—no one, not 					even a Titan, could make my insides turn to mush the way he did. He splayed his 					hand over my back, his palm so hot that I could feel it through my shirt.
   				“I missed you.” My voice broke, and he pressed his forehead to 					mine so all I could see was him.
   				“You’re all right.” He ran his fingers through my hair the same 					way James had on the flight over, but that was nothing more than a distant 					memory. Henry was here now, and part of me clicked back into place.
   				He stumbled, and I immediately dropped back to the ground, 					searching his face for any sign of pain. Instead of grimacing, he smiled and 					took my hand. “I’m all right. Just need rest.”
   				I wasn’t so sure I believed him, but James stood and gestured 					to the door Rhea had disappeared through. “We should thank her and get on our 					way,” he said, eyeing Henry. “I reckon you aren’t in any condition to get us 					back to Olympus, so we’ll have to do it the old-fashioned way. Sunset’s in a few 					hours.”
   				“Wait,” I said, helping Henry forward. “There’s someplace I 					want to see first.”
   				* * *
   				Henry and I sat against the wall in the Zimbabwe 					airport, my fingers laced through his. I hadn’t let go since I’d flown into his 					arms in Rhea’s garden, and he hadn’t tried to make me.
   				I’d sneaked kisses in the cab all the way back to the airport, 					ignoring the faces James made in the front seat. Now that we were in public, 					Henry seemed hesitant, but he never refused me. How could I have ever believed 					Cronus’s ruse? No one, especially not the King of the Titans, could ever replace 					Henry.