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Jonny Capps

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Beschreibung

When a fabled Atlantean gem is found, the goddesses Hecate and Nemesis have different ideas on what should be done with it. Hecate believes that it can be used to help the Olympians. Nemesis wants to destroy it. 

Join the two unlikely friends, along with Athena, Hephaestus, Dionysus and others, in a tale across time, from the swamps of ancient Greece to a dance club in downtown Cleveland.

Have a beer at the bar, Oblivion, listen to the satyr Pan's latest song, and enjoy a story about the gods, searching for relevance in a world that has forgotten them. 

Welcome to the world of Mythos.

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OBSESSION

MYTHOS BOOK 2

JONNY CAPPS

CONTENTS

Introduction

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Copyright (C) 2021 Jonny Capps

Layout design and Copyright (C) 2022 by Next Chapter

Published 2022 by Next Chapter

Edited by India Hammond

Cover art by CoverMint

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author’s permission.

INTRODUCTION

I will be honest—this book wasn’t supposed to be written. In the first story, Cupid was walking around on Olympus, talking to Nemesis via cell phone (I wonder what kind of reception he would get there? I am sure Hephaestus set up some sort of cell tower or whatever; I’ll figure it out later). He was explaining to her why he could not meet her for a night out, and the conversation was cut short when he saw Jason and Hercules. That was, originally, all that was supposed to happen. Later, as I was thinking over the scene, I began to wonder why the “no nonsense” Nemesis (that’s a little alliteration for you, I hope you appreciate it) would call cool, casual Cupid. The story kind of grew from there. It started as a short story, then developed into what you’re holding. In terms of time frame, it occurs during the events of “The Time after Oblivion”, after Jason and Hercules leave Oblivion, wrapping up a little after that. You probably could have figured that out on your own, but I felt like explaining it anyway, and you have to read it, since I’m the author.

What I am trying to say is that, since I did not intend for this book to exist, I have no idea what I should write as an introduction. I could just act as though I had planned this all along, like the creative genius that I pretend to be, but you guys are smart (I assume, I mean, you’re reading my book, so that lends credence to your literary taste at least), and you’d see right through that. I could go without an introduction, since many of you will likely skip this anyway, but something in my mind would always be setting off flares of INCOMPLETE, like a gigantic, neon, billboard. Therefore, I had to think of something to put here.

When I created these characters, I tried to steer away from the stereotypes typically associated with the characters. It worked for some of them, but not so much for others.

Zeus: I designed him around Monty Python’s John Cleese. Zeus needed to be simultaneously both charming and bumbling, and no one embodies that better than John Cleese, with his dry wit and British sigh (I guess everything about him is British, but his sigh and eyeroll are what I think of). It just worked for my image of Zeus.

Cupid: Cupid was a tricky one to figure out. I knew that I wanted to get away from the swaddling baby image, and I knew he would smoke cigars. I went with a dark-haired David Anders. I’ve enjoyed David Anders in every role that I’ve seen him play and, in my mind, nobody embodies the “precocious scamp/punk rock god” quite like him. That made him perfect for Cupid.

Thanatos: Young Dakota Fanning. This one was easy. I wanted an eight-year-old girl in a tea party dress that everyone was terrified of. I’m not saying that every time I watch I Am Sam I think about death (although, after seeing it a couple times, that might be where my mind goes now; the sound track is nice, though). It’s just an inspiration.

Ares: Ares is an asshole. No matter what story, which mythological recount, or iteration of the character—he’s an asshole. Honestly, I didn’t mess with that too much, because I needed Ares to be an asshole. I just messed with the character design. Typically, he’s a big dude with a heavy beard. I drafted him to look more like early 2000’s John Cena. It didn’t take much effort, honestly; John Cena is already a polarizing figure. The only difference is that, with Cena, you either love him or you hate him. Nobody is going to love Ares.

