Persephone in Bloom: Free first chapter!
Seriously.
Persephone in Bloom is coming out soon and it has rave early reviews.
Everyone who’s read the first chapter has kept going, so I keep getting comments like “I read it in two days because I couldn’t stop” and “I opened it just to see if the eARC had downloaded and then I finished it 24 hours later”.
It’s quick, witty, character-focused, smart, feminist romantic comedy that confronts some of the nastier aspects of Greek mythology, and I’m very proud and very excited.
I’m also interested in testing out this first chapter theory.
So, below you will find the first chapter of Persephone in Bloom, absolutely free. My request is that if you read it and like it, you can buy the book, forward this email to someone else you think might like it, or share this post widely. Or all three! Let’s get this girl out there.
Chapter One
Persephone Erinyes, not for the first time in her life, regretted listening to her mother.
Demeter had caught her at the door, taken one look at her sleeveless linen shift dress—perfect for the unseasonably warm September—and pointed out that while Persephone’s tattoos were very nice, darling, perhaps they shouldn’t be on display on her first day.
And so Persephone had started her internship at Olympus Publishing in a long-sleeved, drapey peach confection that, it was becoming very apparent, wasn’t made out of breathable fabric.
Honestly, she should have dressed for a marathon. The head of Human Resources, Mr. Hermes, apparently not only took a very personal interest in the intern program, but seemed determined to drag their intake of twelve through every inch of their new workplace. From his place at the head of the pack, he occasionally called something over his shoulder. Mr. Hermes had introduced himself as “British via the West Indies”, and his rich voice and plummy accent easily penetrated to the back of the crowd.
They’d scrambled from their first getting-to-know-you meeting in the HR department, near the top of the building, down through the hallowed offices of the editors and through the labyrinthine cubicles of the copy departments where those editors’ peons scurried through the maze with intent expressions and giant travel coffee mugs
They were allowed a brief peek into the famed wardrobe, which took up most of a floor. Even Persephone, who’d been in her mid-teens before she realized not everyone’s mother had a whole room for a shoe closet, was awed by the racks on racks on racks of gorgeous fabrics, stunning accessories, and superb designs, all meticulously organized so that someone could find the exact belt that had adorned the cover model of the July issue six years before.
Of course, few of these clothes would fit her, but she could definitely see herself in some of the accessories…
A jolt shot through the group as something happened in an aisle further away, the respectful hum shifting to a more intense pitch. Persephone craned, but couldn’t see.
“What happened?” she whispered to the girl beside her. Thalia, she thought, from the quick introduction icebreaker games they’d played.
Probably-Thalia listened for a moment, and then whispered back, “Someone saw Aphrodite Urania!”
“Is she doing a shoot?”
“She must be. I didn’t see anything on her socials, so it must be a big deal.”
Indeed, Mr. Hermes, smile gleaming in his dark face, was herding them back together and reminding them all of the non-disclosure agreement they’d signed. “There’s always a lot going on!” he said. “And you absolutely can’t talk about it. Not to your best friend. Not even your mum!”
Persephone winced. Her own mother wasn’t going to be happy about that.
They were off again, through the beauty department, where two of their group fell upon the product display with reverent shrieks, and the book design department, where Olympus Publishing created glossy art books, beautiful cookbooks, and hefty coffee table tomes - all, of course, promoted by and derived from Olympus magazines.
Persephone could feel sweat gathering between her breasts and dampening the band at the back of her bra. At least her silver low-heeled sandals weren’t a problem, though Thalia was easily keeping up in her sky-high stilettos. Thalia was also wearing a sleeveless shift dress, with a delicate watercolor tattoo of a butterfly flashing on the underside of her dainty light brown wrist. Obviously, her mother hadn’t caught her at the door that morning.
Persephone nodded at the tattoo while Mr. Hermes extolled the virtues of the advertising department. “That’s pretty,” she whispered. “Who designed it?”
Thalia beamed at her. “My sister.”
“It’s great work. I like the—"
“We’re moving!” their relentless guide sang. “Keep up, keep up! Move it, people, interns coming through! To the art department!”
Persephone quickened her pace. For six months, the intern program rotated the chosen twelve through various departments, making sure they knew who was who and, probably more importantly, how they liked their coffee. It had been made very clear to all of the interns that their first six months were going to be gofer duties - pick up this, order that, clear away this mess, call this car.
