“Hell Beneath Us: Part Five”

This is it — Voice Week is officially over! If you’ve not had a chance thus far, head over to the Voice Week Homepage, where all the other participating bloggers are wrapping things up.

Thank you to everyone who liked and/or commented on my series. Your kind words mean the world.

This voice, being the “grand finale”, got away from me a little. The word count is a wee bit bigger than it should be, but hopefully worth it!

If you’ve missed out on any part of the story, follow the links below to catch up. Thanks again, and I hope you enjoy the final voice.

Part One can be found here.

Part Two can be found here.

Part Three can be found here.

Part Four can be found here.

.. Hell Beneath Us ..

The light, mortal goodness of Earth fades as I am swept deeper and deeper into the darkness of the Underworld.

With a commanding shout, Hades draws his coal-black steeds to a stop, and dismounts. Through the haze of tears, I watch as he reaches up, takes hold of my waist and lifts me from the chariot with the tentativeness of someone holding a wounded dove. Within his grasp, I feel tiny, fragile … and bright. Against his shadows, my own purity seems to shine.

One year later, I rise from the shadowy dead into my mother’s embrace. I am different in her arms. She clings desperately, crushingly tight. Hades touch was always soft, shadowed and sinful.

Mother senses the Underworld’s chill that has penetrated my flesh, and immediately bestows her gifts into the earth to warm me; I can feel the withered soil beneath my feet writhe with life.

In the Hell beneath us, I know Hades is waiting. I taste the sharp tang of pomegranate on my lips and shiver with anticipation.

- Love The Bad Guy

“Hell Beneath Us: Part Four”

Voice Week is slowly drawing to a close with this second-last voice. Once again, I’ll provide the link to the Voice Week Homepage, where you can keep up with all the stories that other bloggers have been posting.

Readers who are in someway familiar with Greek mythology have already picked the story I am telling, so well done! I hope you enjoy today’s voice.

Part One can be found here.

.. Hell Beneath Us ..

I live for the Underworld, for the shadows and secrets held therein. But darkness will always seek the light.

She is my light, whose very name works to drive back the blackness that consumes me—Persephone.

Truly, it was she who captured me—such sinful beauty can be dangerous. She is my obsession; my possession; mine. Her eyes, impossibly blue in the haze of hell, seemed all the more stunning when they glistened with sorrow.

And now, in the face of Zeus’ wretched messenger, my light is to be stolen from me. Back to the mortal world? Ridiculous. How can light be appreciated when not surrounded by shadow? I cloak her swiftly from view, revelling in the tiny creature’s touch. “Eat now, my dear,” I croon. “Your journey will be long.”

The seeds stain her lips like blood. She is pulled away, but those enrapturing eyes gaze back, glistening ever more.

- Love The Bad Guy

DAY 16: Longest Book You’ve Read

I’m sure that there is some book buried deep in my subconscious that I’ve read in the past, which would be longer than anything I can recall at this point in time. Nevertheless, the answer I’ve come up with today is Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes by Edith Hamilton.

aaa

The book itself is actually no longer than a regular novel. But as some of you may recall, I have an odd fascination with Greek mythology; each time I read a chapter of the book, I would notice references to Gods and people and events that weren’t further described in the book…

…And so I would have to put down the book, go to the computer and look up more information about the legend. It was my own fault that the book felt so long; but it was still a fascinating read!

- Love The Bad Guy

“Theseus Within the Labyrinth”

Everyone has that one thing that they find fascinating, while no one else seems to. For me, that thing is Greek Mythology. I love reading legends about the Gods, Goddesses and heroes of ancient times. Of course, I also like to read contemporary stories and poems about such things. One of my favourites is a poem called Theseus Within the Labyrinth by Stephen Dobyns.

For those of you who don’t know the legend of Theseus, here it is in a nutshell: Theseus went to Crete to slay the Minotaur (half-bull and half-man), which dwelled within the Labyrinth. Ariadne, daughter of the King of Crete, fell in love with Theseus and gave him a skein of thread to guide him out of the maze. Together, they fled for Athens, but on the way, they stopped at an island where Ariadne was abandoned (either through an accident, or, as is more popularly believed, through Theseus’s own betrayal). He returned home, but his ship was still displaying the usual black sails; he had promised his father that he would raise white sails if he had succeeded in his mission. His father saw the black sails from a distance and, believing them to be the sign of his son’s death, threw himself off a cliff.

