Achilles, Best of the Greeks (
refusetofight) wrote2022-12-11 10:51 am
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For @messageforyou
“Achilles!”
“Yes, Lord Hades.”
“There are visitors at the gate. See them to the audience chamber.” Hades sets down his quill and pushes up to his intimidating height to head to the chamber in question—an austere and drafty room reserved for private conversations with his fellow gods and artfully designed to honor xenia, while still uncomfortable enough to encourage brevity. Mortal shades and house staff are rarely allowed entry. “And send my wife along as well.”
Achilles bows and strides off to do as he’s told. After his brief infusion of Hades’ power in the arena, he can well imagine the clarity with which his master sees his realm and all that stirs within it. Particularly divine guests at the threshold of his halls, toeing the invisible boundary he placed to prevent gods from entering without his approval. (Shades and other lesser creatures can more or less come and go as they please; he could care less.)
With the grinding scrape of cold iron and stone, Achilles pushes open the House’s gate to behold ...
“Lady Athena, Lord Hermes. Please, come in. Be welcome,” he says after a very brief, shocked pause. He leans on rigid formality to hide his relief at the sight of Hermes safe and well after two months and only one brief letter. This is short lived, quickly replaced by a fresh bout of apprehension; why have he and his sister come to see their uncle?
Once they’ve been ushered to the cavernous audience chamber, Achilles finds Persephone in her garden—with Zagreus—and summons her as well. She smiles, dusts the dirt from her hands, plucks clinging leaves from her peplos and asks her son to continue weeding. Zagreus looks chagrined as he works at a particularly stubborn patch of crabgrass.
After two more short detours—one to task Dusa with preparing guest chambers, another to request food and wine from the chef—and Achilles finally positions himself outside the imposing double doors, ready to receive orders and steer away would-be eavesdroppers. All while he’s desperately straining his own ears to hear snatches of conversation.
“Yes, Lord Hades.”
“There are visitors at the gate. See them to the audience chamber.” Hades sets down his quill and pushes up to his intimidating height to head to the chamber in question—an austere and drafty room reserved for private conversations with his fellow gods and artfully designed to honor xenia, while still uncomfortable enough to encourage brevity. Mortal shades and house staff are rarely allowed entry. “And send my wife along as well.”
Achilles bows and strides off to do as he’s told. After his brief infusion of Hades’ power in the arena, he can well imagine the clarity with which his master sees his realm and all that stirs within it. Particularly divine guests at the threshold of his halls, toeing the invisible boundary he placed to prevent gods from entering without his approval. (Shades and other lesser creatures can more or less come and go as they please; he could care less.)
With the grinding scrape of cold iron and stone, Achilles pushes open the House’s gate to behold ...
“Lady Athena, Lord Hermes. Please, come in. Be welcome,” he says after a very brief, shocked pause. He leans on rigid formality to hide his relief at the sight of Hermes safe and well after two months and only one brief letter. This is short lived, quickly replaced by a fresh bout of apprehension; why have he and his sister come to see their uncle?
Once they’ve been ushered to the cavernous audience chamber, Achilles finds Persephone in her garden—with Zagreus—and summons her as well. She smiles, dusts the dirt from her hands, plucks clinging leaves from her peplos and asks her son to continue weeding. Zagreus looks chagrined as he works at a particularly stubborn patch of crabgrass.
After two more short detours—one to task Dusa with preparing guest chambers, another to request food and wine from the chef—and Achilles finally positions himself outside the imposing double doors, ready to receive orders and steer away would-be eavesdroppers. All while he’s desperately straining his own ears to hear snatches of conversation.
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It takes a massive amount of trust for people like them—gods and heroes—to relax. But it's important. Patroclus provided—still provides—that safety for him: someone with whom he can set aside his role as a hero, a demigod, a prince, a commander, the Greatest of the Greeks and simply rest. He returns to Elysium just as he would return to their shelter at Troy: he removes his armor, and lays bare his fears and uncertainty. He's often wondered if this is a heavy burden for Pat to shoulder, but now that Achilles is here, doing the same for Hermes, he knows it's no trouble to listen in sympathy and provide a warm embrace.
The chair creaks under Achilles as he draws Hermes into his lap. It's a terrible risk in his master's house, but after the two months behind them and everything that now lies ahead, he's feeling greedy. Achilles closes his eyes and ignores the tickle of feathers and the ambient hum of cosmic power—only focuses on the press of Hermes' wine-warmed cheek at his neck and the thrum of his words. Hermes may be a god, but Achilles knows there's a core of him that's imperfect and fragile. Human.