But after that. If they made it. If they didn’t burn out or screw up or run away screaming, they would get a six-month placement in a department of their choice, and the tempting possibility of doing some actual work.
And Persephone wanted to work in the famed Olympus Art and Design department. She was a decent sketch artist and a better painter, but what she really loved was design; selecting and editing elements, turning a miscellany of objects into a composition that intrigued and delighted the eye. If she could just show people what she could do…
The Art and Design space was enormous, and crammed with people. Persephone scanned the room, trying to pick up as much as she could, but it was hopeless; she saw layouts for skin creams and tennis rackets, food photography and travel shoots, all passing before her dazed eyes as they jogged through the floor. One man adjusting the shading on a swimsuit shot gave her a vague half-smile; a woman leaning over a lightbox glanced up in irritation as the pack went by. Everyone else ignored them. They were busy. They were focused. They were creating beauty with purpose and drive, and Persephone wanted to be one of them so badly she could barely breathe.
Persephone had expected people to be grouped according to the publication they nominally worked for, but instead the departments appeared to be organized by the kind of work people were doing, not by which magazine employed them.
“Cross-publication synergy!” Mr. Hermes declared, in response to a question. “It’s what makes Olympus so flexible, and our work so fresh and vibrant.” He checked his watch. “Righto, it’s nearly noon. And you know what that means!”
What that meant, apparently, was a charge downstairs to the test kitchens and the cafeteria on the second floor.
Kitchens was a gleaming expanse of copper pans, white tables and well-scrubbed stoves, loud with friendly shouting over the clatter of cooking. Here, finally, Mr. Hermes slowed down - there were apparently rules about running in the kitchens, as a large Black woman in pristine chef whites reminded Mr. Hermes, the moment he crossed the threshold.
“Yes, absolutely!” he said, and made exaggeratedly slow walking motions. The woman rolled her eyes at him, and turned back to her stove.
Mr. Hermes winked at the interns, but Persephone noted that he didn’t pick up the pace again.
One corner was set up for a photoshoot, and she instinctively drifted towards it. An impressive array of lighting modifiers and gels were trained on a stunning wedding cake. It was four tiers high, embellished with silver sugar roses and elaborate curlicues of pearls curving around the luscious white icing.
The illusion was only slightly tarnished by the food stylist who picked up a spray can, shook it with a calculated expression, and coated the entire thing with a clear substance that didn’t smell at all edible.
“Acrylic spray,” a tall intern with a sharp pixie cut said knowledgeably. “To keep it looking pretty for the shoot.”
“I guess no one’s taking a slice home for dessert,” Persephone joked.
“Oh, do you eat carbs?” Thalia asked.
“Only on days ending with y,” Persephone said gravely.
“I’m on keto.”
“That’s okay. I never offer to share my sandwiches,” Persephone said, and was a little surprised when Thalia laughed. Well, just because somebody was beautiful and perky didn’t mean they lacked a sense of humor.
“Speaking of sandwiches,” Mr. Hermes said, and Persephone jumped. How was he everywhere at once? “It’s definitely lunch time. Let me introduce you to my favorite place in the building: the staff cafeteria!”
And with a flourish he flung open the doors, a gesture only minorly impeded by the man on the other side jumping back with a curse. Mr. Hermes ignored him and gestured the interns inside. “Today, lunch is on HR,” he told them. “Try the beef!”
***
Hades knew it was bad news from the moment his second-in-command came into his office.
“He said no,” Odysseus said, with no preamble.
Hades scowled. “How does he expect us to manage the increased demand on the servers without additional IT support?”
“He approved a three percent salary raise.”
“That won’t give them more hours in the day. IT need at least three additional full-time staff, not a tiny raise for the staff we already have.”
Odysseus spread his hands. “I made the argument.”
And it would have been persuasive. That was why Hades had sent Odysseus to the meeting instead of going himself.
“You could take it to the next board meeting,” Odysseus suggested.
“No point,” Hades said. “The board does whatever he thinks is best. Next?”
“He’s also not happy about the profit to expenditure ratio on the video suite, but accepted the timeline projections—I got the feeling that they’d better be accurate.”
“They will be,” Hades said, with absolute confidence, and was rewarded with a wink. Odysseus had overseen those projections.
“Yes to folding Farm and Country into Life Outdoors, with HR laying off twelve staffers.”
