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  CONTENTS

  1 THE IMMORTAL MARKETPLACE

  2 HADES

  3 THE MISSING SANDALS

  4 THE SEARCH

  5 THE SECOND SANDAL

  6 POMEGRANATE SEEDS

  7 IN THE UNDERWORLD

  8 HOME AGAIN

  9 PRINCIPAL ZEUS’S OFFICE

  10 THE DANCE

  APHRODITE THE BEAUTY Excerpt

  ABOUT JOAN HOLUB AND SUZANNE WILLIAMS

  For Erica DePietro and goddessgirls everywhere

  —J. H. and S. W.

  1

  The Immortal Marketplace

  A LYREBELL PINGED, SIGNALING THE end of another Monday at Mount Olympus Academy. Persephone crammed the textscroll she’d been reading into her scrollbag and got up to leave the library. As she joined the throng of godboys and goddessgirls streaming into the hallway, a herald appeared on the balcony above them. “The twenty-third day of the school year is now at an end,” he announced in a loud, important voice. Then he struck his lyrebell again with a little hammer.

  A brown-haired goddessgirl carrying so many scrolls she could barely see over the top of them fell into step beside Persephone. “Ye gods. That means one hundred seventeen days to go!”

  “Hi, Athena.” Persephone pointed to the pile of scrolls. “Some light reading?” she joked.

  “Research,” said Athena. She was the brainiest of Persephone’s friends, and also the youngest, though they were all in the same grade.

  The two goddessgirls continued past a golden fountain. Persephone’s eyes flickered over a painting on the wall beyond it, showing Helios, the sun god, mounting to the sky in his horse-drawn carriage. The academy was filled with paintings celebrating the exploits of the gods and goddesses. They were so inspiring!

  “Hey, you guys, wait up!” called a goddessgirl in a pale blue chiton—the flowing gown that was all the rage among goddesses and mortal Greek women right now. Aphrodite, the most gorgeous of Persephone’s friends, raced toward the two girls across gleaming marble tiles. Her long golden hair, held in place by seashell clips, streamed behind her as she dodged past a godboy who was part goat. He bleated, but when he saw who it was, he stared after her with an admiring, doe-eyed look.

  “I’m going to the Immortal Marketplace this afternoon,” Aphrodite said breathlessly. “Artemis was supposed to go with me, but she’s got archery practice. Want to come?”

  Athena sagged under her load of scrolls. “I don’t know,” she said. “I’ve got so much work to do.”

  “It can wait,” said Aphrodite. “Don’t you want to go shopping?”

  “Well,” said Athena, “I could use some new knitting supplies.” Athena was always knitting something. Her last project was a striped woolen cap. She’d made it for Mr. Cyclops, the Hero-ology teacher, to cover his bald head.

  “You’ll come too, right, Persephone?” Aphrodite asked.

  Persephone hesitated. She didn’t really want to go to the mall, but she was afraid of hurting Aphrodite’s feelings. Too bad she didn’t have a good excuse like Artemis. But except for cheering with the Goddess Squad, Persephone wasn’t much into sports. “I . . . uh . . . I’d love to go,” she said at last. Her mom would have been proud. She was always telling Persephone to be polite and “go along to get along.”

  “Let’s stop by my room first,” said Aphrodite. “I need to change.” Aphrodite was obsessed with clothes and had a different outfit for almost every activity, often changing five or six times a day.

  The student dorms were upstairs: girls on the fourth floor and boys on the fifth. Taking the steps two at a time, the goddessgirls were soon at the entrance to the fourth floor. “I’ll drop these scrolls in my room and be right there,” said Athena.

  Aphrodite and Persephone continued down the hall nine more doors. After flinging her bag onto Aphrodite’s bed, Persephone perched on the edge of it. “I’ll just be a minute,” Aphrodite said as she opened her closet.

  Persephone glanced around the room. It was small, but intended for two, with an identical bed, desk, and closet on each side. Aphrodite and Artemis were supposed to have been roommates, but Aphrodite had objected to sharing space with Artemis’s three smelly dogs, so Artemis had moved into the room next door. Persephone would’ve loved to live in the dorm, but her mom insisted that she live at home instead.