Nemesis: With Nemesis, it was less about her image, and more about her fighting techniques and attitude. I chose Rhonda Rousey in her design. I’ve always respected Rousey, and I wanted to put a little bit of her into my character. Since Nemesis fights with a sword, I obviously didn’t do that too heavily. Still, if you look closely at Nemesis, you’ll see bits of Rousey popping out.

Hephaestus: This one, I had some fun with. Hephaestus is typically the ugly god, the one that Hera rejected. I wanted to play on the idea that different cultures find attraction in different things. Since he’s the god of the kiln, it made sense that Hephaestus would be a muscular guy. Since I’m using him as the god of technology in the modern setting, I set him up with technological replacements for all of his physical deficiencies. I designed him after Jason Momoa; a big, muscular dude, riddled with cybernetics. He’s awesome. Hephaestus is one of my favorite designs, and I wish I had a story to write about just him. So far, I don’t, but it’s coming.

All right, I think I’m satisfied with that as an introduction. Yeah, there are a lot of other inspirations for the characters, but those are the only ones that I want to talk about right now. You’re probably already bored with me and wanting to head into the story (which was never supposed to exist). Think about that for a moment. This is a story that I had never planned to write, but here it is, and you’re anxious to dig into it. Give me just a moment to breathe it all in.

Okay, moment’s passed. Enjoy the story.

Jonny Capps

To the goddess who lives in the dark corners of my mind, where she redefines both beauty and sanity.

PROLOGUE

I

A Long, Long, Time Ago...

Hecate was sitting in her garden, meditating, when she first heard that the world was in danger of ending. It was a distraction that she could have done without.

As she walked into the garden, before the information reached her, she had been feeling that something was out of sorts in the world around her. That had actually been the precipitating reason behind the meditation session. Something was wrong, and she needed to know what it was. It wasn't as if she was obsessive or that she had an unhealthy desire for control. Hecate simply hated feeling as if there was something important going on that she didn't know about. The Olympians tended to leave her out of the information circuit, since most of them did not understand her methods and, therefore, they did not think that she could be of much help. She resented that slightly, but not enough to do anything about it. She had her own ways of gathering information.

Placing herself beside a grape tree, she crossed her ankles and lowered herself to the ground, daintily. Lowering her head, she allowed her soft, sun-kissed hair to fall over her face, obstructing her view and minimizing distractions. Her eyes fluttered, shifting in color from blue to amber to dark and back again, as she entered her meditative trance. Her perception of the world changed as she grasped at the ties that bound reality.

Hecate was not an oracle in that she could not see the future. Her powers were more natural, driven by the Earth, and her knowledge was restricted to the things that occurred therein. Hecate was not Demeter; she could not feel and understand things that grow in the ground the same way. Her gifts were more mystical, seeing the hidden properties and potential in many sources, be they plant or mineral. Hecate understood that words had power, but she would never say that she was equal to the Titan Mnemosyne, who was said to be the developer of languages (although Zeus would likely deny that, since he never liked attributing any lasting progress to Titans). She simply knew how to use words in order to manipulate reality. Many called what she did sorcery, since her powers resembled magic. Hecate didn't argue with them. It would have been too complicated to make them understand how wrong they were, on the most precise level. It was not her responsibility to make sure that others were right. Her job was only to actually be right, or as right as possible, in as many instances as she could.

Reaching into the aether, Hecate asked the Wind to share answers with her. The Wind whispered its lies, mixed with slight truths, and told her secrets that she should not know and facts that she was familiar with already. She rarely gained any knowledge from the Wind, only rumors, gossip, and deception. Still, it was a good place to start. Wind saw many things and, sometimes, it sang about things that other forces didn't understand.

She asked the Earth to open to her, and Hecate found herself drowning as the flood of information poured over her. She swam against the tides, drinking in the forgotten and overlooked symbols that represent love, lust, hunger, growth, and an infinite collage of contradicting ideas. Taking a moment, breathing in what little serenity could be found, Hecate floated with the current, allowing her mind to absorb the influx. She found what she was searching for, something out of place, but she could not grasp it. There was something that did not belong, but it eluded her. The image remained a mystery.

