Goddess of Light (37 page)

Read Goddess of Light Online

Authors: P. C. Cast

Gulping air, his head snapped around to find Pamela. She was crouched not far from him, eyes wide with shock. “Did it harm you?”
“No,” she shook her head in two shaky movements.
Relief washed over him just before the pain sliced through him, driving him to his knees. His hand! He hadn't even felt the viper's strike—he'd felt only blinding fury and the need to protect Pamela. He turned his burning hand over. The agony was racing up his arm from two bloody puncture wounds near his wrist below his thumb.
“Here, let me see it.” Pamela was on her knees beside him, reaching blindly for the picnic basket. Her face was ghostly, and her hands were shaking, but her voice was firm. He gave her his hand and she sucked in her breath. “Oh, God. I knew it got you.” She stared up into his face, cradling his bloody hand against her body while she groped through the basket. “What are you feeling?”
“Fire,” he said shortly, surprised to find that he was still struggling for breath. He tried to laugh, but the sound came out as a groan. “It feels like my hand is on fire.”
“You'll be fine. You'll be fine. Here, sit back and lean against the rock.” She helped guide his shoulders until they rested against the smooth stone as he almost fell back from his knees, telling herself all the while that she had to stay calm . . . she could not panic. “Keep sitting up.” She lay his wounded hand, palm up, gently on his thigh, trying desperately to remember everything she'd ever heard about poisonous snakebites. V had forced her to read an article not long ago about hiker safety.
Think!
“Make sure your hand stays below the level of your heart,” she told Apollo, who nodded weakly. Then she turned her full attention to the basket. “Where is the fucking cell phone!” she said through teeth that kept wanting to chatter. “Ah!” Victorious, she hastily punched star sixty-two. “Come on . . . come on . . .” she muttered. Looking back through the basket, she jerked out the two bottles of water. While she spoke into the phone, she unscrewed one of the bottles and handed it to Apollo, who drained half of it in one swallow.
“Yes, this is Pamela Gray. I'm a guest of E. D. Faust. My assistant and I are at the top of the pool in First Creek Canyon, and he has just been bitten by a rattlesnake,” she spoke quickly and clearly, as if she wasn't riding on the edge of panic.
“First, are you certain it was a rattlesnake, ma'am?” the dispatcher asked in a calm, professional voice.
“Yes, I'm sure. Triangular head, dull brown body. Rattles.”
“I'm sending an EMT team to you right now, Pamela.”
She could hear the clicks and squawks of the dispatcher's radio in the background. Then he began firing specific questions at her.
“Where was he bit?”
“On his right hand. Below his thumb right around his wrist.”
“Be sure he is sitting or lying down and that his hand is below the level of his heart.”
“Already did that.”
“Is he conscious?”
Pamela's eyes met Apollo's. “Yes,” she said.
“In a great deal of pain?”
“Yes, he says it feels like fire.” Her voice broke.
“Pamela, it is very important that you keep him calm. Do not let him panic. He needs to stay as quiet as possible.”
“I understand.”
Get control!
she ordered herself. If she fell apart, he had no one.
“Okay, do you have water?”
“Yes.”
“Wash the wound, but be careful not to move his hand or arm around too much.”
“I'll do that now, hang on.” She put the phone on the ground next to her and grabbed the other bottle of water. “There's help on the way, but the bite needs to be washed out right away. I hope it doesn't hurt, but it might. You're supposed to stay as quiet as you can, so even if it hurts try not to jerk away.”
“Do what you must. I will not pull away from you.”
When she cupped his hand gently in hers, he closed his eyes, and as she poured the bottled water over the deep fang marks, the only movement he made was the rapid rise and fall of his chest.
She wiped the blood-tinged water from her hands onto her shorts and picked up the phone.
“That's done. What else?”
“Remove any rings, bracelets or watch he has on that hand or arm.”
“He's not wearing any.”
“Good. Now all you can do is keep him calm and treat him for shock.”
“Shouldn't I make a tourniquet or something?”
