Aimee Carter

Goddess of the Underworld


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       Select Praise for Aimée Carter’s The Goddess Test series

      “The narrative is well executed, and Kate is a heroine better equipped than most to confront and cope with the inexplicable.”

      –Publishers Weekly on The Goddess Test

      “Carter’s writing is a delight to read–succinct, clean, descriptive. Goddess Interrupted is definitely a page-turner, one full of suspense, heartbreak, confusion, frustration and yes, romance.” –YA Reads on Goddess Interrupted

       Also by Aimée Carter

       The Goddess Test Novels in reading order:

      THE GODDESS TEST

      “The Goddess Hunt” (ebook)

      GODDESS INTERRUPTED

      and the upcoming

      THE GODDESS INHERITANCE

      Goddess

      of the

      Underworld

      Aimée Carter

       www.miraink.co.uk

      For Carrie Harris, who is one of a kind,

      brilliantly hilarious,

      and knows just what to say to vanquish the crazies.

      JUICES.

      GUIDE OF GODS

ZEUS WALTER
HERA CALLIOPE
POSEIDON PHILLIP
DEMETER DIANA
HADES HENRY
HESTIA SOFIA
ARES DYLAN
APHRODITE AVA
HERMES JAMES
ATHENA IRENE
APOLLO THEO
ARTEMIS ELLA
HEPHAESTUS NICHOLAS
DIONYSUS XANDER
PART ONE

      For the first sixteen years of my life, Mother told me my wedding day would be one of the happiest in my eternal existence. That the birds would sing, the air would smell like flowers and the sun would shine. Every last detail would be perfect.

      Like an idiot, I’d believed her.

      The sun didn’t shine in hell, and unless bats counted, there weren’t any birds in the endless Underworld palace, either. To make things worse, the infinite rock surrounding the cavern weighed down on me, growing heavier with every passing second. I was trapped, literally and figuratively. And I had no idea how to dig myself out of this one.

      Mother did manage to keep her word about the flowers, though. As I paced from one end of the chamber to the other, eleven steps in each direction, I had to zigzag my way around the endless bunches of wildflowers that covered every available surface. The perfume was strong enough to knock out Cerberus, but at least it didn’t smell like death.

      “Persephone?” Mother poked her head into the room. Given the way she glowed, I would’ve guessed this was her wedding, not mine. “It’s time. How are you feeling?”

      She knew exactly how I felt about all of this. She didn’t want the truth—she wanted false affirmation that I was as happy as she was. “I don’t want to do this,” I said. No use holding back now.

      “Sweetheart,” said Mother in a tone she must have thought was understanding, but was really the same one she’d used to convince me to do this in the first place. She stepped inside the chamber and closed the door behind her. “What’s wrong?”

      “What’s wrong is that I don’t want to marry Hades.” Searching for a place to sit, I spotted a chair in the flowered jungle, but a bouquet of purple blossoms already claimed it. I huffed and sank to the floor instead. “You told me the Underworld wasn’t so bad.”

      “It isn’t.” She knelt beside me. “You’ve only seen the palace. There’s an entire world out there—”

      “It feels like a cage. It’s heavy and unnatural and—I want to stay in Olympus with you.” My voice hitched, and I blinked rapidly. Breaking into tears would’ve been a surefire way to make Mother believe I was simply too emotional to think clearly. I’d never thought more clearly in my life, though.

      Mother wrapped her arms around me, and for a moment I allowed myself to lean against her. “You’ve known this was coming for a long time, my darling. I would never allow this if I wasn’t absolutely certain you would love him.”

      “But I don’t.” Didn’t she understand that?

      “You will, in time.”

      “What if I never do?”

      “Persephone, look at me.” She tilted my head upward, and my eyes met hers. “You will. Trust me.” Her confidence should’ve sparked the same in me, but I was empty. “I’ll come visit you all the time. This is the beginning of the rest of your life, not the end.”

      She was wrong—it was the end of everything that mattered. The end of days picking flowers and soaking in the sunlight, the end of nights sitting in her lap as she told me stories. A deep ache filled me, and I swallowed hard. No crying. Not today.

      “I am so proud to call you my daughter,” she murmured. “Eventually you will understand why I asked this of you. In time, you will be happier here with Hades than you could ever be with me in Olympus.”

      Mother had never been so wrong so many times in a row before. I couldn’t be happy, not in this underground cavern. Not without the sun. Not without her.

      “Hades loves you already, my darling. He is quiet, and he doesn’t love out loud like you may be used to, but that doesn’t make his love any less strong. You’ve seen the way he looks at you.”

      Reluctantly