Lastly, she begged the Moon to illuminate secrets for her. The light was blinding, forcing its image into her mind. The primordial images which it supplied, bathed in iridescence, held chaos and frustration, a madness so pure that it nearly redefined sanity. It wanted to show her something. There was something that needed to be known. Hecate opened her mind to receive it, to know the answers that she sought. As she stretched her mind to touch it, she found that it was no longer there. The shadow of the truth was there, she could see it, but it was fleeting, retreating from her, as her meditation was interrupted. She found herself torn out of the moment, painfully thrust back into her body, denied the object that she was seeking.

“Madam,” a voice was speaking to her, a familiar one, one that she had affectionate feelings for. “Madam, I regret invading your sanctum. I would not have done so, my beauty, my queen, but the urgency of the situation was impressed upon me. Fair madam of the Moon, you have a guest.”

The voice belonged to Horace. Hecate was quite fond of Horace, a eunuch in her court. He worshiped her, as all in her court did, but she treasured Horace above the others. The love that he had for her was pure and willing; she could see that through his eyes when he gazed upon her. He did not follow her because he wanted to earn her favor or to spare himself from punishment; he followed her because he loved her. It was the authenticity in his motives that endeared him to her. She treasured him, savoring his love as though it were fine wine.

It was that affection which made her feelings of frustration at being torn from her meditative state so difficult to justify. Horace would never have come to her had it not been an emergency. Allowing her eyes to refocus to the light of her garden, Hecate attempted to conceal her bitterness as she looked upon her servant with a gentle smile.

“You are forgiven, Horace,” she said gently, as she rose from the ground. Reaching to the tree next to her, she pulled a succulent green grape from a bundle and tossed it casually into her mouth. Biting into it, she felt the outer skin burst, spraying the sweet juices against her cheeks and down her throat. Swallowing the grape, she was reminded of where she was. She was no longer in the aether, she was on Earth. Sweet fruit always made that disappointing reality easier to grasp.

“I know that you would never disturb me unless it was important,” Hecate continued to comfort Horace.

Horace's gray eyes sank, and his bald head dropped in shame. “I would never, beautiful mistress,” he replied earnestly. “It wouldn't enter my most fevered nightmares. I would never have dared, were it not for your guest and the urgency with which she demanded an audience with you.”

“Demanded, did she?” Hecate frowned. “Who has caused you to be so distraught?”

Horace did not answer, for he did not need to. Hecate's eyes fell on the third occupant of the garden, a figure clothed in night, with thin lips that looked as though they had never smiled and dark eyes which held the chill of a thousand winters. She advanced on Hecate with a confident stride, striding through the environment with her slender form as a sharpened dagger advances through soft cheese. Hecate held her spot, unyielding, as the figure approached her. Once before her, the figure dropped to one knee, as if in supplication.

“Nemesis,” Hecate breathed. “Why are you kneeling? You would not even bow before Zeus when he defeated the Titans!”

“I am in your home,” Nemesis replied, the sound of her voice sending setting sparks aflame beneath Hecate's skin. “You are owed honor within your own home.”

Hecate felt a soft burning in her cheeks, realized quickly that she was blushing, and resolved her will to stop it. Nemesis rarely came into the presence of any of the other gods, since she typically had other priorities. The cold sword of divine retribution, Nemesis was a legend amongst legendary creatures. Now, with Nemesis kneeling before her, Hecate had to remember not to be flattered and to keep her head.

“Rise, sister,” Hecate gasped eventually, after a moment of breathless shock, and offered her hand. “You are welcome in my home.”

“Thank you,” Nemesis replied, rising from her knees fluidly, accepting Hecate's hand in the process. “I've come to you with an issue that has arisen. It could lead to a greater problem, and I would like to have your assistance in dealing with it. Nature has never been a specialty of mine, particularly in regards to the darker properties, but it is yours. As such, I've come to you. The situation is not dire at the present, but it could be dire in the near future so, therefore, it deserves to be treated as dire now.”

