The
following story is a Camp Half Blood fan-fiction set in a
hypothetical future after the Trials of Apollo series. It takes place
in 2056, shortly after Dionysus has been released from Camp Half
Blood. Apollo has become a god again. All rights to the Percy Jackson
and the Olympians, Heroes of Olympus, and Trials of Apollo series
belong to Rick Riordan.
I was woken up in
the middle of the night by a strange light.
“Whoa man, you
just got claimed” said a Hermes kid.
“By who?”
“Apollo.”
“Alright...”
“Aren’t you
happy? Apollo is awesome.”
“Uh, yeah…
right. Yes. Happy.”
“You don’t sound
happy.”
“Are you?”
“Of course not. My
Dad’s the god of thieves and liars. Do you have any idea what that
has done to my reputation?”
“Do you deserve
that reputation?”
The kid looked
offended. “Of course not.” I’m honest. I don’t steal
anything. I just happen to look like an elf!”
“Have
you even been claimed?”
“No,
I don’t have to be, it’s obvious.”
Hermes
suddenly appeared. “Claimed.”
“I
am nothing like you, though!”
“No,
you are everything like
me.”
“But...”
“Give
it time...”
The
daughter of Hermes looked enraged. Hermes vanished.
I
went over to my bed and packed my things.
A
few weeks later, I dreamed an entire day. The day seemed to go by in
fast motion, but when I woke up, I had the weirdest attack of de ja
vu, because the actual day seemed to be my dream in slow motion.
The
next day, there was a kit on my bed entitled. “So you have the gift
of prophecy”. The note attached to it referred to Hermes’ mail
company. The information in the kit said to never tell anyone my
predictions or interfere in their fulfillment. To do so would be to
interfere with the will of the gods.
Reading
this, I realized that fate was rigged, and that it didn’t work as I
had suspected. The kit contained information on other people who’d
had the gift of prophecy including an old man named “Halcyon
Green”. This man had been severely punished for telling others his
predictions so that they could avert their fate. Avert fate? This I
hadn’t thought possible. I had somehow assumed that either all or
some of the future was a “fixed point in time” like in Doctor
Who, as soon as I learned that the Fates were real. It didn’t occur
to me that the system was not only rigged, but rigged so weakly that
a prophet like me could even interfere. Well… I shouldn’t
consider myself a prophet. Not when I’m not allowed to tell anyone
my predictions ever.
It
was ages before we got a quest, but when we finally did, my boyfriend
Peter and I (my boyfriend being my cousin or possible half-brother,
he hadn’t been claimed), were asked to go on a ship called the
“Glory of Hera”.
“Eh?
Why is it called that?” I asked.
“Have
you not heard of Hercules?” Chiron asked.
We
got on the ship.
Our
quest was to go fetch Hercules, who’d been sulking. Personally, I
suspected there was more to it than that.
“What
do they need Hercules for right now any way?” I asked Peter.
“No
idea. I’ve heard strange things about him.” Peter replied.
“Oh?”
I responded.
“He
hates being a god.” Peter replied.
“Even
with all his power?” I responded.
“He
doesn’t have much power relative to the other gods, and possibly
has PTSD because he’s trapped with his own memories of murdering
his first wife.” Peter responded.
“That
must be why he’s gone missing.” I said.
“Maybe...”
Peter replied.
“You
don’t think he’s been kidnapped, do you?” I asked.
“Doubtful.
He’s very difficult to capture.” Peter replied.
“Maybe
he committed suicide.” I responded.
“Impossible.”
Peter said.
“Can’t
the gods fade?” I asked.
“Hercules
can’t. Too many people are maintaining him through belief.” Peter
responded.
“But
almost no one believes in him.” I said.
“His
domain is over-powered though. The gods draw power through their
domains as well. As long as he is needed, worship of him will
continue. Also, worship isn’t even necessary to keep him alive. All
that is necessary is that someone thinks of him, and mortals think of
him all the time without even believing in him.” Peter replied.
“This
logic implies Santa Claus is real, but if Santa were real, then
parents wouldn’t have to buy gifts for their children.” I said.
“Perhaps
Santa is simultaneously real and lazy.” Peter joked.
“Heh.”
“Not
every ‘belief-being’, as I have decided to call them, is real,
but I can’t figure out why.” Peter said.