Hades sighed. “Ask Daphne to coordinate the severance packages with HR.”
“Yes to contracting Peter Atlas as a speaker for the January retreat.”
“Good.” He waited.
Odysseus looked at him expectantly.
Hades broke first. “And did you ask him about those personal expenses discrepancies?”
“Absolutely not,” Odysseus said. “That’s definitely your job.”
Hades stared at him gloomily. “You’re my direct report. When I tell you to do something, you’re supposed to do it.”
“Write me up,” Odysseus said, with a complete lack of fear. “Or you could email him, if you’re too scared to go upstairs.”
“I’m not scared of Zeus,” Hades protested.
“Just his office,” Odysseus said. “Thirty stories up, glass walls...”
“I’m not scared of heights, either.”
“You know, you can really feel it when you get off the elevator. The building sways just a bit - I mean, it has to, to counterbalance the wind. But you can’t help wondering what would happen if it just kept swaying, maybe if it started to fall—"
“I’ll send the fucking email,” Hades said, a little sharper than he meant to be. “Get out of my office.”
He turned to his computer, fighting to put the idea of falling masonry out of his head. His email was brusque, even for him—"See attached. Can you explain?”—but Zeus didn’t pay him for his people skills. When he looked up, Odysseus was looking at him in concern.
“I’m fine,” Hades said.
“Have you left your office all week?”
“I do have a home of my own.” He seemed to recall it being quite a nice one, when he was there long enough to appreciate it.
Odysseus snorted. “Seen it in daylight, recently?”
“Sunday morning,” Hades said. “I read the papers.”
“Uh-huh. I won’t ask whether you went anywhere except work, because I know the answer. And while you’re at work, have you been anywhere except the basement? The boardroom, the cafeteria, the gardens?”
“Certainly,” Hades said. He couldn’t remember where, exactly, but he must have been. The head of departments meeting? No, he’d sent Odysseus to that. Meeting his sister-in-law for a coffee in the executive dining room? That had been… shit, last month. He entered “Set up coffee with Hera” on his PA’s to-do list.
Odysseus pointed at him. “You’re turtling,” he proclaimed.
“No, I’m not,” Hades said automatically, then frowned. “Am I?”
“Yes. Yanking your head into your shell.” Odysseus gestured at the office walls. “I’m taking you out to lunch.”
“There’s a lot to do,” Hades said. “I can’t leave for that long.”
“Fine. The cafeteria, then.”
“I suppose that won’t hurt,” Hades conceded, and then caught the smile Odysseus didn’t hide quickly enough. “You cunning dog. What’s happening in the cafeteria?”
“The September intern intake is here, and noon is their scheduled lunchtime,” Odysseus said, and winked at him. “You never know, some of them might be cute.”
Hades rolled his eyes. “One, you’re the most faithfully married man I’ve ever met. And two, if you ever did go mad and cheat, your wife would murder you. And then I’d have to bury your body.”
“Not for me,” Odysseus said, mock-offended. “Interns for you.”
“I am forty-two years old,” Hades told him. “I will not be ogling any interns.”
“All right, then we can place bets on who makes the distance,” Odysseus said, moving towards the door. He was heading automatically for the stairs—working with him for nearly a decade meant that Hades didn’t have to come up with excuses to avoid the elevator.
“That would be almost equally unethical.”
“Mark Hermes runs the book every year, and he’s head of HR.”
“Don’t tell me these things,” Hades said, groaning. “I always feel obligated to do something about them.”
“I was an intern,” Odysseus told him. “Penny was an intern. Hestia was an intern. You, sure, you got in because your family owns the place—"
“Thanks.”
”—but my point is, probably half the people working at Olympus were interns. Betting on interns is a time-honored tradition. Don’t take that joy away from us.”
Hades scowled, but he could feel himself giving in. “You could talk anyone into anything, couldn’t you?”
“Yes, and you’d better thank your luck,” Odysseus said cheerfully. “Or there’d be no one who could get you to leave your dungeon.”
Hades was not supposed to know that his underlings called the finance department “the Underworld.” Honestly, he hadn’t meant to keep the department in the basement, but when he’d first stepped in as Chief Financial Officer, building a stable team had been his first priority. A lot of the people working for his father’s CFO had had to go, but Hades was proud that he’d had to fire very few people since then. Mark Hermes might be leading an illegal gambling ring, but he knew how to select good employees.