Hecate frowned as she digested the information which Nemesis had given her. She also resisted the urge to be entertained by the cold, serious, mechanical tone with which Nemesis spoke. It would have been inappropriate to laugh, after all, at the extreme intensity of another's tone, especially when that “other” was Nemesis.

“I've felt an irregularity,” Hecate confirmed. “I was searching for it through my meditation, actually. What can you tell me about the situation?”

As Nemesis spoke, a cloud passed over her already dark features. Hecate fought against the urge to be intimidated, holding her poise as well as she could. Nemesis had come to see her, which means that the situation was dire. Nemesis did not like asking for help.

Actually, Hecate didn't know whether or not Nemesis liked asking for help. To her knowledge, this was the first time that Nemesis had ever needed to.

“There has been some unorthodox activity in the Quaesturas region of Maeotian swamp,” Nemesis informed her seriously. “Many of the naiads there have been functioning in an uncharacteristic manner.”

Hecate shook her head. “They're not naiads,” she corrected Nemesis. “If they're native to the swamps, they're potamoi. The two are relatively the same in nature, except that potamoi have an unquestioning loyalty to their king, Achelous, while naiads serve only the spirit of flowing water. A lot of observers have suggested that a potamide doesn't actually have a mind of their own, but that Achelous thinks for them. If that's true, they wouldn't be able to function in an uncharacteristic manner, but only in accordance with what he desired for them.”

Hecate hung her head, embarrassed. “I'm sure that you already thought of all that,” she submitted.

“There's no reason for you to assume that,” Nemesis stated, shaking her head slowly. “There is much that you know that I am unfamiliar with. That's why I have come to you. The information that you have supplied corresponds to my earlier suspicions that the potamoi are under an influence that is external to them.”

Hecate paused, studying her conversation partner. Nemesis was the goddess of retribution, of justice. There was no questioning her reasoning: if she was alerted to a slight, she would take swift action to resolve it. She had no cohorts, no servants to care for her needs, cults devoted to her worship were so few and far between that they were practically non-existent, and, to Hecate's knowledge, Nemesis had no sexual companion. Her cold isolation and antisocial behavior were well known amongst the gods. While Hecate was oftentimes overlooked by the Olympians, Nemesis didn't care to be included. The fact that she was coming to Hecate now seemed out of character, from everything that Hecate knew about Nemesis. That made her slightly cautious. Nemesis was incorruptible and, yet, Hecate was suspicious of her motives.

“Why does this concern you?” Hecate asked, pointedly. “Do you feel that the potamoi are being done an injustice? Or do you feel that their characteristics are causing them to be unjust, themselves?”

Nemesis nodded. “The later,” she confirmed. “Their actions were what alerted me to the situation in the first place: acts of violence and ritual killings, in and around local habitations.”

“Potamoi don't leave the swamps,” Hecate insisted.

“Were it not for that situational property, I would not need your assistance,” Nemesis said. “I would simply dispense justice, dealing with the problem alone. I am coming to you, because it seems as though the potamoi are being influenced by another force, outside of Achelous, and the source seems mystical in nature.”

This made Hecate smile. One always appreciates when their talents are appreciated.

“So,” she nodded, “since I am well-familiar with mystical enchantments and, as it would seem, the Maeotian swamps, you came to me for assistance?”

If it were possible for Nemesis, the cold and unfeeling sword of justice, to look embarrassed, Hecate could have sworn that she did. “I hope that my request doesn't seem presumptuous,” she answered, her voice devoid of emotion, even if her eyes flickered very slightly.

“Horace,” Hecate addressed the eunuch, as he stood, patiently waiting, “it appears that I will be gone for a short time. Please instruct the servants to care for the home and the ground as though I were still here.”

“It will be as you have instructed,” Horace said, bowing his head and leaving the garden.