“I
can’t either.” I responded.
“Maybe
magic is involved. Maybe Hecate has to bless the “belief operation”
or something.” Peter said.
“Or
it has to do with the domains. Since there is no domain for Santa to
control, seeing as everyone buys the gifts themselves, he has no
power to manifest.” I replied. Then I got an idea.
“There
was a certain Doctor Who episode though… yeah, I know… that
implied that Santa may nevertheless have power over dreams.” I
said.
“How?”
Peter asked.
“Possibly
by manipulating monsters, or by being an archetype of the human
subconscious, or being a real person that can only manifest within
people’s dreams. In that episode he was said to be real and
gift-giving though.” I replied.
“Maybe
he only gives gifts to people who actually need them.” Peter said.
“Or
maybe he’s not real, and magic really is involved in creating
gods.” I replied.
“No,
you can’t just “invent” a god. The only gods I heard of either
started life as immortals or real mortals.” Peter responded.
“Right,
but I think they were originally perceived through visions, which
mortals don’t credit with any validity. Maybe all gods start life
as archetypes.” I said.
“Then
what is to stop every single imaginary friend from becoming real?”
Peter said.
“Perhaps
they are?” I replied.
“I
doubt it.” Peter responded.
“Gods
without enough belief sustaining them can’t take physical form
anyway.” I said.
“Maybe
no god is “invented”, but you could create one with a blessing
from Hecate, or magical powers or something.” said Peter.
“Maybe.”
I replied.
“I
doubt it.” said Peter.
“Oh,
but it’s too beautiful not to be true.” I replied. “In theory,
Hecate shouldn’t even be necessary if the idea gains enough power.
Honestly, I think the Doctor might be real.”
“I
doubt he’s real in our universe.” Peter responded. “You
know what? Even so, I find “false gods” significant. I’m Jewish
and so are you. Our God and angels may be false gods, but they are
nevertheless important to me.”
“To
me as well.” I replied.
“Really?”
“Yes.”
I said.
“But
you sacrifice to the Greek gods all the time. You violate the First
Commandment.” Peter pointed out.
“Oh
contraire. That commandment says no gods “before Me”. I hold no
gods in my heart before Adonai.” I replied.
“In
theory, you would only worship the Greek gods to save your own life.”
Peter pointed out.
“Since
finding out I was a demigod who would get chased by monsters, I’ve
found it wiser to pray to them.” I replied. “Besides, monsters
isn’t the only problem, if not given their due honor, gods can tear
your entire world down.”
“That
makes sense.” Peter agreed.
“Do
you think God is mad at me for worshiping them?” I asked.
“I
doubt it. He knows us all intimately and is merciful. Also he
probably isn’t real in the same sense the gods are.” Peter
responded.
“That’s
just it. Our God is not a physical being, and therefore wouldn’t
exist physically anyway.” I pointed out.
“Maybe
God is the author of our story.” Peter mused.
“Maybe
that author is not Jewish, but Christian… or an atheist.” I
wondered.
“Maybe.”
Peter said.
“But
couldn’t you conjure the God of our universe the same way?” I
asked.
“Perhaps
that’s what prophets have done.” Peter replied.
“Even
so, the cosmology of our universe doesn’t allow for...” I
started.
“God
as the author would be beyond space and time.” Peter replied,
cutting me off mid-sentence.
“True.
Perhaps there is no God except Chaos, and “God” is just a
metaphor for the morality principle.” I said.
“We
have a titan for that though. Themis.” Peter pointed out.
“True.”
I said.
That
night, I had a dream that a shiny blob attacked Peter. He died, and I
woke up with a start.
On
the way to Hercules’ island we came upon another island that we’d
have to cross (the waters around it were too turbulent to sail
through. While walking on that island I kept noticing a shiny blob.
In my mind’s eye, this blob had an appearance, he looked like a
dragon with the skin of a crusty brown toad.
Peter
noticed it too, but we both kept walking, deciding not to draw it out
in the open, fearing that doing so would lead it to attack us
directly.
All
of a sudden, the shiny blob ambushed Peter. I felt as if time slowed
down. In a flash, I grabbed two arrows from my quiver and stabbed the
dragon in both its eyes.