“No, the bite is too close to his wrist joint. Keeping him quiet and making sure that he doesn't lose any body heat will help him more. Do not let him sleep. He may have a rapid pulse or labored breathing. He may also go into seizures, or even become unconscious. Rattlesnake venom is extremely painful. Be prepared for his reaction to the pain.”
“When will the paramedics get here?” It was hard for her to speak through the fear beating around inside her breast.
“They will be there in less than twenty minutes. Stay calm, Pamela. A rattlesnake bite is a serious event, but it does not have to be fatal.”
The word
fatal
knifed her heart.
“I—I am feeling—” Apollo began, but broke off as he tilted sideways, eyes fluttering.
“Gotta go,” Pamela told the dispatcher before tossing the phone aside and scrambling over to Apollo. “No!” she said, straightening him back against the boulder. “You can't pass out.” She touched his face. His skin felt hot. “Don't leave me!”
His eyes fluttered once more, and then opened. He blinked rapidly, as if he was having trouble focusing on her face.
“Pamela,” he said faintly.
“Apollo, stay with me,” she said. Reaching into the basket, she pulled out one of the linen napkins, wet it with a little of the water left in his bottle, and gently wiped the sweat from his face.
“That feels good,” he murmured, “cool . . . nice.” He grimaced as another tide of molten lava rolled up through his arm. “So this is what it feels like to be burned. Ironic, isn't it, that it should happen to me?” he panted.
“It'll be okay,” she said, wiping his brow. “The paramedics will be here any second. They'll bring the antivenin. You'll be okay. You have to be okay.”
Apollo blinked again, trying to clear his vision. “You're crying.” His unwounded hand tried to brush the tears from her cheeks but ended up falling weakly back to his side. “Don't cry, sweet Pamela. I already told you that the Greek Underworld is a rare and beautiful place. Like you, my soul mate, are a rare and beautiful woman.”
“Don't talk about the Underworld!” Fresh tears rolled soundlessly down her face. “You can't die. You're Apollo, God of Light!”
“At this moment the God of Light is very much a mortal man.” He paused. His panting was making it difficult to talk. The fire in his arm was spreading quickly. He could feel it clawing up his shoulder and spilling like hot tar into his chest. “Pamela, listen to me. Hades told me that soul mates always find each other. Life after life, they circle back together. Remember that . . .” The burning in his chest seemed to explode, and his face convulsed in pain. As he crumpled in on himself, Apollo closed his eyes against the agony and he slipped into black nothingness.
“No!” Pamela cried. With hands that shook so hard she could barely control them, she touched his face. Seconds ago it had felt hot; now it was cool and damp. She felt for his pulse and found nothing. No! It couldn't happen like this. It couldn't be allowed to happen like this. She stood up and threw back her head and screamed her rage to the heavens.
“Zeus! Your son is dying! Where are you? Save him—open your damn precious portal and take him home. What kind of father are you?”
Above her, the air suddenly shimmered and then, like the fold of an invisible curtain being opened, a section of the sky parted, and a young man stepped through to hover over her. He was wearing a short tunic, much like the one Apollo had worn the night they met, and golden sandals that had gilded wings flapping at his heels—the same wings that were on his helmet-like hat and the crystal wand he held. His short, curly hair was white-blond, and his handsome face looked mildly amused.
“What? Are you suddenly struck wordless now that your shrieking has actually roused Olympus?”
Pamela narrowed her eyes at him, recognizing the same arrogant tone she'd heard countless times in Artemis' voice. “First save him,” she demanded. “Then you're free to bully me.”
The god raised his brows in surprise. “Do you realize to whom you speak, mortal?”
“Yes.” She spat the word in frustration. “Your flying feet mean you must be Hermes. Talk later. Save him now.”
Hermes huffed out a puff of indignant air. “Impertinent!” He glanced at the still body of Apollo and shook his head in disgust. “I believe he must be spoiling you.”
Pamela wanted to wrap her fingers around his throat.
“Oh, there's no need for such a passionate show of concern. Zeus would not let Apollo die.”
