I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me

Chapter 155: Helen of Troy



Standing in the doorway was a woman of breathtaking beauty, so otherworldly that mere words could hardly capture it. Her long, golden hair flowed like sunlight, reaching down to the small of her back, and her golden eyes gleamed with a mesmerising allure. Every inch of her presence commanded attention, as if the gods themselves had sculpted her from the essence of beauty itself.

It was Helen.

Helen of Sparta, once the queen of Menelaus, but now... Helen of Troy.

Paris's face lit up with joy as Helen entered the room. "Helen!" he exclaimed, his voice filled with happiness and relief. To him, she was still the same breathtaking woman who had stolen his heart, her beauty transcending the realm of mortals.

But Helen did not even glance in his direction.

The enchantment that had once bound her to Paris had long faded. When Paris had used Aphrodite's divine girdle, capable of making any woman fall madly in love, Helen had been momentarily entranced. Yet the spell had worn off the moment she stepped foot in Troy. By then, it was far too late to change anything. Her fate was sealed.

Returning to Sparta, though, was not an option. Helen could only imagine the torment that awaited her there. Menelaus, her husband by forced competition, had been humiliated, and the men of Sparta were thirsty for vengeance. Her marriage to Menelaus had never been of her choosing.

When Helen's beauty became a curse, her father had organized a competition among the most powerful men in the Achaean lands. Menelaus had won, and Helen, against her will, became Queen of Sparta.

Menelaus had been patient with Helen, waiting for her to accept him as her husband, but Helen never did. Though their marriage was official, Helen had never given him her heart. She had always been distant, and Menelaus had respected that boundary for a time. But when Paris entered her life and whisked her away, it broke something inside Menelaus—his trust shattered, his patience turned to fury.

Helen had thought, perhaps, that escaping with Paris might offer her some form of freedom from Menelaus, but instead, it only plunged her into deeper despair. She found herself trapped in Troy, hated by both sides. Sparta despised her for betraying their king, and Troy blamed her for bringing the wrath of the Achaeans to their doorstep.

Now, she had no home. She could not return to Sparta, where death or worse awaited her. But she was no more welcome in Troy, where whispers of blame and scorn followed her wherever she went. Her beauty, once admired by all, had become a symbol of destruction.

Helen had never wanted this war. She had never wanted to be the cause of so much suffering. Now, as she stood before the gathered royals and nobles of Troy, she realized she couldn't stay silent anymore. The destruction looming over Troy was unbearable, and her presence only seemed to fuel it.

With a steady breath, Helen spoke, her voice soft but resolute. "I will go back to Sparta."

Her words stunned the room into silence.

Paris's face paled, his joy turning into disbelief. "What… what are you saying?" he stammered, stepping closer to her. "Helen, you can't! They'll kill you if you go back! You belong here, with me, in Troy."

Helen finally looked at Paris, her eyes devoid of the warmth he had once seen in them. "I don't belong anywhere," she said quietly. "Not in Sparta, not in Troy. But I can't allow this war to destroy more lives. If my return can bring an end to this, then I will face whatever awaits me in Sparta."

Hector, standing off to the side, watched the scene unfold with a mixture of anger and relief. Part of him still blamed Helen for the war, but another part of him understood her pain. He had always known that the war was about more than just Helen—it was about pride, power, and the ambitions of men like Agamemnon. But if Helen's return could truly stop the bloodshed, it was a path worth considering.

Paris shook his head, his voice pleading now. "Helen, no! I won't let you go. We can find another way—we can fight!"

But Helen's heart had hardened toward Paris. She had been swept up in his romantic ideals, tricked by divine intervention, and now all she could see was the cost of his actions. "This is not about us anymore," she said, her tone cold. "It's about stopping the bloodshed."

A heavy silence descended over the room at Helen's words, broken only by the sound of Paris clenching his fists, his knuckles white with frustration and powerlessness. The tension in the air was palpable, thick enough to cut with a knife. All eyes shifted towards the beautiful woman who stood at the heart of this conflict, her face shadowed with sorrow.

Despite the turmoil in the room, many of the Trojans, gathered in their royal chamber, exchanged glances of cautious delight. For them, Helen's offer to return to her former husband seemed like a beacon of hope—a possible way to avert the looming threat of war.

Among them, however, King Priam remained still, his expression unreadable, while his wife, Queen Hecuba, sat beside him with a stern and contemplative gaze, her sharp eyes fixed on Helen.

Finally, after what felt like an eternity, Hecuba spoke. "No," she said firmly. "Even if you return to the Greeks, it will not stop them. They will attack us regardless, perhaps not now, but a few years from now. Your sacrifice will only delay the inevitable."

A collective gasp echoed throughout the room. Shock rippled among the gathered nobles and counselors, who had expected the queen to support Helen's suggestion, if only to buy them time. Yet here she was, seemingly taking the side of Helen, the woman who had sparked the war.

"But," came a hesitant voice from the back, "it could still buy us a few years. Time to prepare, to fortify ourselves against the Greeks."

Hecuba shook her head slowly, her eyes gleaming with resolve. "No," she said. "We shall not bow to them. We will fight, and whatever fate the gods have reserved for us, we will meet it with courage. We will not cower before the arrogant Greeks." She paused, her gaze turning to her eldest son, Hector, who stood tall and stoic beside his father. "Or should we, Hector?"

Hector sighed, though there was no hesitation in his movement. A faint smile tugged at the corner of his lips as he nodded in agreement. "Of course not, Mother. We will not run. We will face them."

Priam, who had been watching his wife and son with quiet pride, allowed a rare smile to soften his face. He turned to Helen, his voice gentle yet resolute. "You've heard them, Helen. Return to your chambers and rest. Our fate does not lie in your hands. Whether you choose to leave or remain, we will fight.

The decision is yours, but our path is clear."

Helen's hands trembled as she balled them into fists, her nails digging into her palms. The weight of their words settled heavily on her, but she could not find the strength to respond. Were they pitying her? Did they truly believe she was worth more than the war that raged because of her? Yet, amid her confusion, a faint sense of relief washed over her.

For so long, she had felt purposeless, like a mere ornament to be admired, an object of desire that men would kill and die for. She had been praised endlessly for her beauty, but no one had ever truly seen her. All they cared for was the face that launched a thousand ships. And now, even that beauty seemed like a curse, something that had only brought misery and destruction.

So why, then, did she still cling to life? What hope was she holding onto? She could not even understand it herself.

Before she could sink deeper into her thoughts, the heavy wooden doors to the royal chamber suddenly swung open with a loud bang, drawing all attention to the entrance. There, standing framed in the doorway, was a man whose presence exuded strength and power, his muscular frame imposing and his demeanor commanding.

His features were strikingly handsome, reminiscent of Hector, though his aura was more wild, less restrained.

"Aeneas," Priam greeted with a smile, his eyes lighting up at the sight of the man.

Hector's expression mirrored his father's as he stepped forward to greet his kinsman. "Brother," he said, clasping Aeneas's forearm with a firm grip.

Aeneas returned the gesture with a nod. He was renowned throughout Troy as the second-strongest warrior after Hector, a hero in his own right, and his arrival now only further bolstered the confidence of those present.

"Aeneas," Hector continued, "what news do you bring?"

The younger man turned his attention to Priam, his expression shifting to one of serious intent. "Your Majesty," Aeneas began, "all the mercenaries who answered our call for aid have arrived. They await your command in the courtyard."

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