Location: Temple of Apollo
Time Remaining: 31 years
It
was dawn when Nemesis reached Apollo’s temple. She swooped up under one of the
eaves and perched on the edge of one of the stone columns, where the roof did
not rest squarely on the column’s top. Now
what? She wondered.
She’d
defied Zeus when she’d spared the child, spurned his advances, attacked him,
and now she’d run from her punishment as well. Nemesis had hunted many heretics
at Zeus’s behest, but none who’d done so much as she now had, had ever been
afforded forgiveness or mercy. Death was the best case scenario, now – more
probably, she’d be sealed away in one of Tartarus’s sarcophagi and condemned to
an eternity of torment in one of its nightmare worlds.
But
isn’t that what she deserved? Zeus was her lord and master, ultimate arbiter of
right and wrong, and she’d defied him. Perdition was the fate she deserved. So
why was it that she still hadn’t simply flown back to the Constellar Palace and
surrendered herself? Why was she so driven to prolong the inevitable?
She’d
served the gods for roughly two centuries. Generations of human beings had come
and gone in that time, so it seemed strange to Nemesis that she would suddenly
be so determined to prolong her life. Perhaps, she thought, the reason she was
so reluctant to let go of her life was the uncertainty. The humans believed
they knew what was coming for them, and some of them structured their lives
around that expectation. Nemesis didn’t have the benefit of that certainty. In
fact, until just now, she’d not given too much thought to what would await her
if or when she reached the limit of her immortality.
Contrary
to what most humans believed, one did not automatically travel to the
underworld when they died, no matter what their relatives did with their bodies
to mark their passing. One had to be taken to the underworld by a servant of
Mt. Olympus.
Some
of the humans residing in the underworld were there either because of a random
lottery maintained by Demeter and Hades, or due to an allegation of minor
heresy. When someone’s number was up, or when they were declared an
irredeemable threat to the people’s faith, an agent like Nemesis would be sent
to retrieve the person, abducting them from their lives and sealing them away
in one of Tartarus’s ancient sarcophagi, where their minds would enter a dream
world the humans described as the Asphodel Meadows. In the sarcophagi, the
human’s body would survive almost indefinitely.
Those
humans closest to the gods, either by relation or favor, were sometimes taken
to the underworld when death was imminent or very recent. These individuals
found themselves in the dream world of Elysium, where they would live on
eternally as pets and servants to the gods and titans who had retired there.
The most unfortunate humans, though, were those who’d managed to outright
enrage one of the gods – these individuals were interred in nightmare worlds,
designed by Zeus himself, to torment his enemies for all of eternity.
Most
humans simply died, though, never setting foot in the underworld before or
after. This was now Nemesis’s best option. At one time, if she’d thought about
it, she might have expected to retire to Elysium when she could no longer serve
the gods in the physical world, but now the nightmarish prisons of the titans
who’d opposed Zeus hundreds of years ago seemed a much more likely destination.
A
roll of thunder announced Zeus’s arrival. Artemis’s attempt to conceal
Nemesis’s escape had given her time to fly to the temple, but only just barely.
Two
of Apollo’s priests walked out of the temple to greet the Lord of Olympus. They
all but threw themselves on the ground to kneel before Zeus.
“Praise
Zeus, father of the Sun God! Father of knowledge!” they shouted.
“I’m
searching for someone,” Zeus said, towering over them, “You know her as
Nemesis. She may have assumed the form of a mortal woman to hide amongst your
flock. Have you seen anyone unfamiliar?”
“No,
my lord,” one of the priests said, “Everyone who came in for sunrise worship is
a regular worshipper.”
“Indeed
my lord,” the other priest said, “But there will be sessions at noon and
sunset, as well. Perhaps if you would like to join us…?”
