Tender Cruelty – Dark Olympus Read Online Katee Robert

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Dark Tags Authors: Series: Series by Katee Robert
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Total pages in book: 90
Estimated words: 83786 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 419(@200wpm)___ 335(@250wpm)___ 279(@300wpm)
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I shove through the doors hard enough that Imbros bolts up from where ze leans against a table and has zir gun halfway drawn before ze registers who I am. Even then, ze doesn’t immediately release the butt of zir gun. Ze eyes me with suspicion.

My wife couldn’t have asked for a better set of protectors…or are they her lovers, too? Why stop at one?

I hate this. I’ve had lovers in the past and I’ve never felt this kind of possessive jealousy. It feels like there’s a monster inside me clawing to get out. Even though this is an arranged marriage of convenience, at least for the first couple of months, I tried. I was kind to her, as much as I’m able to be. I brought her flowers. I found out what kind of food she likes and had it cooked for us. I spent every moment in our bed ensuring that she was experiencing as much pleasure as I was. More, even.

And all my efforts were rewarded with her derision. She hates me. There’s nothing I can do to change that. There’s absolutely no reason for that knowledge to sit like a hot coal in my gut.

I tried to be as good of a husband as I could be for her, and she would have none of it. Instead, she plotted to kill me. And now, when our city is at its most vulnerable, she’s meeting up with Ixion, Imbros, and Nephele to pursue her selfish interests.

I barely register the fact that Hera looks particularly lovely today. She always looks lovely. Though lovely is too tame a word for my wife. Her beauty is violent and cutting, all angles and viciousness. Her long dark hair is pulled back into a high ponytail, and though the color is high in her angled cheeks, she looks…tired. Surely not. Surely I’m seeing things. Hera would never allow for something as mundane as exhaustion to affect her.

She stares at me as I cross the bar to get to the booth that she sits in next to Ixion. Too close. Always too damn close. “What are you doing here?”

“I could ask you the same thing. I was under the impression you’d be spending the day at your orphanage.” The orphanage has been the heritage of every Hera since the founding of Olympus. My father found it to be a silly little hobby, but I’m aware of the good my Hera has done with that so-called hobby. I worry that Olympus will see more orphans before this is done.

“I am. I was.” She looks away. “I just needed a moment.”

Something is off. Hera usually meets me with derision and malice, and I can’t remember a single time where she stumbled over her words.

I look at her again, closer this time. I note the faint smudges of darkness under her eyes, the smattering of what almost looks like freckles on her cheekbones and the way her hand shakes as she lifts her drink to her lips. Something’s wrong. Actually wrong. Even Ixion, the bastard, can tell. He hovers over her even more than he normally does. “I need to speak with my wife,” I finally say. “Alone.”

He glares at me. “I don’t take commands from you.”

“Stop trying to order my team around,” Hera snaps, sounding almost like her normal self. Almost. “And stop staring at me like that.”

“Like what?” I ask it absently, still focusing on the clear evidence that something is wrong with her. Her color is off, too. A little too pale, almost green. “Are you sick?”

“Would you care if I was?” She sits back in the booth and crosses her arms over her chest. It’s infuriating how beautiful my wife is. Hera waves a hand in a move that’s almost careless—if not for the tension in her shoulders. “Run along, Husband. You’ve done your due diligence and checked up on your poor little wife. As you can see, I’m alive and kicking and hardly up to no good.”

“You’re always up to no good.”

Her lips curve the slightest amount before she seems to catch herself and stills the motion. “Don’t you have a war criminal to chase down? Or can you even call Circe that when all she’s done is poke at the cracks that already existed?”

Her words don’t echo Hermes’s, but they’re close enough that I narrow my eyes. “Have you been talking to Hermes?”

“What? She’s back in town?” Her surprise seems genuine enough, but I’ve learned that Hera is a superb actor when motivated. If she’s working with Hermes to do… I don’t even know what the fuck Hermes is doing. I barely had time to process the barrier being down, let alone contemplate all the things Hermes mentioned in her brief visit.

“Do you know something about why she left?”

Hera shakes her head slowly. “You’d be better off asking someone like Cassandra or maybe Dionysus. Hermes and I tolerate each other, but we’re hardly friends.”


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