Potamoi, like naiads and dryads, were the spirits of their respective elements. When they appeared, however seldom that may be, it was in the body of an attractive woman. While they were fiercely protective of their natural environment, be that water, wood, or swamp, they typically remained docile in most other instances, unless threatened. That was fortunate, since very few weapons had the ability to do them any harm.

If the potamoi were growing restless, it was a situation that needed to be dealt with. If they chose to wage war on the world, the Earth would end up much worse for wear.

While it had its problems, Hecate had grown quite fond of Earth. She would prefer to live there as long as possible.

II

Nemesis hated having to come to someone else for aid, but the situation called for it. As the Sword of Justice, she should be able to function alone, without the aid of other parties. Aligning with others meant that she had the potential of forming bonds, both social and psychological, with that individual. That could lead to complications, should that person ever stand in the way of Nemesis' pursuit. Nemesis trusted that she would be able to separate herself from her emotional attachment should such an instance arise, but there was really very little need to test those boundaries. It was just easier to do things by herself.

Looking now at the lithe blonde woman with sparkling blue eyes, Nemesis sighed, inwardly. Hecate was very different than she was, embracing life and others, always ready with a disarming smile and willing to provide aid, if the situation called for it. Nemesis was aware that Hecate was strong, even dangerous, under the right circumstances, but those properties were difficult to distinguish at that moment. Right now, it was difficult to take Hecate seriously, and Nemesis resented needing her help even more.

As the two of them approached the Quaesturas area, where the disturbances had originated, Nemesis saw Hecate making a motion with her hand. As she stopped to view the goddess, she noticed that her formerly-sandaled feet were now protected by thick leather boots, rising to her mid-thigh. When Hecate noticed Nemesis examining her, she stopped advancing, blushing slightly. Nemesis nodded to her feet.

“That was an interesting trick,” Nemesis said. “Did you conjure those from the air, or were they with you all along, but invisible?”

Hecate shrugged. “I guess they were with me all along,” she admitted. “Technically, the boots are another form of the sandals, since they're composed of the same leather. All I did was isolate the properties of the sandal leather, then multiply and expand them, until they formed boots. Since we're headed into a swamp area, boots seemed to be more appropriate attire.”

Nemesis cocked her head curiously. “To hear you describe the process, I would assume that it was a simple thing to do,” she said, carefully concealing the degree to which she was impressed. “I would imagine that, if I were to attempt the same technique, I would be sadly disappointed.”

Hecate smiled as she advanced toward the swamp's quagmire. “Thank you,” she laughed. “I'd offer to show you how to do it, but I doubt you'd be interested. The process isn't that complicated.”

Nemesis followed Hecate closely, wondering about the irony in her statement. To the outside observer, magic was likely one of the most mystifying and fascinating subjects possible. To hear Hecate speak of it, it was similar to weaving or farming. Magic was just something that she did, and she shrugged off the complexity of her gift. Nemesis began to wonder how much of her personality was modesty and how much was a disguise to conceal her true motives. Hecate was clearly very powerful.

Stepping into the swamp's quagmire, Nemesis quickly took an inventory of all the new sensations which were being introduced. There was the smell of disease, which she had been expecting, and which she was able to identify immediately. The wet, melancholy smell of entropy, combined with the uncomfortably moist aroma of decaying wood gave the environment a precise signature. The buzzing in the air intensified with each step that Nemesis took, and she tried to think about which disease each of the insects would be carrying. Scampering and slithering all around her, Nemesis could sense forms of life that she had never encountered before and, with any luck, never would again. Damp ground beneath her feet provided her with the awkward sensation that, with each new step, she may be swallowed by the bayou. Through her brief passage, no step had fulfilled that promise, but that only made the hesitation to take another stronger; were she to become complacent, the next step would be the one that would hold its guarantee, and she would be lost in the quagmire.