“Ugh…
tedious,” Zeus growled, “I have another idea.” Zeus turned around and walked to
the top of the stairs that led up to Apollo’s temple. He took a deep breath and
channeled his power into his voice, shouting so that the entire town below
could hear, “NEMESIS! I know you’re somewhere in earshot, being sheltered by
the people of this town. You disobeyed me because you had qualms about killing
a mortal. You did so, full well knowing that your disobedience would be
punished. Yet, when I demanded you surrender yourself last night, you refused,
condemning the three mortals you took sanctuary with to violent deaths. So, I’m
confused, Nemesis – do you care about these mortals or not?” Zeus paused for a
moment until the echoing boom of his voice faded, “So, let’s find out.” Zeus wove
his fingers around in an elaborate gesture, conjuring an orb of blue-white
lightning. He flung it into the town, and it exploded in a storm of arcing
electricity, partially collapsing one of the smaller homes and sending the
townspeople screaming in terror. “Come out, Nemesis, or I will keep this up.”
“No!
Please my lord!” one of the priests cried, “We have not seen the goddess, or
any unfamiliar face. If someone is…”
“Silence,”
Zeus flicked his wrist and casually electrocuted the man, “Come and meet your
maker, Nemesis, or they will all die. Men, women, and children.”
Nemesis
was paralyzed with fear. That unfamiliar feeling of regret and responsibility
gnawed at her again. Now she was sure it was what others called ‘guilt’. The
mortals had short lives, of course – from a god’s perspective, intervening to
save any given human from harm accomplished little. The most affluent Achaean
men had a life expectancy of around seventy years, with women, impoverished
Greeks, and slaves having much shorter lifespans. A titan, by comparison, could
live for centuries without medical assistance, and a god like Zeus or Nemesis
herself had no defined upper limit to their age. Zeus’s stark white hair was
the direct result of his battle with his father, Kronos, rather than any
natural aging.
But
then, the difference between a slave and a king had little to do with
competency or diligence; luck decided the family one was born into, and so it
was luck that determined how long a person could expect to live. A king was
luckier than a slave, and though Nemesis was loath to admit it, a goddess was
luckier than a human king. The notion violated her innate sense of fairness and
justice, just as it did when she saw a fat rich man attended by emaciated
slaves.
And
that parallel was where her answer lay. For a starving man, a loaf of bread and
a portion of meat was a feast, while for a king it was likely garbage, scraps
to be thrown to the dogs. The lives of mortals were all the more valuable for
their brevity. One more year of life, for a mortal, had more value than a
decade for a goddess.
Nemesis
flew down to the ground and changed into her god form. It was now mostly healed
from the lightning bolt that Zeus had stricken her with, though she was still
weak and in a fair bit of pain. She leaned with one hand on the column for a
moment, collecting the strength and courage to step out into the open and
surrender. She took a deep breath and stepped out into the early morning light.
“Stop!”
she shouted, “Stop killing them! I’m right here!”
Zeus
laughed as he juggled an arc of lightning between his hands, “You have grown
sentimental, haven’t you? You forfeit your life for mortal insects; your
resolve has become weak.”
A
blinding light flashed between them, and when their vision recovered, a tall
man with golden skin stood between them.
“Step
aside, son,” Zeus said, “My quarrel is not with you.”
“And
yet, one of my most devoted priests lies at your feet,” Apollo said, “That
certainly raises some questions.”
“He
was harboring a fugitive,” Zeus pointed at Nemesis.
“My
priest did not know she was here, and even if he had known, a sanctuary is a
sanctuary. Violence in our temples is forbidden.”
“Don’t
presume to tell me what is and is not permitted,” Zeus said, “You quote laws
written by my great grandfather. They bind me no more than they bound the
Skyfather before him.”
Zeus
started forward, but Apollo’s golden hair blazed with a corona of energy, and a
brilliant beam of golden light erupted from his eyes and tracked across the
ground in front of Zeus, leaving a glowing red cut in the marble walk way. It
was enough to give Zeus pause.
“You
wouldn’t dare raise a hand against me,” he said.
“You
murdered one of my priests,” Apollo said, “You’ve undermined me in the eyes of
my worshippers. I’m well within my rights to defend my status.”
