close to his weaponsâone sword and one gunâready to fight.
âSuck his powers out and kill him,â Artemis snarled.
Kat gaped at the order. Once issued, it couldnât be taken back. Deimos was one of the most dangerous of the Dolophoni. A son of the dreaded Furies, he was the one the gods called out when they needed a relentless Terminator, and he wouldnât stop until Sin was dead.
Deimos ran at Sin and slammed him to the floor.
âWhat have you done, Matisera?â
âWhat I should have done in the beginning.â Artemis tried to flash Kat out of the room, but since Artemis had traded Katâs service to her grandmother, she didnât have that power anymore.
Katâs mother snarled at her, âLeave us, Katra. Now.â
But she couldnât. She was the reason Sin was in this mess, and though he was giving Deimos a good fight, in the end she knew who would win it.
And it wouldnât be Sin.
Sin was fighting with one hand tied behind his back and three nasty chest wounds while Deimos could draw from the power of the entire Greek pantheon to kill himâit was one of many benefits bestowed on the Furies and their children. And though Sin might deserve to die, he didnât deserve death like this.
Not after what theyâd done to him and not if what heâd said was true. They would need him to fight the demons of his own pantheon.
âSorry, Matisera.â Kat barely registered the confusion on Artemisâs face before she ran at Sin. He was against the wall, fighting, while Deimos was pulling out his sword to finish him off. Kat grabbed Sin from the side and flashed them from his apartment to her own place in Kalosis.
They landed in a pile of twisted limbs in the center of her dark living room. Sin hissed before he pushed her away. Kat didnât go far. He was bleeding profusely, but what concerned her was the gaping wound his dagger had left. If he were mortal, that would have been fatal to him, and it was probably causing him enough pain right now that he was wishing it was.
She scooted herself toward him. âYou need to be tended.â
He glared at her. âWhere are we? What did you do?â
âI kept you from dying.â
He pushed her hand away from his wound. âOh, believe me, I could have held my own.â
Kat sat back on her legs. âYeah, you were doing a real bang-up job of it. I particularly liked the way you were bruising his fists with your face. A few minutes more and Iâm sure your heart would have been on the attack ⦠after it was ripped from your chest.â
He grimaced at her. âWhat do you know?â
âMore than I want to most days.â
Sin frowned at the catch in her voice as she spoke. It was apparent that she was weary, no doubt of Artemis and her machinations. They were enough to wear down even the stoutest of immortals.
And as much as he hated to admit it, she was probably right about him getting his ass kicked. He should have known better than to go up against Artemis without his full powers. Itâd been stupid, and he was lucky the Dolophonos hadnât torn his heart out. But heâd wanted his revenge, and nothing else, especially something as trivial as common sense, had mattered.
Katra moved forward and ripped his shirt open to expose the jagged wounds in his chest from the dagger Artemis had repeatedly planted there. He started to shove Kat away, but before he could, she manifested a cool rag in her hand so that she could clean the wounds. Her kindness made no sense to him whatsoever given her genetic makeup. Not to mention, he wasnât used to anyone helping him for any reason. Everyone heâd ever known had turned their backs on him and left him to suffer.
People werenât kind and he knew it. Not unless the act of kindness could benefit them in some way.
âWhy are you helping me?â
She gave him a withering glare. âWho said Iâm helping