And just when Hades had gotten his team together, and was starting to think that sunlight and fresh air might be nice, Zeus had ordered a renovation program for most of the building. The basement layer was the only one he’d been able to guarantee wouldn’t be touched for a couple of years. Maybe the flighty art department types could adjust to scrambling to a new location every six months, but Hades’s people benefited from orderly recordkeeping and longevity.
So they’d stayed in the basement. And stayed. And stayed. For… Nearly fifteen years?
Distracted, Hades followed Odysseus into the cafeteria and looked up, just as a beam of sunlight struck through the high windows of the mezzanine and illuminated the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.
She was sitting in the middle of a group of chattering children, like a queen among her court. She was lush and round in profile, golden-skinned and pink-lipped, and her body was draped in curving folds of peach. Her honey-blonde hair was piled on top of her head. When she turned slightly to talk to a girl beside her, he saw bright red flower petals peeking over the back of her gown’s neckline.
Poppies. There were poppies tattooed on the back of her neck.
“Holy shit,” Odysseus said, from very far away.
Obviously, Hades needed to touch those poppies. He took a step forward, and a wiry hand clasped his wrist, squeezing lightly.
“Not that this isn’t very, very funny,” Odysseus said, so quietly it was almost under his breath. “But if you throw yourself at her feet in the middle of the cafeteria, people are going to talk, and that might be a problem on her first day.”
Hades blinked twice, and felt heat rush to his cheeks as he met Odysseus’s eyes. “What?” he said at random. “I was just. First day?” Shit, shit, shit. She was an intern. She was sitting with the other interns, and he was a dirty old man.
He could feel his eyes returning to her as if dragged, and forcibly stared at the dining stations instead. “Soup looks good.”
“You hate cold soups. Last week you called gazpacho ‘chilled demon vomit.’”
“I should give them another chance. I’m open-minded. I’m flexible.”
“Since when?” Odysseus muttered, but he followed Hades to the soup station. There was a peal of laughter from the intern table. It wasn’t… there was no reason for the laughter to be at his expense, but he felt the anxiety prickle at the back of his skull.
“Chilled cucumber puree with feta and cashew crumble,” Odysseus read over his shoulder. “So… baby food?”
The station attendant grinned at him. “Don’t let Hestia hear you say that,” she advised. “Besides, how many babies eat feta?”
“Mine did,” Odysseus said, “He ate everything, before he decided to eat nothing. Rubber bands. Coins. I miss those days.” He handed Hades a tray. Hades watched as the attendant ladled pale green glop into a bowl, and sprinkled a generous handful of cheese and nuts on top. Hestia’s determination to test new recipes on a wide audience was probably admirable but to his mind, cold liquids in a bowl should be desserts. He couldn’t stop his eyes from fooling his tastebuds into expecting something sweet.
“I wish Hestia would get over this cold soup streak,” Odysseus muttered. “Hasn’t anyone told her it’s nearly fall?”
“Do you want the job?”
“No more than I want to ask your brother what those unexplained items are in his personal expenses account.” Odysseus paused, then lowered his voice. “You don’t think he’s having another affair, do you?”
“No,” Hades said. “He hasn’t done that since they remarried, and Hera’s prenuptial agreement is iron tight. If the marriage fails because of infidelity, she gets half of everything.”
Odysseus’s mouth was wry. “If I’d divorced someone for cheating, I wouldn’t marry him again, even with a prenup like that.”
“She loves him,” Hades said. It was, unfortunately, the only reason that made sense. “Anyway, Zeus never paid for his affairs on the company dime. My chief concern is that someone on his staff is hoping that he doesn’t check his expenses list before it gets sent to Accounts Payable.”
“Well, he doesn’t,” Odysseus said. “Good thing he’s got you.”
Hades knew very well what Odysseus was doing; distracting him with banter, creating a small, private space for the two of them as they moved through the hall. The space was much more crowded than usual, and the intern table was attracting a lot of covert attention; people trying to gauge the odds before they placed their bets.
Unwillingly, inevitably, Hades looked at her again.
She wasn’t perfect, he told himself. No one was perfect. And she wasn’t, on closer inspection, the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen, either; he worked in an industry that frequently put the most impressive human specimens (suitably Photoshopped) on display. If he put her next to Aphrodite Urania, she might even look ordinary.
