After Forrest and I ate breakfast, I disclosed to him that I would be visiting the Underworld this morning to check on Arn. After his state yesterday, especially when I left, I felt obligated to ensure he was okay this morning.
I took my path through Mother Gaia's cavern. No one was in the throne room this morning, which was odd. Usually, someone was about.
I entered the Underworld. I crept quietly into Arn's room.
Arn had gotten his hair cut. I watched him as he slept peacefully, a temporary bandage over his eye to protect it while he moved unconsciously.
His hand was outstretched towards the other side of the bed. I took it, holding it close to my chest.
I had noticed Arn's new scars since he had returned. I didn't look too closely at them. A scar ran across his hand and through to the other side. I was surprised his hand still worked, but I supposed it had healed since the wound was made. I touched the pale strip of skin.
I was on the forest floor, screaming in agony. A sword dropped through my right hand as I reached for the Black Daliah.
I snapped back to the bedroom. I had been a god for this long, but I still wasn't used to seeing others' memories.
I attempted to dismount the bed. My breathing was erratic. I didn't want to wake Arn in a panic.
There was more. Blood slipped between my fingers over an eye I wasn't sure was there anymore. The Black Daliah before me, a spirit trapped in a weapon. She wanted my blood.
I made it to the hallway, shutting the door as quietly as possible. I sank to the ground, heaving. It kept coming back to me in waves—missing magic and not sleeping and not eating. Blood and wounds and lost friends. A terrible loneliness and fear that no one cared for me anymore. Accepting that I was going to die.
"Lexington," Calliope was before me. "Are you okay?"
"I-I was trying to wake Arn, and I just wanted to surprise him, but I keep seeing everything he went through in that war."
"Slow down," she attempted.
"Mom," I started to cry. "We left him alone through all of that. He's hurting-"
"He's also growing," she reminded me. "Even plants must grow through mud, but he will be okay."
"I'm sorry that I abandoned him," I said.
"You'll have to tell him that in your own time," she assured me. "Why don't you go home and calm down? Talk to your friend Forrest; he also sees others' pain, right? Focus on your work for today. Come back for dinner. It will be okay for Arn and you."
"Okay," I nodded. "I-I'm sorry for causing this mess."
"It's not a mess at all," she assured me. "I'll see you later."
~*~
My mom was crouched outside my door. I thought I heard it close, so I got up.
"Are you talking to mice again?" I asked.
She smiled. "Just asking them to leave our humble abode. Breakfast?"
"I need to change into another patch," I leaned on the doorway. "The adhesive itches after too much wear."
She watched me stumble and almost fall. She gravitated to my side, guiding me along pathways I knew so well.
"You don't have to," I said. "I just get a bit dizzy after sleeping. I'm okay."
"Arn," she gave me a sad smile. "I love you, but you are not great at asking for help when needed."
I sighed. She was honestly correct in the least brutal way possible. That was my mother.
YOU ARE READING
Ancient Monsters (Chasing Titania #3)
FantasyThe gods are returning to Newartic. A new threat is foretold to take place upon Caliope. As the gods head to take care of the ancient monster who had resurfaced, more monsters of the past come out to play. Can a family survive being torn apart? Or w...