money.” There, that was sure to get a response.
But the man paused again. “To do what?”
Okay, maybe this one was smarter than the average bear. “Keep me alive.”
He made a sound that could have been a snort or a laugh. “Yeah, well, that’s easier said than done most times, ain’t it? What’s so special about you, babe?”
Not much. That was both true and very misleading. “You are Caligo, correct? I need to know I’m talking to the right person.”
Again the snort. “Probably not.”
That was complete bullshit. This was definitely the man Salvatorus had told her she needed. And if Salvatorus said she needed him, then this was the man she wanted.
“My name is Tessa. Salvatorus sent me here to seek protection he told me you’d provide.”
“Huh.” The man’s mouth twisted in a smirk. “Now I know that’s not right because Salvatorus should know better than to send your kind to me.”
“Special circumstances. Please, I need you.”
Some emotion crossed his hard face, something she didn’t understand, so she pushed on.
“My name is Thesan, but I go by Tessa now.” She paused, waiting to see if her name struck any chord at all with him, but his expression never changed.
She sighed. So much for being a formerly beloved goddess. That and five bucks would get her a Starbucks mocha latte these days.
“Your name’s supposed to ring a bell?” He crossed his arms over that deliciously perfect chest.
She shook her head. “It’s okay. It’s been several thousand years since anyone worshipped me on a regular basis. Of course you wouldn’t know my name.”
His gaze narrowed. “Worshipped you?”
She stood a little taller and pointed her nose into the air. “Thesan, Goddess of the Dawn, at your service.”
“Yeah, right,” he grunted. “Goddess my ass. The deities don’t live down here with the common people, babe. And the only Goddess of the Dawn I know is Aurora, and you ain’t her.”
She held her smile though she had to grit her teeth to do it. “No, I am not Aurora, for which you should be grateful. She’s…” A worthless, ugly cow “ … not worth talking about. And most of the Etruscan pantheon still lives in this time and place.”
His gaze never faltered. “And that’s what you are? Etruscan?”
She nodded, unsure if her affiliation would help or hinder her cause.
He grunted again, but in response to what she couldn’t tell. “That still doesn’t explain why you need me for protection. Aren’t you deities supposed to be all powerful and shit like that?”
Absently, she rubbed at a raw spot on her wrist from the ropes and saw his gaze arrow in on it. “Not really. I was never all powerful, but I very much enjoyed what I did.”
And then that bubble-headed, Barbie-doll bitch Aurora took my job and—
Okay, deep breath. No need to hash all that out again. It’d been centuries. She should be over it. Really.
“When the Roman pantheon usurped our roles, some of us became… obsolete.” She truly hated that word. “There’s only one sun, after all, and, well…” She forced a smile. “Anyway, I retained my midwifery duties, but over the years, some of us have become mostly… forgotten.” And that really sucked. “Some of us still serve the magical races of the Etruscans, the Enu and the Fata . But mostly,” she shrugged, hating the hollow feeling her chest, “we merely exist.”
Was that pity she saw in his eyes? Damn him, that’s not what she wanted. Her back straightened, but he spoke before she could say anything else.
“That still doesn’t explain why you need me.”
No, it didn’t, and she could only hope that when she told him, he didn’t kick her out on her butt.
“Charun has—”
He held up one hand. “God of the Underworld, right?”
She nodded. “We call it Aitás, but yes. He’s one of the gods who has retained his position through the millennia, and he’s not very happy about it. He’s been stuck in Aitás, trapped there,