As he spoke he waved his crystal wand in Apollo's direction, and light showered down on his body like a Forth of July sparkler. The instant the first of the sparks touched him, Apollo's chest lifted as he drew in a long breath, and then his eyes shot open. He looked around in obvious confusion, but when his gaze found Hermes, he frowned.
“Oh, I know, I know,” the hovering god said. “You were expecting Hades or Charon or someone equally as dreary.”
“I have explained to you that Hades is my friend. Watch how you speak of him.” Apollo's voice sounded rough, as if he had to struggle to speak through a raw throat. “What are you doing here, Hermes?”
“Being underappreciated.” Hermes waggled his fingers delicately at Pamela. “Your mortal shrieked for Zeus. Apparently, you were dying.” He sighed and looked bored.
“Zeus sent you,” Apollo said.
“Of course Zeus sent me. Your father is angry with you and the delectable Artemis, but he would hardly allow you to die.”
Pamela's knees felt suddenly very wobbly, and she plopped down beside Apollo, who automatically pulled her closer to him. She wanted to sob with relief at the strength she felt in the arm he put around her.
Hermes watched Apollo's show of obvious affection for the mortal woman and decided that the God of Light had more to worry about than just the anger of his father. When a god loved a mortal, there was always a price to be paid.
“You should know that although Zeus is not going to allow you to die, he has decided that you need to be taught a lesson for disobeying him. Your wound will not kill you, nor will it actually damage your body, but your father is allowing you to feel the pain of the venom.
All
of the pain of the venom,” he finished gleefully.
“Hermes, you would do well to remember that I am only temporarily without my immortal powers.” Apollo's raw voice had gone flat and dangerous.
“Obviously you're temporarily without your sense of humor, too,” Hermes huffed. “Nevertheless, I'm not finished delivering the Storm God's message. Zeus will open the portal at sunset on the mortal world's Friday. He expects you and your sister to appear before him directly after that. Have I mentioned that our Supreme Ruler is not pleased?”
“It was Bacchus' scheming that caused us to be trapped here. Take that message back to my father, and tell him that Artemis and I will be
pleased
to formally confront the God of the Vine with his misdeeds in the Great Hall.”
Hermes rolled his pale eyes. “Zeus knows all about Bacchus and his incompetent plan to wreak divine havoc in the modern world in an attempt to keep the mortal kingdom to himself, which is why it is his decision that the portal to Las Vegas be closed. Permanently. With the corpulent Bacchus banished from the modern world as a part of his punishment.”
Apollo ground his teeth against the pounding pain in his body and rasped, “Zeus is closing the portal? No, he cannot. That would mean—”
“That would mean,” Hermes interrupted smoothly, “that you have until Friday to decide if you want your little mortal to join you in Olympus.
Unless
”—he drew the word out, tapping his temple in mock contemplation—“you would rather remain here as a mortal man.” Hermes made a tisking sound. “And it doesn't appear that mortality agrees with you.” Then the hovering god grinned mischievously and brushed his hands together as if he had just rid himself of a bothersome task. “Well, I have delivered my message and done my good deed for the day. Rumor has it that Aphrodite is hosting a gambling party, and I am planning on losing big to her.”
With a flick of his delicate wrists, the flying god disappeared back through the fold in the sky.
Hugging his pulsing hand close to his body, Apollo shifted so that he could look into Pamela's face. Her cheeks were still wet with tears.
“I wish you wouldn't cry, sweet Pamela. All is well.”
“Was he telling the truth? Are you really going to be okay?” Pamela said, brushing at her wet face.
“Hermes is Zeus' messenger. His manner is caustic, but his words are true.”
She sagged with relief against him. And then she suddenly straightened, took his face between her hands and kissed him with ferocity. Ignoring the blazing pain in his body, he kissed her back, tightening his arm around her so that he could feel the curve of her breast and her soft hip pressing into him.
“Don't ever scare me like that again,” she said against his mouth. She started to kiss him again but pulled abruptly away when she heard the scrambling of booted feet coming quickly up the trail. She straightened her shirt and ran a hand through her short hair. “I'm supposed to be keeping you calm.”

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