  Within minutes Aphrodite had wriggled into a fresh chiton—a lavender one this time—and Athena had returned. Back at the entrance to the hall again, the three goddessgirls shucked off their shoes and grabbed winged sandals from a communal basket.

  As soon as they slipped them on, the sandals’ straps twined around their ankles, and silver wings at their heels began to flap. In a blur of speed, they raced down the marble staircase to the main floor of the academy. Then, with their feet barely touching the ground, they zipped out the heavy bronze doors and sped across the courtyard. The wind whistled in their ears as they whipped past boulders and trees while descending Mount Olympus.

  The Immortal Marketplace stood halfway between the heavens and Earth, below the cloud line. The goddessgirls reached it in minutes, skidding to a stop at the entrance. Loosening the straps around their ankles, they looped them around the silver wings to hold them in place so they could walk at a normal speed.

  The marketplace was enormous, with a high-ceilinged crystal roof. Rows and rows of columns separated the various shops selling everything from the newest Greek fashions to tridents and thunderbolts. Persephone followed Aphrodite and Athena into a shop that sold makeup.

  There weren’t any clerks, so Aphrodite went directly to one of the counters. A sculpted bust of a beautiful goddess sat on its glass top, surrounded by bottles and boxes of eye powders and liner, creams, and blushes. “Could you make us look like Egyptian princesses?” she asked the statue.

  “It would be my pleasure to do so. Please be seated,” the statue replied in a polite voice.

  Aphrodite perched gracefully on one of the stools and motioned to her two friends to do the same. “Come on, it’ll be fun. Just tell the makeup lady what you want.” She turned toward the statue. “Egyptian kohl eyes are the newest style.”

  Almost immediately, three of the boxes opened and brushes flew out, ready to begin powdering the girls’ faces.

  “No, thanks,” said Athena, backing away. “I don’t wear makeup.”

  Her makeup brush paused, almost as if in shock.

  “She’s young,” Aphrodite explained to the brush, trying to soothe it. “Give her a couple of years.”

  “Ha!” snorted Athena. “You’re only ten months older than me. Go ahead, though. I’ll watch.”

  Drooping with disappointment, the little brush returned to its box as Aphrodite’s brush began dusting sparkly blue powder on her eyelids.

  It had been on the tip of Persephone’s tongue to say that she’d watch too, but Aphrodite had already pulled out a stool for her and the third brush was hovering over her impatiently, waiting to begin. “Hop up,” Aphrodite said. “This will be fun!”

  Persephone obeyed, and the brush immediately began dusting blue on her eyelids as well.

  When the goddessgirls finally left the shop, Aphrodite’s and Persephone’s eyes were heavily lined with black kohl, and Persephone carried a bagful of lipsticks, eyeliners, and eye powders that she
didn’t really want.

  Oh well, she thought, she’d leave them in the Beautyology classroom later. She could hardly wait to wipe off the kohl from around her eyes when she got home. Against her already super-pale skin, the heavy black eyeliner made her look positively pasty. On Aphrodite, of course, the kohl looked great, but it made Persephone feel like a raccoon.

  “Look!” Athena exclaimed. “There’s Arachne’s Sewing Supplies.” The goddessgirls hurried over to the shop. Athena and Aphrodite oohed and aahed over bins of shimmery fabrics and colorful threads and yarns.

  Aphrodite held up a length of sparkly pink fabric. “I want to make a new chiton for the dance on Friday,” she said. “This will be perfect!”

  “Yeah!” Persephone pretended to be excited too, but in truth she was bored. Besides, she didn’t plan to go to the Harvest Hop. Even if she had wanted to go, she doubted her mom would let her. She thought Persephone was too young for dances—for any activity involving godboys, actually. Her mom owned a shop in the mall, Demeter’s Daisies, Daffodils, and Floral Delights. Persephone would have enjoyed stopping by to see the new fall bouquets, but she didn’t suggest it. She knew Athena and Aphrodite didn’t share her interest in gardening.