Here, Dobyns present a very interesting interpretation of the legend… Enjoy!

Theseus Within the Labyrinth

The lives of Greeks in the old days were deep,

mysterious and often lead to questions like

just what was wrong with Ariadne anyway, that’s

what I’d like to know? She would have done

anything for that rascally Theseus, and what

did he do but sneak out in the night and row

back to his ship with black sails. Let’s get

the heck out of here, he muttered to his crew

and they leaned on their oars as he went whack-

whack on the whacking board—a human metronome

of adventure and ill-fortune. She was King Minos’s

daughter and had helped Theseus kill the king’s

pet monster, her half-brother, so possibly

he didn’t like feeling beholden—people might

think he wasn’t tough. But certainly he’d spent

his life knocking chips off shoulders and flattening

any fellow reckless enough to step across a line

drawn in the dust.  If you wanted a punch thrown,

Theseus was just the cowboy to throw it. I’m only

happy when hitting and scratching, he’d told Ariadne

that first night. So he’d been the logical choice

to sail down from Athens to Crete to stop this

nonsense of a tribute of virgins for some

monster to eat. Those Cretans called it eating but

Theseus thought himself no fool and liked a virgin

as well as the next man. Not that he could have got

into the Labyrinth without Ariadne’s help or out

either for that matter. As for the Minotaur, lounging

on his couch, nibbling grapes and sipping wine, while

a troop of ex-virgins fluttered to his beck and call,

Theseus must have scared the horns right off him,

slamming back the door and standing there in his lion

skin suit and waving that ugly club. The poor beast

might have had a stroke had there been time before

Theseus pummelled him into the earth. Then, with

Ariadne’s help, Theseus escaped, and soon after he

ditched her on an island and sailed off in his ship

with black sails, which returns us to the question:

Just what was wrong with Ariadne anyway?

But nobody like Theseus likes a smart girl, always

telling him to dress warmly and eat plenty of fiber.

She was one of those people who are never in doubt.

Had he sharpened his sword, tied his sandals?

Without her, of course, he would have never escaped

the labyrinth. Why hadn’t he thought of that trick

with the ball of yarn? But as he looked down

at her sleeping form, this woman who was already

carrying his child, maybe he thought of their

future together, how she would correctly foretell

the mystery or banality behind each locked door.

So probably he shook his head and said, Give me

a dumb girl any day, and crept back to his ship

and sailed away. Of course Ariadne was revenged.

She would have told him to change the sails,

to take down the black ones, put up the white.

She would have reminded him that his father,

the king of Athens, was waiting on a high cliff

scanning the Aegean for Theseus’s returning ship,

white for victory, black for defeat. She would

have said how his father would see the black sails,

how the grief for the supposed death of his one son

would destroy him. But Theseus and his men had

brought out the wine and were cruising a calm sea

in a small boat filled to the brim with ex-virgins.

Who could have blamed him? Until he heard the distant

scream and his head shot up to see the black sails

and he knew. The girls disappeared, the ship grew

quiet except for the lap-lap of the water. Staring

toward the spot where his father had tumbled

headfirst into the Aegean, Theseus understood

he would always be a stupid man with a thick stick,

scratching his forehead long after the big event.

But think, does he change his mind, turn back

the ship, hunt up Ariadne and beg her pardon?

Far better to be stupid by himself than smart

because she’d been tugging on his arm; better

to live in the eternal present with a boatload

of ex-virgins than in that dark land of consequences

promised by Ariadne, better to live like any one of us,

thinking to outwit the darkness, but knowing

it will catch us, that we will be surprised like

the Minotaur on his couch when the door slams back

and the hired gun of our personal destruction bursts

upon us, upsetting the good times and scaring the girls.

Better to be ignorant, to go into the future as into

a long tunnel, without ball of yarn or clear direction,

to tiptoe forward like any fool or saint or hero,

jumpy, full of second thoughts, and bravely unprepared.

 (1987)

Dobyns, S. ‘Theseus within the Labyrinth’ in Velocities: New and Selected Poems,
Great Britain, Bloodaxe Books, 1996, pp.204-206.

mino

- Love The Bad Guy