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Aphrodite snorted, "That's not so hard to imagine. I can't imagine the uptight High Council wanting anything to do with something as messy as two giant guy bulls and any beliefs they represent."
"She means except for you," Stark said, frowning at Aphrodite and sending her a "you're not helping"
look.
Thanatos smiled. "No, Aphrodite is correct. The Council has changed over the centuries, especially over the past four I have existed. It used to be a vital force, in its own way very elemental and rather barbaric in its power. But in modern times it has become . . ." The High Priestess hesitated, searching for the correct word.
"Civilized," Aphrodite said. "It's super civilized."
"It is," Thanatos said.
Aphrodite's blue eyes widened. "And being too civilized isn't necessarily a good thing, especially when you're dealing with two bulls ramming against each other and taking out anything that stands between them."
"Zoey's awfully close to Light," Damien said softly.
"Close enough to get gored by Darkness," Stark said. "Especially if Darkness has been sent to be sure she doesn't ever reach the Light again."
The room went silent while everyone's eyes went to Zoey, lying silent and pale against the very civilized cream-colored satin linens.
It was within the silence that the realization came to Stark, and with the instincts of a Warrior guarding his High Priestess, he knew he had found the right path.
"Then finding out how to protect Zoey isn't about ignoring the past. It's about looking deeper into the past than anyone today would think to do," Stark said, excitement raising his voice.
"And it's about embracing and understanding the raw power that is unleashed by the struggle between Light and Darkness," Thanatos said.
"But where the hell do we find out about that?" Aphrodite said, brushing her hair back from her face in frustration. "The beliefs we need have died out - you said that yourself, Thanatos."
"Perhaps not everywhere," Darius said, sitting up straighter, his eyes sharp and intelligent as his gaze met Stark's. "If you want to find ancient and barbaric beliefs you have to go to a place formed by an ancient and barbaric past. A place that is essentially cut off from today's civilization."
The answer jolted through Stark. "I have to go to the Isle."
"Exactly," Darius said.
"What the hell are you two talking about?" Aphrodite said.
"They speak of the place where Warriors were first trained by Sgiach."
"Sgiach? Who is that?" Damien asked.
"It is the ancient title for the Warrior who was called The Great Taker of Heads," Darius said.
"Sgiach was as raw and barbaric as it gets as a Warrior," Stark said.
"Okay, this is all well and good, but we need him to be alive today and not just an old story Warriors know, 'cause I'm pretty sure if Stark can't travel to the Otherworld, he also can't travel to the past,"
Aphrodite said.
"She, " Darius corrected.
"She?" Aphrodite's face was a question mark.
"Sgiach was a female Warrior, a vampyre of amazing powers," Stark said.
"And those 'old stories,' my beauty, also say that there will always be a Sgiach." Darius gave Aphrodite an indulgent smile. "She lives on the Isle of Women at the House of Night there."
"There's an Isle of Women House of Night?" Erin said.
"Why don't we know about that?" Shaunee said. "Do you know about that?" she asked Damien.
He shook his head. "Never heard of it."
"That's because you're not Warriors," Darius said. "The Isle of Women is also known as the Isle of Skye."
"Skye, like in Scotland?" Damien said.
"Yes. It is there that the very first vampyre Warriors were trained," Darius said.
"But not anymore, right?" Damien said, looking from Darius to Stark. "I mean, Warrior training goes on at all the Houses of Night. Like Dragon Lankford trains a bunch of Warriors who come from all over, and he's definitely not in Scotland."
"You are correct, Damien. In the modern world the training of Warriors takes place at the House of Night schools throughout the world," Thanatos said. "Around the turn of the nineteenth century, the High Council decided that would a more convenient way of doing things."
"More convenient and more civilized, I bet," Aphrodite said.