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Monsters of Greek Mythology, Volume Two

Page 20

by Bernard Evslin


  Defeating the monstrous bull-man called the Minotaur was only the first test in his long quest for glory, and one that he almost failed.

  THE NEMEAN LION

  For my grandson NOAH

  Who needs a monster to counterbalance the angels

  that swarm about him

  Contents

  CHAPTER I

  Zeus Is Uneasy

  CHAPTER II

  The Waif

  CHAPTER III

  Vengeance of the Hive

  CHAPTER IV

  The Haunted Healer

  CHAPTER V

  The Garden

  CHAPTER VI

  Transformation

  CHAPTER VII

  The Stretching

  CHAPTER VIII

  The Nemean Lion

  Characters

  Monsters

  The Nemean lion

  (neh MEE an)

  Gigantic beast made to order for Zeus by Grandmother Earth

  Gods

  Zeus

  (ZOOS)

  King of the Gods

  Atropos

  (AT roh pohs)

  Eldest Fate, Lady of the Shears

  Hades

  (HAY deez)

  Lord of the Dead

  Hecate

  (HECK uh tee)

  Queen of the Harpies

  Thalia

  (thuh LY uh)

  Muse of Comedy

  Gaia

  (GAY uh)

  First earth goddess, grandmother of Zeus

  Mortals

  Palaemona

  (pal ah MON ah)

  Later known as Heraclea, daughter of Zeus, born of an oak nymph

  Melampus

  (meh LAM pus)

  Master physician

  Rhoecus

  (REE kus)

  Brave young man who dwells in the forest

  Woodsman

  Foster father of the young Palaemona

  Eurystheus

  (Yoo RISS thee us)

  King of Mycenae, taskmaster to Heraclea

  Copreus

  (COH pree us)

  Eurystheus’s herald

  Bullman

  A professional killer

  Animals

  Bear, stag, bees, squirrel, birds, bulls

  Others

  Serpent

  Oracular python who serves Melampus

  Oak nymph

  Palaemona’s mother

  Dryad

  (DRY ad)

  Another oak nymph, but of the Bee Clan

  Oreades

  (oh REE ah deez)

  Mountain nymphs who serve Melampus

  Empusae

  (EM pyoo sy)

  Miniature Harpies with leather wings and spiteful habits

  1

  Zeus Is Uneasy

  Clouds raced across a great blowing lilac sky. Lightning split an oak; the voice of a wood nymph sounded above the thunder. But no one could tell whether she was screaming with fear or joy. For Zeus fancied dryads, and was known to brandish his thunderbolt when he came a-courting. And when the dryad who dwelt in the blasted tree was ready to give birth, the covey of oak nymphs wondered whether they were about to welcome a child of Zeus.

  But when the babe made her appearance, it was decided that she must have been sired by something less than a god. For the infant was undersized and looked sickly—a tiny blue scrap of tissue fighting for every breath. And nobody was surprised when she vanished. For the forest was full of hunting beasts, and the young of every species had to be hardy to survive.

  Once every thousand years a strange wind blows from all directions at once, shaking the chandelier of stars and branding the night sky with a scrawl of fire. And only the eldest Fate, Atropos, Lady of the Shears, could read that scroll which held the mighty secrets of What Was To Be.

  This traffic with the future lent Atropos special authority—so that she was feared by the gods themselves. Even their king, Zeus, who feared nothing, was made uneasy by her.

  And the next morning, when he saw the Scissors Hag winding her way among the flower beds in the Garden of Olympus, he knew by the smile on her face that she was bringing bad news for someone and hoped it was for someone else.

  “Greetings, your majesty,” she grated.

  “A fair day to you, my lady. I trust the windstorm last night did not disturb your slumbers.”

  “I do not sleep much, my lord. Most old folk die at night, you know, and I must be ready with my shears when the thread of life has to be snipped.”

  “Yes, of course,” muttered Zeus.

  “Besides,” she said, “if I were inclined to nap, it would certainly not be when the thousand-year wind comes to jostle the stars. It is part of my task, you realize, to read the fiery splinters. Indeed, this time their message is especially interesting.”

  Zeus shuddered as he heard these words and saw the smirk twisting her withered lips. For she smiled, he knew, only when she had something unpleasant to announce. He said nothing; just waited.

  “It concerns you, O Zeus,” she said.

  “I am all attention.”

  “A certain child dwells in a deep wood. A sickly, undersized babe, but she is fated to shake your kingdom.”

  “Impossible,” growled Zeus.

  “Nay, my lord, possible. Even, perhaps, probable.”

  “How can such a thing be?”

  “This girl child is destined to be the embodiment of female strength and wisdom, and will dedicate herself to avenging the Great Goddess. Yea, she will seek to restore the glory of the Mother, even by dislodging you from your throne.”

  “Ridiculous!”

  “Quarrel with the thousand-year wind and the splintered stars, my lord, not with me who only reads their message.”

  “Whose child is she? Who has spawned her?”

  “Mystery within mystery. But she will claim to be Hera’s daughter, although not yours. Indeed, she will call herself Heraclea.”