True, it was hard to pick out a particular feature that was less than gorgeous, but she had flaws. Her left sandal had a mark on it. Her mascara had smudged under her eyes. A tendril of her hair had escaped and was wandering deliciously down the back of her neck, bringing his eyes again to those blood-red poppies, starkly outlined in black against the golden dream of her skin…
The completely objective appraisal had lulled him into distraction, Hades realized. Odysseus’s wandering route had brought them a lot closer to the intern table. Hades stopped in his tracks. The soup bowl wobbled perilously on his tray.
Odysseus turned to give him a look of innocent inquiry. Hades wasn’t fooled for a second.
“No,” he said, nearly under his breath, but with all the command he could bring to bear.
“Okay,” Odysseus said. “You go find a table, and I’ll join you in a second. I want a closer look at the prospects.”
Half-relieved, half-disappointed, Hades scanned for a clear table. There weren’t many; apparently everyone wanted to assess the new crop of interns. Maybe he could persuade Odysseus that the trip to the cafeteria had been enough social interaction for the day, and retire to his office to eat in peace.
The wistful contemplation of this peaceful vision was torn away by a booming, cheerful voice with a British accent.
“Well, well! Right over there is Hades Kronion, our CFO. Come and say hello, Hades!”
Hades forced a smile through gritted teeth, and turned to face Mark Hermes, who was wearing a lavender tie that glowed against his brown skin, because Hermes had style. Hades was devoid of style. This usually didn’t bother him, but she was sitting directly opposite Hermes, so that he was perilously aware of a blur of peach fabric as she shifted to look at him.
Unfortunately, he couldn’t turn away from the intern intake without a word. It would give them a terrible impression of an Olympus owner, and Hermes would make him pay for it, using all the resources of HR. There would be meetings. There would be workshops. There might be roleplay.
Hades took three steps towards the group, casting about for some polite nothing phrases of welcome, and felt the toe of his sensible leather shoe catch on some hidden flaw in the floor.
It happened in slow motion.
There was the jolt of the impact as it travelled up his leg, halting his progress. There was the instinctive stagger to keep his footing, following by the sickening realization that while he and the tray had stopped moving, the bowl had not. There was the futile reach after he dropped the tray and grabbed at the bowl as it described a low arc, rotating vertically as it spun and dropped, face down, in her peach-covered lap.
Hades looked into the face of the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen, who was dripping green slime from throat to thigh, and yearned for the earth to swallow him whole.
***
Persephone took a bite of the best salmon salad she’d ever had, and focused on Mr. Hermes, who was emphasizing the necessary bonding between the interns.
“It’s one of the things that will get you through the first six months,” he said, and waggled his finger at them. “The program is tough, and we make no apologies for that. You have to be able to rise to a challenge to make it in this business. Make your fellow interns your family, and you’ll have the support to meet those challenges. These are your siblings now!” He smiled in reminiscence. “Mine was the very first intake, and several of our fellowship even married each other.”
“So, we should marry our siblings,” Pixie Cut muttered under their breath. “Check.”
Persephone choked on a leaf of baby spinach, and hastily turned it into a cough.
“Enjoy your lunch,” Mr. Hermes concluded, and sat down to engage with an enormous sandwich.
Pixie Cut turned to Persephone. “I’m sorry, I didn’t catch your name earlier. I’m Terry. Pronouns he/she/they.”
“I forgot your name too,” Persephone admitted. “I’m Persephone, she/her. What department are you looking at?”
“Photography. You?”
“Art and Design.”
“Oh, me too!” Thalia exclaimed. “Where did you go to school?”
“Eleusis U,” Persephone said. Thalia seemed determined to make friends, which Persephone felt cautiously optimistic about.
Thalia’s eyes widened. “Me too! I knew I’d seen you somewhere before.”
“We probably didn’t overlap,” Persephone said. She’d been hoping that this topic of conversation would wait a few days. “I graduated five years ago.”
Thalia blinked at her. “But you look so young.”
Persephone gazed at her fresh-faced, beaming companion, and felt about three hundred.
Thalia dropped her voice conspiratorially. “If you don’t mind me asking, how old are you?”
“I’m 27,” Persephone said.
“Oh, wow. That’s, like, nearly 30!”
“I guess so,” Persephone said.
“Experienced,” Terry said, nodding. “Smart. I took a couple of years off after college myself and travelled through Europe.”