  “You should take up knitting, Persephone,” said Athena. She held a big ball of luminescent green yarn next to Persephone’s head. “What do you think?” she asked Aphrodite.

  Aphrodite squinted at Persephone. “I think her hair could be less curly. Maybe a straightener—”

  “I was asking about the color of the yarn next to her hair,” interrupted Athena.

  Leaping Olympians! thought Persephone, stunned. They were talking about her as if she wasn’t even there! But she continued to stand between them as they tossed remarks about her back and forth over her head.

  “Green goes perfect with red hair,” Aphrodite declared. “And it heightens the green of her eyes. What are you thinking she should make? A cap?”

  “But I—,” Persephone started to protest.

  “Don’t worry,” Athena interrupted again. “I invented a great pattern you can use.”

  Persephone sighed. She didn’t want a cap. She never wore caps. Besides, despite having a green thumb for gardening, she was all thumbs at sewing and knitting. But faking an enthusiasm she didn’t feel, she bought the yarn anyway, planning to return it next time she visited the market.

  “Thanks,” she told the saleslady in a cheerless voice. “I can’t wait to use this.” Her words sounded so false. Couldn’t anyone else see what a phony she was? Even the sound of her name seemed to show it: PersePHONY. But she lacked the guts to say how she really felt about even the smallest things.

  “Don’t let me forget to give you that pattern later,” Athena said as the goddessgirls left the mall.

  Persephone nodded. “Sure,” she said, though she rather hoped Athena would forget.

  The three girls loosened the ties on their sandals to free the silver wings at their heels. The ties twined around their ankles again, and the wings began to flap. In seconds their sandals whisked them up the mountainside and through the clouds. When they were almost to the top of Mount Olympus, Persephone called out, “See you tomorrow!”

  Waving, Athena and Aphrodite barely slowed as they ascended to the top of Mount Olympus without her. Persephone watched them wistfully. Among her friends, she was the only one who lived at home, instead of in the dorm.

  Veering right, she came across a stream and washed off her eye makeup. Then, as she began to zip upward again, the papyrus bag holding her purchases ripped. The ball of yarn rolled out. She made a grab for it, but only just managed to catch the end of the string as the ball tumbled toward Earth, unwinding as it fell. “Come back here, you snarly little ball of trouble!” Persephone grumbled.

  She followed it down, landing in a large open space of stony ground, patchy green grass, and scattered trees. A park, she thought. But then she noticed the rows and rows of gray stone markers and rectangular marble tombs. “Godness!” she exclaimed aloud. “It’s a cemetery!”

  2

  Hades

  PERSEPHONE HAD HEARD ABOUT CEMETERIES before, but until today she’d never actually seen one. By now, her yarn was strewn all over the rocky ground and caught on the tops of stone markers. She gathered the stringy stuff up and dropped the whole tangled mess into her chiton pocket. Then she took a good look around.

  The cemetery covered an area as large as a stadium. Here and there, scraggly laurel and olive trees poked up through the ground like stray feathers on a plucked chicken. A gated stone wall surrounded the place, separating it from the town outside. How odd, Persephone thought, wondering why a wall was necessary. But maybe it was. Maybe mortals found the cemetery so inviting that too many were dying to get in. She giggled at her own joke.

  Because she couldn’t die—that’s what it means to be immortal, after all—death had always fascinated Persephone. However, it wasn’t a subject she discussed with her friends. The one time she had brought it up, they’d looked at her as if she were a stranger—and a strange stranger at that!

  Persephone wandered through the cemetery, stopping to admire the more elaborate monuments, including one with a marble bull perched on top. The plainer grave markers were simple stone cylinders, inscribed with the name of the deceased. Near the more recent of the graves, cups of wine and small cakes had been left as offerings to the spirits of the dead.

  Next to one newly dug site, Persephone found some lilies scattered on the ground. She picked them up. Immediately the flowers’ stalks straightened and became greener, and their drooping yellow petals curved upward, taking on a brighter hue. “That’s better,” she said to herself.