Looking to her partner, she was surprised to see Hecate advancing forward bravely, with a slight sparkle in her eyes. Arching an eyebrow, Nemesis observed her momentarily. She was confident, as though she knew the environment well and it was welcoming her as treasured company. Nemesis knew that Hecate had more experience with Maeotian swamp than she did, which had been the reason behind Nemesis' desired association with her. The level of comfort that Hecate had with a world that Nemesis found completely repugnant, however, gave her pause.

“You've been here before,” Nemesis noted, as the two of them advanced through the swamp, both unsure of what they should be looking for.

“I have,” Hecate confirmed. As she spoke, a large dragonfly landed on her shoulder, bare beneath the hem of her blouse. Instead of swatting it away in repulsion, she reached up, pet the large insect affectionately, and it flew off towards its next perch.

“It's peaceful,” she continued, stepping forward again, casually knowing exactly where to step without even thinking.

“I don't know if I could relate to that,” Nemesis replied, as she carefully calculated each footstep that she took. “All that I can sense is disease, rot, and the death which comes with it.”

Hecate nodded. “That's understandable,” she said. “There is an abundance of all three of those elements in this environment. There's also life, and it's a world that thrives in spite of those things. They've found a balance, existing alongside one another, embracing the community which has made them neighbors.

“And besides,” she concluded, “there's nothing more peaceful than death.”

Nemesis raised her eyebrows, partially in surprise, partly in admiration. “You didn't strike me as one to wax poetic,” she admitted.

Hecate laughed. “Given the right outlet,” she said, “I think everyone has the potential to sing.”

Nemesis declined to join in the laughter, choosing instead to sink into contemplation. At that moment, there were too many other things to think about, but whenever she had a moment, she would need to consider how seriously she was taking Hecate. It was clear that the goddess was very powerful, and yet, she chose to belittle her abilities, perhaps in an attempt to disarm onlookers. While others may have found her comforting presence through the swamp to be endearing, even charming, Nemesis found her casual acquaintance with death to be unsettling. Up to this point, Hecate had proved to be nothing but a pleasant, if a bit eager, partner. Nemesis could not afford to trust her yet, though. Only through trust does betrayal strike.

The two continued their exploration of the swamp for nearly an hour before Hecate stopped, her eyes locked on something in the swamp ground. Dropping to her knees, she pushed aside foliage, digging about in the dirt, before finding what she had been looking for. Cupping her hands, she pulled it carefully from the ground, lifting it to her nose for examination. Nemesis stopped beside her to see what she was holding.

In the palms of Hecate's hands sat a strange, light green mushroom, emblazoned with purple stripes and speckled with spots of an even darker green. Nemesis looked at it skeptically, wondering why such an object would draw so much attention. Hecate looked up at her with her soft blue eyes and shook her head gently.

“This doesn't belong here,” she explained, as if reading Nemesis' mind.

“A fungus doesn't seem out of place in this environment,” Nemesis critiqued.

Lifting the mushroom to eye-level, Hecate began to spin the object in her fingers, as a contemplative frown creased her brow. “This isn't a fungus,” she said, quietly, as if to herself. “I mean, it is, but it isn't one that I've seen before. There are several types of fungi in the swamp, and I am familiar with all of them. This type of mushroom is not among that number, and I don't know how it came to be.”

Nemesis saw how perplexed Hecate was by the mushroom but resisted the urge to feel sympathy. Hecate felt comfortable in this area because she knew the properties, and she could quickly identify everything that lived there. Finding something alien in the vicinity must have been equivalent to coming home and finding an intruder, seated in your guest house. Nemesis quickly balanced the odds of Hecate, feigning distress in order to gain the upper hand, against those of Hecate's authenticity, and she found that Hecate's discomfort was likely true. Nemesis then considered words which could bring Hecate comfort in this situation, but she knew nothing she thought of would bring any calm.

Suddenly, as if signaled by something external to it, the mushroom began to vibrate, shaking violently against Hecate's fingers. She yelped in surprise and almost dropped it.

“Get rid of it!” Nemesis shouted urgently, staring at the mushroom with surprise and frantic suspicion.

