Location: Temple of Nemesis
Nemesis
didn’t have as many temples as the other gods, or as grand of temples. The punisher
of hubris and righter of injustices had fewer regular worshippers, barely more
than a cult. Though small in number, they could be quite devoted, however, and
the devotion of gods and goddesses’ worshippers energized them, so Nemesis flew
to her nearest temple – a place of worship near the mouth of the Cephissus
river. The temple’s priestess, Echo, immediately came out and prostrated
herself before Nemesis.
“Praise
Nemesis, Dark Avenger of Olympus, how may we serve you?”
“I
am being hunted by Zeus,” Nemesis explained, “I need to recover my strength.”
“Then
you shall have our thoughts and prayers,” Echo said, “Please, Lady Nemesis,
join us in the chapel, and let your worshippers tend to your injuries, physical
and nonphysical.”
Echo
led her into the temple’s main chamber. It was largely dark, save for
strategically located sconces that illuminated her statue and a series of
murals across the walls. The murals told Nemesis’s story – she’d been plucked
from darkness by Hera herself and granted a portion of Zeus’s power as an
infant. She’d been raised on an isolated island southwest of Crete, where she’d
fought for survival, every day, until she was a powerful and hardened warrior.
Then she’d been sent out among the people of Greece to ferret out heretics and
punish wrong-doers.
The
handful of people worshipping inside flocked around her, begging for her to
intervene in one injustice or another, but when they discerned her weakened
state they brought her offerings of food and wine, and began performing ritual
demonstrations of their dedication. Nemesis sat down on a lion fur and ate
slowly, wanting to show her worshippers that she was grateful for their
sacrifices. As the night went on, the worshippers retired to their homes,
leaving Nemesis alone with Echo.
“My
lady,” Echo said, “What do you mean when you say you are hunted by Zeus?”
“I
showed mercy to a mortal,” Nemesis explained, “Zeus and Hera ordered me to
terrorize a heretic’s child. I spared the child’s life, and my master’s
stripped me of my station. I am no longer the goddess of divine retribution.
Truthfully, I ought not to be here. In asking for your supplication tonight, I
misled you.”
Echo
seemed stunned by the revelation, but eventually recovered. “You showed mercy
to the child?”
“Yes,
essentially.”
“And
the child was innocent, not accountable for its parents’ sins?”
“The
child was a toddler, so certainly not responsible.”
“Then
what alternative did you have but to spare the child’s life?” Echo asked,
“Wouldn’t any other course of action have been unjust? And are you not the
deliverer of justice? Justice without mercy or compassion… that would only be
revenge, wouldn’t it?”
“But
Zeus decides what justice is and is not,” Nemesis said uncertainly.
“Does
he, though?” Echo said, “Because I feel like goddess who spares an innocent
baby’s life may be a better judge of right and wrong than the god who condemns
it to death.”
Nemesis
looked at her with surprise.
“Of
course, I realize that saying that qualifies as heresy against Zeus…”
“Maybe…”
Nemesis shrugged, “But that’s not my responsibility anymore. Say whatever you
wish – I have no obligation or authority to punish you for your words.”
“Well,
the truth is…” Echo took a breath, “From everything I’ve heard, Zeus and Hera
are cruel and vain. But that does not seem to be the case for all gods, which
makes me think that Zeus and Hera’s actions are not indicative of a divine
morality independent of my mortal sensibilities. It makes me think that they
are simply terrible people, who by luck of birth are unaccountable for sins
that would see a mortal man or woman stoned to death in the streets.”
“You
believe that you, a human being, are morally superior to Zeus, a god?”
“Zeus
ordered you to perform an immoral act, correct?” Echo said.
“Because
he is Zeus, any command he gives is moral, by definition.”
“A
god is moral because he does morally good things, and the things he does are
morally good because he’s a god; isn’t that circular logic?”
“I
don’t see the problem with that,” Nemesis said, “The circle is the most divine
of all shapes, and gods are no more accountable to human logic than to human
morality.”
“But
you’re not human,” Echo pressed, “You’re a goddess; what seems right to you?”
Nemesis
found that surprisingly difficult to answer, and before she could invent a
response, their attention was drawn to the front of the temple by a brilliant
blue-green light filtering through from the outside.
“What
is that?” Echo asked.
“Hera,”
Nemesis frowned, “She’s probably decided to help Zeus.”
“Is
it possible that she’s here to mediate a peaceful resolution to your conflict?”
Echo asked.
“I
suppose it’s possible…”
“Then
I will try to discern her intentions,” Echo said, “If she’s here with malicious
intent, go out the back of the temple and flee. I will delay her.”
“I
can’t send you out there. If she’s here at Zeus’s behest, she’ll use your life
as leverage; kill you if I don’t surrender.”
“If
she intends violence, you will not prevail. You aren’t strong enough to face
her yet,” Echo said honestly, “And I am your priestess. I swore my life to your
service when I took up that mantle. What more could I ask for than to save the
life of my god?”
“But
I told you,” Nemesis said, “I’ve been stripped of my station at the Constellar
Palace.”
“But
not in this temple,” Echo said as she headed outside, “Here you are still the
goddess of divine retribution, and my pledge to you is undying.”
Outside,
Hera waited with a small contingent of human soldiers, and a handsome man who
was unmistakably of Titan descent.
Echo
prostrated herself before Hera, “How can I serve my Lady?”
“I
am here for the goddess of your temple, Nemesis.”
“As
are all who are welcomed in this temple,” Echo said, “We’ve concluded our
services for the evening, but we could surely make an exception for you…”
“I’m
not here to pray to her, simpleton.”
“You
believe she is here incarnate?”
“Of
course I do, why else would I be here?”
“What
do you wish to speak to her about?”
“That
is none of your concern, mortal,” Hera said.