The
dragon exploded into dust.
“Thanks
man!” Peter said.
Suddenly
my father appeared. He looked livid.
“You
dare defy fate?” he asked calmly, his eyes flashing blue murder.
“Yes.”
I replied with equal calmness. I was surprised at my own composure.
“I defied fate to save Peter’s life.”
“Were
you not warned?” Apollo asked. “You have the gift of prophecy.
All of your predictions must come true.”
“This
one mustn’t. Peter is my boyfriend.”
“That’s
irrelevant. You can’t defy fate.” His face was an impassive
stone.
“What
did I just do then?” I asked with a smirk.
My
father got even angrier. It was at that point that I had an idea:
“Hey
Dad, why don’t you just kill me?”
“What.”
“Why
don’t you just kill me, so I can become a god?”
“What
makes you think you’ll become a god if you die?”
“That’s
how it works in Greek myths, isn’t it? When a god kills he deifies,
always.”
“Not
always. That’s just the myths you’ve heard. It doesn’t always
happen that way.”
“No?”
“What
makes you think you even deserve to be a god?”
“Nothing.
But someone needs to be the god of what I want to be the god of.
Someone needs to be the god of free will.”
“You
heroes already have free will! You can challenge anyone--”
“But
we prophets don’t! Every time you have a child with the gift of
prophecy, they die horribly! And it’s always because they couldn’t
change fate! They are always punished for speaking their predictions
or entrapped by destiny! There may be a god of prophecy but there is
no patron of prophets!”
“Hercules
is a god of oracles...” Peter said, cutting in.
“But
not the god of the prophets who must keep silent! I was shown the
story of Halcyon Green. A person with the gift of prophecy can only
talk if they are the chosen Oracle. Otherwise they must keep silent,
and can’t even save their friends! That is a free will violation!
We heroes must have the free will to be heroes whether we have the
gift of prophecy or not! It is unfair otherwise!”
“Life
is unfair” Apollo muttered.
“Look,
if you’re not going to deify me, then at least deify Halcyon Green!
He deserves it more than I do anyway.”
Apollo
paused. “You are Halcyon Green.”
“What.”
“You’re
his reincarnation. That’s the whole reason you have the gift of
prophecy. You and he are the exact same soul. I can’t deify Halcyon
Green at this stage without deifying you as well.”
“Why
would he reincarnate, after all this time?”
“He
was on his second incarnation. The first incarnation was Cassandra,
princess of Troy. Both lives earned you Elysium, Steven, but you
always tried again. If you prove your worth in this life you will
earn your right to reside in the Isle of the Blessed.”
“Nice.”
“That
means obeying me. That means obeying the will of the gods. I wont
tolerate anymore of your nonsense.”
I
paused. “Do I have to keep going on quests?”
“No,
but if you don’t I don’t see how you’ll end up in the Isle of
the Blessed.”
“So
I’m just supposed to let my comrades die then.”
“If
that is the will of the fates… yes.”
“What
happens if I don’t make it into the Isle? Do I go back to Elysium?”
“No,
you go to Asphodel Meadows.”
“After
all the hard work of my past lives?”
“I’m
afraid so.”
Apollo
vanished.
After
that conversation, I decided that the Isle of Blessed just wasn’t
worth it. Not if I ever again had to risk losing Peter or any of the
ones I loved. I never thought I could truly love anyone. I mean sure,
I love my Mom, but I don’t feel much emotion for her at this stage
and could lose her easily. Particularly now that I know there’s an
afterlife for her.
But
I could never stand to lose my friends.
I
didn’t think I could make friends as good as the ones I made when I
came here. I was born with nonverbal learning disorder, a hybrid
between ADHD and Asperger Syndrome. Though I am not dyslexic, I am
mildly autistic. I also have the wrong sort of ADHD. Instead of
seeing too much, I really do see too little unless you count my
mind’s eye, which is able to see through mist better than anyone.
The price of course being that I can’t actually see through mist as
well as the other demigods can. I have found that my battle reflexes
improve dramatically when I simply see with my spirit instead of my
five senses. This isn’t how it works with any of the other demigods
and I have no idea why I’m different in this regard. I have no idea
why I’m the only Greek demigod without dyslexia.