A shrill wheeze suddenly began to emit from the mushroom and, it seemed, from several other places in various areas of the swamp ground. Quickly, Hecate threw the fungus away from her as hard as she could. As the mushroom crested through the air, it erupted into a cloud of vapor, colored a nauseating yellow. Both Hecate and Nemesis stared at the area in a mixture of repulsion and fascination, wondering what the outcome would be, and being sickened by the disturbing odor which accompanied the vapor. It reminded Hecate of something that had grown in damp areas, never saw the sun, and had died long ago, while Nemesis was reminded of rotten corpses, lain in the sun, and set to whither and dry. The two goddesses looked at each other; Hecate with wide-eyed curiosity, and Nemesis with a dark scowl.

“That was certainly unexpected,” Nemesis admitted.

Hecate coughed. “I could have done without the smell,” she admitted.

Nemesis opened her mouth, as if to say something, but she was interrupted by loud rustlings coming from the area where the vapor had emitted, from the swamp depths, and the surrounding trees. As she turned to see what was making the noise, she was witness to something astonishing. It almost terrified her, and it made her reach for her weapon.

Rising out of the bog, bursting from within vines, the bodies of women began to appear. At least, Nemesis assumed they were women, based on their assets. Their naked skin glistened a disturbing shade of green which looked, somehow, both completely natural and strangely alien simultaneously. Two orb-like eyes, colored a strange, heart-scouring lime, pulsed from behind tangled messes of black hair. Their bodies were thin, but muscular, and each was clothed only in vines.

The creatures held no conventional weaponry, yet, somehow, Nemesis felt threatened. She counted six figures, and none of them seemed very happy with them. Of course, it was difficult to gauge emotion from a pupil-less eye, but Nemesis surmised from their posturing. Everything about these women, from their stance and formation to the cruel snarl on their thin lips, suggested aggression.

Nemesis turned to Hecate: “Are these potamoi?”

Hecate nodded, examining the battle line which was quickly forming amongst the six new parties.

Nemesis frowned, curiously. “They look as though they want to kill us,” she observed.

“They certainly do,” Hecate confirmed, as she sank into a defensive stance, waving her hands through the air with fluid but deliberate motions.

“Ah,” Nemesis reached over her right shoulder and pulled her sword from its invisible scabbard, before taking a stance of her own. “That's unfortunate.”

The potamoi screamed shrilly in one voice, and began to advance. Nemesis prepared for the strike.

The ensuing combat was chaotic and surreal. The potamoi attacked as though they were one creature with many limbs. They needed no weaponry, it seemed, since their vines served as both defense and offense. As they advanced on Nemesis, the vines provided a protective shield around their bodies, constantly swirling and crawling, to both cause disorienting distraction and to obstruct oncoming attacks to their most vulnerable areas. Coming closer, Nemesis found that she was onset by an assaulting ivy, which sprang from the vines with stinging nettles. Her armor protected her from the majority of the attack, but a few of the stingers found a way through the shields into her skin. There, they burned, as if on fire.

Swinging her sword with exact precision, Nemesis struck at the ivy as it advanced toward her. She was beginning to feel as though she were on the defensive, and Nemesis did not like that feeling. She also hated that the more that she chopped at the attacking ivy, the more of it seemed to be coming, as if it were some sort of hydra weed: she would sever one vine and two more would take its place. With the vines attempting to strangle and sting her, Nemesis momentarily lost sight of the fact that she was, in fact, combating the potamoi. The ivy was a distraction, supplied by these swamp dryads. They were the source, and she was combating the symptoms. As she continued to thrash at the ivy, in the back of her mind, she wondered how Hecate was holding up against these creatures. She thought about how Hecate had shown no physical weapon, and she considered that maybe the goddess had an invisible one, much like her sword. Hecate's boots stuck in her brain, and she wondered if, perhaps, Hecate could form a sword from the air in a similar manner.