  It was peaceful in the cemetery. Quite lovely, in fact. Persephone smiled. She was surprised how much at home she felt here. It was wonderful to have some alone time, with only her thoughts for company. She plucked a bunch of little daisies that had sprouted in a patch of grass. Relaxing against one of the stone markers, she began to weave a daisy chain.

  Suddenly, not more than twenty feet away, the ground split open with a loud crack. “Yikes!” yelled Persephone. Her hands jerked and she dropped the daisy chain into her lap as a black stallion pushed up through the gap. It reared on its hind legs, and its front hooves pawed the air.

  A godboy sat on the stallion’s back. He seemed as startled to see Persephone as she was to see him. “Whoa!” he shouted. The stallion calmed, and the godboy nimbly leaped down. He swept back his hair, which hung in long, dusky ringlets. “I know you,” he said coolly. “Persephone, right? I’ve seen you at school. What are you doing here in my cemetery?”

  Persephone pulled part of the tangled pile of green string from her pocket. “I lost my ball of yarn. It fell out of my bag, and I followed it down here.” She was surprised the godboy knew her name. He was older than her, maybe fourteen. He wasn’t in any of her classes, but she did recall seeing him skulking along the hallways at school. Once she’d seen some mean godboys push him up against a wall. They’d been led by Ares, a real hothead.

  The godboy was staring at her. He was cute in a dark and brooding sort of way, with flashing black eyes and a fine, straight nose. “What’s your name?” Persephone asked, blushing under his steady gaze.

  He raised an eyebrow, as if he was surprised—and maybe a little insulted—that she didn’t already know. “Hades.”

  Persephone gave a little gasp. She’d heard his name before, and though she couldn’t remember exactly what she’d heard, she knew it wasn’t good. For one thing, Hades was from the Underworld—a gloomy, lonely, horrible place. Or that was the rumor, anyway. Yet he didn’t seem horrible.

  Frowning, Hades waved a hand toward the cemetery. “Most goddessgirls wouldn’t step foot in a place like this. Doesn’t it creep you out to be here?”

  Persephone tossed her curly head. “Not a bit,” she replied. “I like it here. It’s peaceful.”

  Hades seemed pleased by her response. He nodded. “It is peace
ful.”

  “Is this where you live? Or—” She glanced at the hole his horse had galloped out of.

  “No, but I come here a lot. Especially when I need a break from school and stuff.” He sat beside her.

  “Oh,” said Persephone, hugging her knees. “I know what you mean. Sometimes I need to get away from things for a while too.”

  “I’m not real good at school,” Hades confessed. He picked up a stick and dug at the ground with it. His dark hair fell over his brow.

  “Me neither,” Persephone lied. She was doing very well in her classes, but she didn’t want Hades to feel bad.

  “That’s not true. I know you make As.” He looked at her curiously. “Why are you lying?”

  “Lying?” Persephone gulped. But he was right, and she liked that he had been so straightforward. She decided to be the same. “I guess I just wanted you to feel better.”

  He nodded, seeming to understand. “Sometimes I skip classes when I don’t want to go. Which is most of the time.”

  Persephone thought about saying that she sometimes skipped too, but stopped herself from telling another lie. She was sure Hades would see through it. Instead she said softly, “Maybe that’s why you don’t do real well in school.”

  He looked at her and laughed. “Yeah, maybe you’re right.”

  “Do you have any classes with Mr. Cyclops?” Persephone asked as they continued to talk.

  Hades nodded again. “I have him for my last class of the day.”

  “Does he walk around barefoot in your class too?” Persephone asked, giggling.

  Still bent over his stick, Hades grinned. “Yes, and he leaves his sandals lying around for everyone to trip over. Those things are as big as boats!”

  Persephone nodded. “It’s become a game to hide them.”

  “Have you ever done that?”

  “No, but once, my friends Athena and Aphrodite decorated them with glittery stars and hung them from the ceiling!”