After
this incident I became depressed, but I didn’t realize it at the
time. I had found out the hard way that my father wasn’t a safe
father to have, that unlike a mortal parent he might literally kill
me for misbehaving. Or worse yet, he might fail to protect me from
harsh punishments meted out by the other gods. I wasn’t safe here.
I
tried to convince myself that this didn’t matter, because you are
never really safe. That’s what the Doctor said to Clara when he
said goodbye to her: “You’re never safe.”
Even
so, my body couldn’t accept it. One night, I woke up in tears, but
I couldn’t remember crying.
I
tried to tell myself everything would be okay, but I couldn’t
remember how to speak. My consciousness was becoming increasingly
cloudy. I was very scared but I couldn’t will myself to move. I
gradually fell into a trance and started floating through the air. I
wasn’t surprised to be floating, I was that out of it, but it was
the first time I had done so, and turned out to be a power of mine.
The
next thing I remember is that I was on a bus in my a sweater out of
the backpack and put it on to cover my pajamas. I pulled shoes out of
my backpack and put them on. It seemed that in my trance I had
somehow had the presence of mind to pack, but now I had no idea where
I was.
“Excuse
me?” I asked the bus driver. “Where is this bus going?”
“San
Francisco.”
“How
close are we?”
“Just
a few more miles.”
What.
I
squinted and read the bus driver’s aura. Yep. He was a satyr. A hat
covered his horns, but the aura of a satyr is obvious. For one thing,
their fur smells like barnyard animal. Even if they keep especially
clean, they still have that goat aura.
When
I got off the bus, I tried to take stock of what to do. I couldn’t
remember why I’d come here, perhaps a god had mind-controlled me
into going to Camp Jupiter. Perhaps I’d myself wanted to go there,
but at this point all I could think of was seeing my mother.
I’d
never missed her more.
Oh
sure, she wasn’t a perfect mother. She was a narcissist and a space
case. She’d conceived me after having a one night stand. It seemed
she was smart enough to attract a god, but not a decent enough person
to keep one. She wasn’t like Sally Jackson. She was far more human.
Not
to say she was negligent or abusive or anything. She was fine. But
I’m not sure she made the right judgment calls, when raising me.
When I was bullied in school, and I said “I don’t want to go to
school anymore” she agreed to take me out and home-school me.
In
retrospect, I think that was a mistake. In retrospect, I might have
been able to develop better socially while in school.
It’s
really hard to tell though, considering I was able to have the
advantage of a more manageable workload while studying at home. My
mother says if I get good grades at a junior college it won’t
matter that I never went to high school. (I left school when I turned
twelve).
I
was about to go to Camp Jupiter when I remembered what it was like.
They tattooed you and had wolves attack you just to get in there. I
wasn’t big on being wolf food, so I decided to head back home. I
took the Grey Sister’s taxi.
When
I returned, I walked into my cabin only to find that my counselor was
furious with me.
“Where
were you?” We’ve been worried sick!” he yelled.
“Do
I know you?” I asked blearily.
“We
haven’t been introduced, but don’t think I’m not aware of who
lives in this cabin.” he said.
“You’ve
been away.” I replied.
“Glad
you actually noticed.” he replied sarcastically.
His
aura seemed identical to that of my Dad, so for a moment I wondered
if it was my Dad in disguise. I put the idea out of my head because
it would be embarrassing if I asked and I was wrong.
My
boyfriend had also been worried, but he thankfully didn’t give me
crap about running away. I explained the situation to him, and he
thankfully understood.
“You
know what I wish?” I asked him.
“What?”
he responded.
“Remember
when I told Apollo that Halcyon Green should be made a god who
advocated for the rights of prophets, and he told me I literally was
Halcyon Green?”
“Yeah?”
“Well,
what if I actually managed to become a god?”
A
sister of mine named Elizabeth walked up to us.
“What’s
this about becoming a god?” she asked.
“I
wish I was a god.” I replied. “I wish I was the patron of
prophets.”
“Isn’t
Dad already the god of prophecy?”
“By
‘patron’ I mean advocate. We need someone to advocate for those
with the gift of prophecy. I have it, and so did both of my past
lives. Dad forbid my last past life and I from sharing our
predictions, lest we “give away too much too soon” and prevent
fate from happening has it was originally ordained. I wish I was the
god who could advocate for people with the gift and enable them to
give away their predictions without fearing the gods’ wrath.”