“I’m
bound to serve my goddess to the best of my ability – if she is here, I must
announce her visitors properly.”
“I’m
her queen, not a visitor.”
“But
you are visiting,” Echo said,
“Doesn’t that make you a visitor?”
“Don’t
play word games with me, fool.”
“A
thousand pardons. If my lady is here to play a game, she may certainly choose
the sport.”
“I’m
not here to play a game!” Hera shouted, “I’m not here to talk! I am here to
find Nemesis, and drag her back to the Constellar Palace screaming, so that she
can bear Lord Zeus children!”
“I’m
so sorry,” Echo said, “I had always been led to believe that you were Zeus’s
wife…”
“I
am! And I always will be!”
“Will
you? If you bring him another goddess to bear children for him, isn’t he likely
to leave you?”
“LEAVE
ME?!” Hera shouted, “He wouldn’t dare?”
“I
forget my lady; are you Zeus’s second wife or his third wife?”
“I
am… wait… Gah!” Hera cried in frustration, “You’re stalling. You’re trying to
distract me!” She grabbed echo’s head between her hands. Hera’s right index
finger grew longer and thinner, and snaked into the woman’s left ear.
Echo
screamed as the goddesses appendage bored through her ear canal, “NO! WHAT ARE
YOU DOING! NO, PLEASE!”
“You
talk too much,” Hera said, “Shut up.”
A final thrust of her finger caused Echo’s body to fall into a seizure. Hera
pulled out her finger and flicked the blood off of it as it returned to normal
size.
Echo
collapsed to the ground, staring at her attacker. She tried to scream, to
curse, to shout, but all she could say was, “Shut up. Shut up. Shut up,” in an
endless loop.
“Burn
the temple,” Hera ordered her men, “Gather wood if need be and douse it with
oil from the amphorae inside. I want the whole building razed to the ground.”
“Razed
to the ground!” Echo cried.
The
five men who’d accompanied Hera marched into the temple, but found that it was
completely dark – the sconces had been extinguished, and it almost seemed as
something sapped the remaining light from the room as they entered.
Nemesis,
had heard what happened outside, and she hadn’t run. Concealed by the darkness,
she slipped around behind the man who was closest to the entrance. She grabbed
him, wrapping her right arm around his throat, and pulling his sword from his
belt with her left as she used the talons on her feet to slash the backs of his
legs, between the bottom of his leather tassets and the tops of his sandals.
She released him, and the man fell to the ground screaming. The other men
raised their simple weapons – they’d come armed to deal with worshippers, not a
goddess.
Nemesis
calmly killed three of the men as they flailed blindly in the dark. Each one
that she killed made her feel stronger, more powerful. The fifth man was the
titankin who’d accompanied Hera. He’d be stronger, tougher, than any mortal
man, and that was assuming that he hadn’t learned any of their ancestors more
spectacular abilities.
Still,
Nemesis felt better, stronger than she had in days. She channeled the energy
she’d stolen from the light in the room and struck the man with a writhing blue
tendril of electricity. He yelped and jumped back. He tried to circle around
and counterattack, but the erratic motion of the blinding lightning whip in the
darkness made it next to impossible for him to discern her actual location in
the room. She lashed him repeatedly until he fell to his knees, and Nemesis
wrapped the pulsing whip around his neck. It shocked him, again and again,
until she uncast the whip. As the writhing blue energy dissipated, the man fell
flat on his face, unconscious.
Nemesis
marched out the temple door, spreading and flexing her wings. Hera saw her and
began to wheel about on Echo, who was still on the ground, but Nemesis flicked
a small bolt of lightning in Hera’s path, causing her to jump back.
“Echo,
run,” Nemesis said.
Echo
stumbled to her feet, repeating “Run, run, run!” as she sprinted away, leaving
Nemesis alone with Hera.
“What
did you do to her?” Nemesis asked.
“I
just re-trained her mind to process information more… simply,” Hera said, “Don’t
you remember me doing the same to you as a child? No, of course you wouldn’t.
Well, needless to say, my work on you was much more refined.”
Nemesis
lunged forward, striking with her talons. They were strong and sharp enough to
cut almost any gods natural skin, but Hera used her shapeshifting abilities to
cover her arms in a thick, hard, horn-like substance. Hera grew spikes from the
natural armor that she slashed at Nemesis with, and when her reach proved too
short, she stretched the armor out to form mantis-like scything blades.
Nemesis
couldn’t match Hera’s shape-shifting abilities, but she was a more experienced
fighter, who’d killed more than her fair share of monsters. She ducked and
dodged, spun and rolled, and took Hera by surprise with a slash of her talons
that caught Hera in the small of her back, splattering hot god-blood across the
ground.
“Careful
child,” Hera smiled, “You’re making me crabby!” Hera covered herself with a
bony, spiked exoskeleton, her forearms growing into a pair of large pincers
that she snapped at Nemesis. Nemesis began snapping small bolts of lightning at
her from just out of reach, delivering painful shocks that crawled across and
under her carapace, then jumped on her from behind, digging her claws into her
joints and delivering stronger jolts of electricity.
Hera
withdrew her armor plates in favor of slimy, scaled, eel skin, her eyes turning
round and black. Nemesis plunged her talons into the soft skin, but her stored
electricity drained rapidly and Hera knocked her away with a surge of strength.
“You
can’t destroy the one who made you, foolish girl,” Hera said. “Now, come along
peacefully before I have to start trying.”
Nemesis
lunged at Hera again. Hera manifested her exoskeleton again, but Nemesis
grabbed both sides of Hera’s heads and plunged the long, sharp thumb talons
into her eyes. Hera screamed and knocked her away. She created four lidless
eyes above the two Nemesis had destroyed, but she was too late – Nemesis had
fled into the night.
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