Persephone ate another bite of salmon and watched Thalia and Terry start a conversation about their post-college backpacking adventures. The rest of the interns were talking about their colleges, their senior year spring breaks, the work they’d picked up over the summer vacation. Mr. Hermes was looking at her, a warm gaze that was nevertheless clearly assessing her current performance. And no wonder; he’d just told them to make friends, and she was sitting here in silence. The least she could do was make an effort.
“Has anyone watched anything good recently?” she asked, and Terry turned back to her.
“Last week I saw this amazing Spanish documentary about endangered snake preservation efforts,” they said. “Did you know that—"
“Well, well!” Mr. Hermes cut in, easily slicing through the chatter. “Right over there is Hades Kronion, our CFO. Come and say hello, Hades!”
He was looking over Persephone’s head. Persephone twisted in her chair, and saw a tall man in a dark suit, hunched over a tray. He turned back towards them, his lips drawn back in a tight smile, and she felt a thump in the pit of her stomach.
This Hades Kronion had a great face. Strong cheekbones arching over slightly hollowed cheeks on either side of an interestingly craggy nose. His skin was marble-pale, a stark contrast to the neatly kept black hair and beard, and there were faint blue shadows under his dark blue eyes. She could do something with charcoals, maybe, or even muted pastel crayons, to outline the bones and smudge the shadows, but she wasn’t sure what she’d do to capture that wary air, like a cat that wasn’t sure of its welcome.
He took a few steps towards the group, and then everything happened too fast for her to understand what was going on. One moment she was wondering how you asked the CFO at your new workplace if he’d like to sit for some quick sketches, and the next she was wet from collarbone to knees with something that smelled minty green and tangy.
There was a suppressed snicker from her left, as Thalia valiantly stifled a giggle behind her hands.
Hades was staring at her, his eyes wide and appalled.
“I’m so–” he said, and swallowed hard. “I’m so sorry, I lost my footing. Are you hurt?” His voice was deep and resonant, his tone grave. He could have been apologizing for some mortal offence.
Persephone plucked the bowl from her lap and deposited it neatly on the table. The bowl was empty; the entire serving had managed to disperse itself over her person. “No, I’m fine,” she said. “Don’t worry, it was an accident. But I’d better go get cleaned up.” At least now she had a good excuse to dump the damn dress without her mother saying a word. Not even the most talented drycleaner was going to salvage this one.
“Washrooms are in the–” Mr. Hermes started, but a short, wiry, red-haired man with the sharpest eyes she’d ever seen suddenly appeared, and held his hand out to her.
“This way,” he said, giving her a charming smile, and Persephone found herself being raised to her feet. “Introduce yourself,” he muttered at Hades in an undertone, and Persephone was being whisked off to the kitchens while the hesitant, deep voice behind her began a stilted hello to the interns.
“I’m Odysseus,” her rescuer said, and raised his voice a little. “I need some towels over here, please! Any allergies?”
“No,” Persephone said.
“Good.” He handed her a clean pile of kitchen cloths. “Wipe the worst of it off, then head up to Wardrobe. You remember where that is?”
“Seventh floor,” Persephone said, and was rewarded with a smile. He scribbled something on a piece of paper, folded it in half, and put it on top of the towel pile.
“I need to rescue Hades from your cohort, but if you give someone in Wardrobe that note, they’ll show you the secret showers and find you something to wear.”
Persephone’s brain had taken a moment to get up to speed, but it was whirring into action. “Will they have anything in my size?” she asked, striving to keep her voice even and non-judgmental.
Odysseus looked at her with approval. “An intelligent question. I’m almost sure they’ll have something. At the very least, they can wash and dry your dress and you could wear it home. But it’d be a shame to miss out on the rest of your first day.”
That, Persephone could agree with. She wiped off enough of the green sludge that she could get into the elevator without dripping, and developed a practiced rueful smile for everyone who saw her on her way there. She truly wasn’t offended or upset, but even if she had been, no one had to tell her that whiny interns who baulked at the first mishap that came their way weren’t going to be employment material.
She flagged down the first person she saw in the wardrobe floor, a woman who gave her dress a single, disgusted look, and the note a surprised one.
“Follow me,” she said briskly. “Don’t touch anything.”