  “I thank you for your warning, my lady. Where do I find the presumptuous brat?”

  “In the depths of the forest girdling Thebes. She is called Palaemona now; the name Heraclea will come later.”

  “Too late …” said Zeus. “I shall hunt her down and snuff her out before she can pronounce that absurd name.”

  “Good hunting,” said Atropos, grinning. And humped off. After she left, Zeus thought very hard.

  “How shall I proceed?” he asked himself. “Hasten to Thebes and gaff her with a thunderbolt? Effective, but unwise. It would proclaim to the world that she is as important as she claims to be—dangerous enough to attract my personal attention and merit the use of my ultimate weapon. No! I shall do her no such honor. She must die, but her death must resemble other deaths. In other words, I shall employ a monster. But which?”

  He thought and thought. “There are monsters aplenty,” he told himself. “But they all seem to work for other gods. Hades employs Cerberus. Poseidon commands a hideous flotilla of sea serpents. The snake-haired Medusa serves Athena’s vengeance. The Calydonian boar is the handiwork of my daughter, Artemis. The Cyclopes work for the smith god inside smoky Aetna. And that dreadful three-bodied Geryon acts for my wife, Hera. The Chimaera tends to free-lance, and is stupid besides …

  “I could borrow one of these repulsive creatures, no doubt. But to do so would be to reveal my intentions toward that forest brat. What I must do is find one that will be mine alone. I’ll go to an expert. My grandmother, Gaia, most ancient of earth goddesses, has spawned an enormous brood of monsters—as well as giants, Titans, and gods. She will help me if I ask her.

  “But what shall I ask her for? I am hampered by my keen sense of beauty. I detest ugliness. And the appearance of these monsters tends to be revolting. Surely, though, there must be some creature who possesses a bestial beauty. A lion, for example. All other animals tremble when his scent is borne to them on the wind. When he roars, their marrow freezes; they are too frightened to run, and he kills them with one stroke o
f his barbed paw and devours them at leisure.

  “Yes, he is a killer, and magnificent! A very king of the beasts as I am King of the Gods. A lion … the idea grows on me. But an animal such as no one has ever seen, or even dreamed—one that will make an ordinary lion look like a house cat. Superb notion! I must summon Gaia now.”

  He sent a message to Gaia and received her in the Garden of Olympus, bowing low to her. “O Queen of Earth, wise and powerful, I ask your help.”

  “To be asked when it is yours to command, to be given an opportunity to assist omnipotence—this, kingly grandson, is to do me high honor. How can I serve you?”

  “I am displeased with certain mortals—a nationful, in fact. The Nemeans.”

  “How have they offended you?”

  “They favor other gods. Shun my temples. Pray to me seldom, and make me few gifts.”

  “They deserve to be punished, of course.”

  “Yes, but I do not wish to visit them with swift destruction, blast them with my lightning, incinerate their forests and their cities. For they would die ignorant and serve no example to others. Their punishment must be spaced over time. I want to teach them a slow lesson in the meaning of true faith. I need a monster.”

  “No problem.”

  “Not a fire-spitting dragon, mind. Nor a gaping serpent, nor something with a lot of heads. That’s not my style, Grandmother. I crave an imperial beast. A lion. But a very special one.”

  “Special how?”

  “Huge, Earth, huge. Surpassing ordinary lions as we gods surpass mortals. And let his teeth be like ivory daggers, his talons made of brass and as big as baling hooks. His hide should be a supple armor that no spear point or arrowhead can pierce, or blade can slash.”

  “A task worthy of my best efforts,” murmured Gaia.

  “Take your time,” said Zeus. “I want him perfect …”

  “When next I see you, Grandson, I shall be accompanied by your lion.”

  And she left. Zeus laughed gustily, shaking the trees. “She’ll take her time all right. She’s slow, Mother Earth, slow but sure.… However, there is no hurry. A century is a summer’s afternoon to me; I can afford to be patient. I’ll let the lion roam Nemea for a while, feast upon the inhabitants thereof, and their cattle, and teach them the cost of impiety. He’ll grow into his work, gain a reputation, and when I do send Heraclea against him, her death will seem entirely natural.”

  2

  The Waif

  No woodsman ever entered the grove where the dryads dwelt, for it was a sacred copse. And a woodcutter was circling the grove one day when he saw a pile of dead leaves tremble and heard a faint, mewing cry. He dug into the leaves and felt something squirm. He pulled it out. It was an infant; a girl. He yelled with joy. For his wife had just had a miscarriage with their first child, and he thought that the gods had answered their grief with the gift of another child. He bore the baby home, and the young couple raised her as their own, naming her Palaemona.

  Other children came; they soon outgrew her. She was a curious child altogether, so weirdly small in that tall family. Huge yellow eyes flared in her famished face. “Eyes of a panther in a mouse’s face,” her father said. But she was tough as a bowstring, was never ill, and would play tirelessly from dawn till night.

  And so she lived quite happily until her twelfth year. Then one night a robber band came to the hut. They killed the woodsman, abducted his wife, and rounded up the children to sell at the slave mart in Thebes.

