little Nemesis,” Gaia said, but not to Diana.
Would Diana once again let herself be swept along in the wake of an evil person, first with Caine, now with Gaia? Was impotent snark all that Diana had to offer in opposition?
During her abbreviated pregnancy she had allowed herself to fantasize about being a mother, a better mother than her own. She’d pictured herself becoming a good person. She could do that, she’d told herself. She didn’t always have to go on being what she had been and what she had become.
She could have been saved.
“The end is the best part of any story,” Gaia whispered, talking to no one that Diana could see. “The end.”
Diana had imagined redemption, forgiveness, a new beginning as a young mother.
But she was mother to a monster who cared nothing for her.
“I don’t make good choices,” Diana whispered as she lay down in the dirt and wrapped her arms tightly for warmth.
“What,” Gaia snapped, looking up at her.
“Eh,” Diana said with a sigh. “Nothing.”
Little Pete was getting littler. That’s how it felt, anyway. He could feel himself sort of shrinking, and he wasn’t so sure it felt bad. Maybe it was a relief.
Life had always been strange and disturbing for Peter Ellison. From the moment of his birth the world had attacked him with noise and light and scraping touch. A