Persephone didn’t need the warning. She’d spent enough time around her mother’s closet to appreciate how many thousands of dollars of dainty clothes she could destroy with an ill-placed soup smear. She tucked the flowing gathers of her dress tight around her thighs, and walked after the woman, trying to keep her shoulders and hips pulled in. It wasn’t easy—the aisles were narrow, and she was pretty wide—but she made it to a glass walled office where a dark-skinned woman in her late thirties was frowning at a rack of skirts.
Persephone’s escort rapped on the door and walked in. “Penny, this is an intern,” she announced. “Odysseus says help her out, and he’ll owe you a favor.”
“Oh, good,” the woman said, turning to smile at Persephone. She had acne scars and lopsided features, and wasn’t what most people would think of as pretty, but her crooked smile lit up her face. “He’s down to owing me half a dozen favors, and I like to have a few in reserve. Stand up tall, hon, let me get a look at you. I’m Penny Laconia, Head of Wardrobe. What’s your name?”
Persephone dropped her arms by her sides and straightened obediently. “Persephone.”
“Right,” Penny said, giving her one comprehensive glance. “Diana, show Persephone to the shower, and then pull… let’s see. The navy Siriano metallic suit pants, the Trelise Cooper Curate thing in orange, and the Elie Saab I altered for Ashley. No, the Saab’s too sparkly for work, make it the copper La Femme with the ruching. All right, go.”
Twenty minutes later, Persephone was in the navy pants and a drapey orange camisole top. Penny had given her a new pair of shoes, which Persephone was almost sure she wouldn’t fall out of. Diana had presented her with a bag that contained the peach dress, hastily rinsed and run through a spin cycle, so that it was merely stained and damp instead of marinaded and dripping.
“That orange looks wonderful with your tattoos,” Penny said. “All those stark outlines and bright watercolor fill are great.”
“Thank you,” Persephone said, touching her bared arms. “I, uh, I designed them. In senior year. I did some design work for the tattooist and she cut me a deal.”
“Did you?” Penny said. Some kind of consideration moved in her face. “Ah, well, I’d better get back to work, and you’d better catch up with the intake. Diana, where are the interns?”
“Zeus’s office,” Diana reported.
“Better scoot,” Penny said. “You don’t want to keep the boss waiting.”
Persephone arrived on the top floor just as the last of her fellow interns was filing into the cavernous glassy space that was Zeus’s office, and joined the end of the line. Mr. Hermes tipped her a wink and said, with barely a pause, “And finally, Persephone Erinyes, Art and Design candidate.”
Zeus Kronion didn’t look much like his brother, except perhaps for the height. Where Hades had hunched, he leaned back against his gleaming wooden desk, every inch of him radiating confidence and power. He wore his blondish hair swept back, and was clean shaven, exposing symmetrical features and piercing grey-blue eyes. He was handsome, and that was all. Her fingers didn’t itch for a pencil.
Of course, she’d seen him before, which was probably dimming any possible impact. She couldn’t ever recall meeting Hades Kronion, but Zeus and his wife were frequent attendees at her mother’s more upscale events.
This was something she absolutely didn’t plan on telling the other interns.
Zeus looked straight at her. “Persephone!’ he said, flashing his teeth. “So great to have you with us. And how is your lovely mother?”
Persephone ignored the startled attention of her workmates, and plastered on the smile she used when she had to convince rowdier guests that they didn’t need another glass of wine. “Fine, thank you, Mr. Kronion,” she said, and hoped that he’d pick up on her cues. Formal greeting, casual acquaintances at most, please don’t call any further attention to me…
Zeus laughed, a deep boom of genuine amusement, and made eye contact with Mr. Hermes to share the joke. Persephone noted that Mr. Hermes didn’t smile back, and was grateful. He knew about her connections, of course, but he hadn’t made an issue out of them.
“Mr. Kronion!” Zeus said. “As if she hasn’t known me since she was this high.” He waved a hand at thigh level.
Persephone was maybe ten or fifteen years younger than Zeus, not a whole generation behind him. She tried to think of a tactful way to remind him of this, when he spoke again:
“I’ll be keeping an eye on you. You’ll have to tell me how you like the program!”
None of the other interns physically moved, but Persephone could feel them leaning away from her. The mystery of her age was solved for them now--rich girl, well-connected, no doubt only got the sought-after slot because her mom made a call. Spoiled, untrustworthy, and probably reporting every move to the big boss.
Persephone swallowed. “Thank you,” she said, wishing she could fade into the wall. “I’m so grateful for the opportunity.”
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