  Palaemona fled. A robber chased her. He was a tall, gawky fellow, but she was a very fast runner despite her size and was drawing away from her pursuer. But another robber jumped out from behind a tree and stood in her path. She tried to duck around him, but he grabbed her. She went limp; his grip slackened. Her hand flashed up. She struck like a cat, raking his face with her nails, gouging with all her strength, feeling the flesh pull away. He screamed and lunged for her. His face dripped blood. He did not stop to wipe it but kept after her. She dodged under his arm and darted toward the river.

  She flung herself off the bank, flattening her body in a shallow dive. Had she wished to escape she could have swum underwater, for she slid through the water like an eel. But she did not want to escape; she wanted him to follow her into the river. She surfaced immediately and saw him standing knee deep, looking for her. She dived again and came up in a thick clump of weeds. She splashed to attract his attention, then pretended to struggle in the water as if she had been caught in the reeds. His head swiveled. He saw her. She saw his teeth flash in the bloody mask of his face and knew that he was grinning. He was a squat man, very hairy.

  As he came near, she moved very slowly out through the clinging reeds. He waded toward her. Now he was waist deep. She waited until he was almost within arm’s length, then dived. She groped in the mud until she found a heavy little rock. She arched in a tight turn underwater, slid behind him, and swept his legs from under him. She surfaced as he sank and waited for him to come up.

  As he arose, spluttering, she lifted her arm high and slammed the rock down on his head. He grunted and collapsed. She stood shoulder deep, watching the bubbles rise. She saw the water changing color and couldn’t bear the idea of his blood fouling her river. She went under, seized him by the hair, and dragged him up. His eyes were closed; his face was greenish white. He did not seem to be breathing.

  She shifted her grip and held him beneath the armpits. Blood seeped through his soaked hair. She dragged him to the shore and let him drop. She took off her tunic and washed it in the river, beating it against a flat rock. Then she dived again and swam underwater, keeping away from the clump of reeds, turning and corkscrewing until she felt clean. She came out, put on her wet tunic, and went to look at him.

  The robber lay there motionless. His hair was a mat of blood. Fat blue flies buzzed slowly about his head. She felt her stomach churning and fought back nausea, trying to cling to triumph. Flies clotted about his head. She waved them away, blaming him. Even dead he kept attacking her, smearing her with filth.

  But was he dead? Was that not a thread of pulse in his fat throat? He was one of those who had killed her foster father, and she needed him dead, but she did not want to touch him. She stood up and looked at the river. Its waters had turned red in the setting sun. It was fouled then forever. She would never swim in it again. She would never do anything again that she had done before.

  She turned and raced across the meadow, away from the river, into the forest. She did not head for the hut that had been her home. She turned left and struck deeper into the wood.

  Night came and she still moved through the trees. Wind rattled the leaves. She was chilled now in her damp tunic. She welcomed the chill and drew it into her in great gasping breaths. She sat at the foot of a tree trying to let the wind blow into her mouth, sucking its coldness, feeling it shrink the hot lump of blood and flies.

  3

  Vengeance of the Hive

  She lay under the tree and tried to sleep. She became aware of how many sounds the wood held: rustlings, scuttlings, a howl, a hoot, a tiny shriek. She was not afraid. She meant to stay in the forest forever and never see anybody again. Even if she knew something was going to eat her, she would not go back to the clearing where the hut had stood and where she had seen her father fall in midstride with an arrow through his throat …

  Moonlight sifted through the trees. There was a silver pepper of stars. The moonlight grew stronger, became silvery green, almost hot. Something blotted the light. Hanging above her was a blunt head. She sprang to her feet. It was a snake’s head on a tall, thick stalk of neck rising from the coils of its own body. She saw the head coming down and was choked by the beating of her heart. She felt her legs being touched. She tried to run; her legs would not move. A swoon came upon her. She felt the body of the snake wrapping itself about her, strand upon living strand looping around her. Her arms were bound to her sides; she was encased in serpent.

  She had seen one crush a deer once,
and she knew that this was how they did it—looping about the victim, tightening the coils; making it soft enough to swallow. She did not scream. Nothing would make her scream. The snake’s body was strange upon her—smooth, hard, and cool. She was growing warm in its leather hug. But she was not being crushed, not yet. Did a snake play with its victim like a cat? She could breathe without constriction but could not move. Now the wedge-shaped head was so close she could see its small eyes glittering in the moonlight. Softly it began to sing:

  Another mother

  bore you …

  Has she something

  for you?

  Hush … hiss …

  I leave a kiss

  within your ear.

  Listen, listen,

  you shall hear,

  what few have heard.

  Listen, listen,

  to beast and bird …

  She felt the hard leather of its head on her cheek and a tickling in one ear, then the other. A piercing sweetness entered her through her ears; colored flame dancing down her body, all pressure gone as the loops melted away.

  She whirled, calling, “Don’t go!”

  She chased the snake. It entered shadow. She sped after it, calling, “Come back! Come back! Oh, please.”

  It was gone.

  She danced in the sifting moonlight. She heard an angry buzzing. It turned into words.

 

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