“Do
you really think you’d be able to break the “give nothing away”
rule?” Elizabeth asked.
“Perhaps
not, but even so, we need an advocate and I think I’m the one to do
it.”
“If
you say so...” Elizabeth said. She developed a mischievous smile.
“You
a legacy of Hermes?” I asked.
“Unfortunately.”
she replied. “I’d rather be a legacy of Hecate. That way I’d be
able to do real magic instead of all these magic feather spells.”
“Magic
feather spells?”
“Casting
spells as a mortal. It shouldn’t work in theory.”
“Maybe
it works if Hecate wills it to.”
“That
isn’t magic, that’s praying. The gods don’t usually respond to
the prayers one casts magic for. Magic is about enacting your own
will, which doesn’t necessarily conform to the will of the gods.”
“I’m
not sure the gods want to be bothered with all your whims and
wishes.” Peter quipped.
“I
know, that’s the problem! I wish I could cast real magic like the
Hecate kids.”
“Any
mortal can cast chain reaction magic” I said.
“Eh?”
“Chain
reaction magic. Or perhaps I should call it chaos magic. It’s more
of a Hermes thing than a Hecate thing, so you might be better at it.
It has to do with getting what you want by provoking natural chain
reactions.”
“Can
those even be tracked?”
“Surprisingly
well, actually.”
“Wouldn’t
tracking the chain reaction make it seem less magical?” Peter
asked.
“It’s
sort of like being a magician.” I responded. “You want to be in
on your own trick, even if no one else is.”
“Do
you keep track?” Elizabeth asked.
“At
least some of the time, to make sure it’s working.” I replied.
“I
guess that’s what I do.” Elizabeth said. “I guess it’s pretty
magical after all!”
“Depends
on what you mean by magic. I spell chaos magic ‘magick’ to
distinguish it from Hecate’s real magic. It’s not actually the
same thing I’m afraid.”
“Maybe
Hecate controls both.” Elizabeth replied.
“I
doubt it. I think Hermes controls what I described. You being a
legacy of Hermes may give you talent at chain reaction magic.”
“I
hope so” Elizabeth replied. She looked relieved. Perhaps she was
relieved to hear that what she was doing actually meant something.
After
that, I went on a few more quests, but I kept having to let people
die, which made me feel guilty. Eventually, I stopped going on quests
all together, to stop that from happening, but I could still see who
would die, and I felt guilty about not being able to warn them. As
the time went by, my powers increased. I started floating in more and
more places, and my anxiety about not warning people of their fates
went down. I suppose that was because I was growing up.
I
didn’t feel like I was maturing though, so much as evolving into an
alien. The older I got, the less human I felt. When I turned
eighteen, I still looked seventeen. I hadn’t grown at all, and was
still pretty short. One day, while in the common room of the cabin, I
absentmindedly drank some nectar, downing the entire glass without
meaning to.
Oops.
I
panicked. Demigods weren’t supposed to drink this much nectar. Too
much nectar would incinerate us.
I
felt my forehead. A small overdose usually caused a fever as opposed
to incineration. I didn’t feel I had a fever though. As a matter of
fact, I felt fine.
On
an impulse, I drank another glass.
Still
fine.
Holy
shit.
I
had become a god. Or at least immortal. I didn’t seem to be shining
very brightly though. Perhaps I didn’t yet have enough power to do
so.
“Counselor?
Counselor?”
“My
name is Will.” the counselor said, coming into the room.
“I
drank too much nectar but it isn’t affecting me. Am I a Greek God
now?”
“Eh?
Be careful with that stuff.”
“But
it isn’t affecting me!”
“You
might have a fever.”
“I
swear I don’t! I feel fine! Take my temperature if you don’t
believe me.”
Will
did so, and was surprised to find that I was correct. “I guess
you’re a god now.” he said.
“Are
you sure I’m not just a nymph or something? I don’t seem to have
an iridescent true form or whatever.”
“I
think we have to ask Chiron.” he replied.
We
walked to the Big House. Will took the lead.
“Come
in.” Chiron said.
We
walked into his office.
“Am
I god now?” I asked.
“Why
would you be a god?”