A sudden wave of heat brushed past her, and the ivy which had been attacking her burst into flame. Nemesis jumped back in surprise, recovered quickly, and looked toward Hecate, only a few feet away. She was preoccupied with her own combat, but their eyes locked momentarily, and Nemesis saw her weapon, as Hecate ignited the air around her, channeling flame toward the ivy. She moved with the fluid motion of water, smooth and seamless, dancing in the wind as a serpent in the dirt. The fire provided the venom in her strike, and instantly, Nemesis was both impressed and wary. The strength of this woman's power should not be taken lightly, yet it seemed that all of Olympus had done exactly that. Nemesis considered whether that had been the plan all along.

Returning her focus to the battlefield, Nemesis saw that Hecate's flames had left the potamoi temporarily vulnerable. Before it had a chance to regrow its defense to full capacity, Nemesis jumped at the nearest creature, swinging her sword at its neck. The creature dodged the swing and parried with a stabbing punch to Nemesis’ side. The punch connected with Nemesis' armor with such minor impact that she hardly realized that she was struck at all. Spinning in response to the dodge, Nemesis plunged her sword into the potamide's body.

The blade sunk in deeply, yet the potamide showed no sign of pain. As Nemesis began to retract her blade, she was met with resistance. From inside of the blade's entry point, the oozing innards crept, almost cognitively, around the sword, holding it in place. Nemesis grit her teeth and scowled in frustration, as she pulled at the sword with heightened strength. The sword began to give, and finally, Nemesis was able to wrench it free, bringing what seemed to be half of the potamide's viscera with it. The hollowed creature collapsed into the ground, melting into the swamp in a fashion similar to the way it had emerged.

Turning to face the next attacker, Nemesis was pleased to see that Hecate's magic seemed to be doing an apt job at keeping the potamoi busy. She seemed to have dispatched two of them in the time that it had taken Nemesis to terminate one, leaving three creatures left to be dealt with. While Hecate was avoiding vines and igniting fire in the faces of the remaining potamoi, Nemesis snuck up behind one and plunged her blade into the creature's back between its shoulder blades, dragging the tip downward along the spine. As its bodily contents spilled into the swamp, the potamide screamed. Whether it came as a result of the pain or its intention was to alert the two remaining potamoi to Nemesis' presence was undetermined. Nemesis was thankful for it though, since it disguised her own pained gasp.

Nemesis had been surprised when, as she lunged at the potamide's back, a stabbing pain pierced her side. Now that the potamide was dispatched, she glanced to her side and was surprised by what she found. In the area where the first potamide had punched her, there was a hole in her armor, and it was rapidly widening, as though it were dissolving in acid. The effect was rubbing against her skin and causing irritation. Nemesis had to think quickly, since one of the remaining potamoi had turned their attention away from Hecate to her. Not knowing the extent of the damage which the irritation would do to her skin, Nemesis quickly tore off her upper armor, discarding it in the swamp. She was bare beneath the armor, and that made her feel a bit more vulnerable. Since the other option held a much larger threat, however, she would have to deal with the slight compromise.

The potamide who had been advancing on her thrust the attacking vines toward Nemesis. Nemesis dodged them quickly, considering how much easier it was to do when she was only dealing with a singular attacker. She also quickly became conscious of her naked chest, especially when being attacked by stinging nettles. A few of the needles buried themselves in her skin, and the insertion points burned fiercely. There was no time to consider superficial wounds, however. The attacker needed to be dealt with.

Spinning away from the vines and toward the attacker, Nemesis swung her sword fiercely. The blow pierced through air as the potamide dodged the attack artfully. She then lunged at Nemesis, reaching for her exposed body. A rare moment of fear stuck in Nemesis' mind, as she considered the effect that this touch would have on her flesh. She danced clear of the potamide's reach, parrying with a strike to the potamide's extended appendage. Her sword sliced through the arm as though it was soft cheese; it fell to the swamp's floor and melted into the moist ground, similar in method to the fallen potamoi. Nemesis looked toward the potamide, preparing to strike again, but what she saw surprised her.