“You
forget yourself, child,” Zeus raised a hand, and the clouds swirled and
darkened, blocking out the sun. The honey undertones of Apollo’s skin faded,
and his luminescent hair dimmed to an ordinary blonde. Zeus lashed Apollo with
a lightning bolt, knocking him aside, and walked past him to seize Nemesis by
the throat.
Nemesis
sank her talons into Zeus’s wrist and arm, drawing blood, but she was too weak
from the various injuries she’d been dealt over the past couple of days to
inflict more than superficial damage. Zeus lifted her off the ground and
punched her in the abdomen with his free hand, cracking one of her ribs.
Nemesis tried to kick him, but again, couldn’t muster enough force to hurt the
god.
But
then, Zeus faltered, and – for lack of a better word – he yelped. He dropped Nemesis
and fell to the ground, clutching the back of his calf, which was sizzling.
Apollo
stood behind him with his bow drawn. “Artemis uses arrows she conjure at will;
bronze usually,” Apollo said, “But I always felt that effectiveness was more
important than convenience.”
Zeus
ripped the arrow from his calf, and held it up. His blood burned on the metal
arrow head, as if it were white hot. “Iron,” Zeus growled. Although most gods
could conjure weapons of wood, bronze, or tin, one element almost none of their
number could create was iron, the bane of Titans and Olympians alike. Centuries
ago, iron weapons had been plentiful. The ore was ubiquitous, more common than
bronze or tin, and thanks to Prometheus, the Minoan humans had known how to
smelt it. That knowledge had largely disappeared from the Aegean when Knossos
collapsed, though, and the surviving iron weapons had quickly rusted away,
making it incredibly easy for Zeus and his kin to dominate Greece. “Who gave
you iron arrowheads? Hephaestus?”
“My
little brother owed me a favor,” Apollo said, “Now leave. I’ve got several more
of these priceless beauties, and that broad chest of yours is an easier target
than your leg.”
“You
wouldn’t dare!”
Apollo
fired again, and struck Zeus just below the left collarbone. Zeus shouted in
pain and anger.
“I
could just as easily put this through your throat and sever your spinal cord.
Or straight between your eyes – 10 grams of iron, delivered straight to your
brain. Either way, you’d be dead before you could shape shift.”
“You
wouldn’t kill your father,” Zeus said, “You were never that cold.”
“Perhaps
you’re right,” Apollo said. He lowered his bow to aim at Zeus’s groin, “Did
grandfather’s testicles grow back before you killed him? I have to think that
it would hurt either way.”
“You
will pay for this insult, son,” in a flash of lightning, Zeus transformed into
an eagle and disappeared into the storm clouds.
Nemesis
staggered over to Apollo and knelt before him, “Thank you for protecting me,
Lord Apollo.”
Apollo
looked down at his dead priest, the other clergyman was weeping over the man’s
badly scorched body. The other worshippers would be lucky if Zeus didn’t exact
his revenge by sending a storm to wipe out their little city.
“Leave,”
Apollo said simply, “Artemis was wrong to send you here, Nemesis. You are a
goddess. You have your own temples; shelter in one of them. Let Zeus’s wrath
fall on your worshippers, not mine.”
Nemesis
staggered back to her feet. The god didn’t even look at her; he just turned and
walked down into the town to tend to the people injured by Zeus’s rampage.
Nemesis
returned to human form, summoned a simple garment, and left town on foot, using
the tree cover to hide her from Zeus’s gaze. She was alone now. She could maybe
go to one of Hades or Persephone’s temples, but the outcome would likely be the
same – Zeus would track her there and attack, killing their worshippers. Zeus
had drawn her out once, that way, and so he would use that tactic again until
he succeeded. She could go directly to the underworld, but it was doubtful
she’d even be let in; her security clearance had likely evaporated with her
station.
So,
she simply wandered through the wilderness until she was satisfied that she was
far enough away from town to have escaped Zeus’s watchful eye. She transformed
into a bird and flew to her nearest temple. A god or goddess’s power was
greatest in their house of worship – if she sheltered in one of her own
temples, she might be able to put up a fight.
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