“Because
I drank two glasses of nectar and I feel fine.”
“Why
would you do that? You have to be careful… wait what?”
“Yeah.”
I responded.
Chiron
looked me up and down. “Change shape.” he said.
“I
can do that?”
“You
can if you’re a god.”
I
concentrated. I thought of growing boobs as a lark, and touched my
chest, willing them to appear.
To
my surprise they did.
Will
snickered.
“Wow.”
Chiron said. “You really are a god, Steven.”
“Stephanie.”
Will corrected, smiling in amusement.
I
touched my hair to turn it black, and grew it a bit. I turned my eyes
blue. I grew my hair a bit, and curled it.
“Amazing.”
Chiron remarked.
“Huh?”
I said.
“You’re
the spitting image of Thalia Grace.”
I
realized that I was a man with breasts, which felt weird to me, so I
transformed the rest of my body to female. I was surprised by how
good being a woman felt. Mentally speaking, I’d never really had a
gender. I was just me.
EPILOGUE:
For a while I was
mystified about how I’d become a god. It turned out Elizabeth had
started a cult for me online. Few mortals had taken it seriously, but
they had nevertheless responded positively, thinking it was a joke.
Many demigods had decided to genuinely worship me, not because they
thought I was worthy of worship, but because they thought it was
worth making me a god for the sake of my “patron of prophets”
cause, which Elizabeth had described on my website.
Now that summer was
over, I was coming home, which made me nervous. Ever since I had
changed into a woman I hadn’t changed back. I hadn’t felt the
need to change back, but my family had never seen me like this;
they’d never seen me display godly abilities.
When I walked into
the parlor I was surprised to see a man there. He bore a strong
resemblance to my boyfriend, Peter.
“Oh, hello there.”
“Hello.” the man
replied smiling.
“Oh, hello Steven,
this is Hercules.” said my mother. She didn’t seem surprised by
my new form.
“I told your
mother about your transition” Hercules said.
Transition?
I hadn’t really considered myself trans.
“I’m
not sure I’d call it that.” I replied. “Hercules as in Roman
god Hercules?”
“Technically
I’m just as Greek as I am Roman. I don’t have any other aspects.”
“I
see...” I paused and then realized something.
“Are
you two… together?”
“Oh
yes.” my mother said. “...Are you alright with that?”
“Oh
of course...” I said. “It’s just… I never asked… whatever
happened with you and Apollo?”
“We
had a one-night stand.”
“Well,
yeah I already knew that, but… Did you know who he was at the
time?”
“Oh
yes, his aura was easy to recognize. We’d been communicating
telepathically before meeting, but I was already bored with him by
the time we met. All those
haikus… He never seemed to consider me any more important than I
considered him, but we both think everyone is important.”
“You
never loved him then.”
“I
wouldn’t say that… I still worship him now. What with my
personality, and his personality… you could say I’m too in love
with him to have ever fallen head over heels… but… I’m
definitely head over heels for you, Hercules… if you don’t mind
what I just said.”
“Not
at all.” Hercules said smiling.
“Doesn’t
Hebe mind you cheating? I mean… are you still married to her?” I
was immediately alarmed by my own rudeness.
“Hebe
and I have an open marriage.” Hercules responded. “Or at least…
we do now. She’s had her own affairs.”
“Oh
can we have that?” my mother asked.
“Sure.”
Hercules said. “It’s not like I have the right to have anyone
exclusively at this stage.”
“So
you’re immortal now,” my mother said, changing
the subject.
“I
told her about that too.” Hercules said.
“We’ve
never met.” I said. “How do you know so much about me?”
“I’m
the patron of heroes, it’s my job to keep track.” Hercules
replied.
“Guess
I’m not needed then.” I replied.
“Huh?”
my mother said.
“I
was going to be the patron of prophetic heroes.”
“The
world still needs a patron of prophets.” Hercules said. “You’re
still needed.”
“For
how long?” I asked. “Thinking of you… I’m a little scared to
be immortal.”
“You’ll
get used to it. Hercules said. “You’re lucky you became immortal
before the onset of adulthood, I mean… can you still forget your
pain?”
“Surprisingly…
yes.” I replied.
“Then
you’re still resilient. I think you’re going to be fine.”
END
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