That Hermes shares such a tender part of himself is a blessing.
"Even if you were a mortal—a shepherd, an athlete, a cutpurse—I would love you just the same."
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Achilles gives Hermes' waist a teasing squeeze, then turns his head to collect a kiss. After he's enjoyed the taste of wine on Hermes' lips, he withdraws, and says with a weak smile: "My novelty will wear thin before a century's passed. Your eternity takes you anywhere you desire. Mine is bound to the Underworld. It changes very little—and slowly, at that—and leaves me little to discuss besides my duties."
A hand moves to Hermes' chest, tracing the loop of his necklace and each of the charms strung along it. There's no jealousy or resentment in his voice when he says, "You'll find other lovers in a hundred years' time."
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But he sees how Hermes took his words. Achilles wraps both arms around him reassuringly and he tries to explain himself. "I was only granting you permission to see less of me, or to move on someday if you wish. I'll be sad, but I won't be hurt. I'll always treasure the time we've shared and what you've taught me."
He presses his nose to Hermes' and gives him a pointed look. "And if you never tire of seeing me, rest assured I will always be happy to see you."
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"My father used to say the same. Time moves faster the more years you have behind you." He looks up at the vaulting ceiling, still discolored with water stains and rushed patch jobs from the downpour months back. "I must at least be as old as he was when he told me that. Approaching sixty? Thereabouts?"
It was hard to tell with the former Argonaut. He was a sturdy, lively man, but still scarred and weathered by voyages and warring. Achilles suffers a brief pang of sadness at the thought of him.
"Maybe Lord Hades and Lady Persephone will have another child to tutor. Or Zagreus will have his own." Achilles shifts his posture, as one might when he's given up hope of moving from underneath a well-settled cat. "In the meantime, I'll take you up on your offer. I've need of a lyre ... or whatever curious things you come across. So long as they aren't obvious contraband."
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Of course, all of these possible futures hinge on Hermes' success in the short term; if he fails to oust Zeus, it could all be reduced to wishful thinking. But there's no harm in optimism; Achilles hopes this happy talk will help steel Hermes' resolve and improve his chances against his father.
Achilles' shifting jostles the table and he realizes they've totally ignored Dusa's request; the food still sits mostly untouched. Looking at it, what's there shows the head chef has learned about Hermes' sweet tooth: there are honeyed cakes topped with pomegranate seeds, dates stuffed with goat cheese, and fried dough sprinkled with chopped pistachios, to name a few.
He plucks one of the cakes from the spread and offers it to Hermes. "With all the new ingredients from the surface, the chef has never been happier. The only challenge is that surface food doesn't keep as well in the Underworld.
"The queen is experimenting in her garden, though—trying to acclimate plants." He frowns. "The results can be strange. I brought her water from the Lethe to cultivate a crop of tomatoes. When I tried one, it was uncanny ... The next hour felt as if I'd lived it all before." Déjà vu, the feeling might be called one day.
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His sister must be somewhere else in the palace, sampling a tray of food specially selected for a refined palate. Achilles imagines her seated prim and restrained like the patient herons she uses as her messengers.
"You can guess how your uncle agonizes over visions of that exact scenario. If Persephone and Zagreus didn't stand in his way, you'd be served Stygian water and half-stale bread. Maybe a bit of cold barley porridge if you're lucky."
For the most part, Achilles doesn't mind the thought of more Olympian visits. It might break up the monotony. There are a few exceptions, of course. He could do without Zeus or Ares, and Apollo is a definite maybe.
But he can see why Hermes might like to keep the Underworld free of his family; it's a place he can escape to for some respite. Still, Achilles takes the chance to tease him with a wink: "I thought you liked a bit of healthy competition?"
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He steals Hermes' abandoned cup, refills it, and helps himself to a sip. He visibly grimaces, not at the taste, but because his thoughts linger too long on sleeping with the likes of Ares. How miserable. Especially if he shares glimpses into his domain like Hermes does. "I suppose if I ever want the very worst sex of my life—or death—I'll seek out Ares."
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No, worse than that: a dead mortal. One who can't even champion Hermes' divinity through great feats or stately temples or lavish sacrifices. Achilles genuinely believes Hermes has nothing to fear from the other Olympians; what could they stand to gain from a dalliance—or even friendship—with a hero's shade? At most, he's a diverting novelty or a passing topic at a feast.
But here is Hermes, always returning like a happy bird to a familiar roost with no expectations besides companionship and intimacy. What a strange and wonderful thing, Achilles thinks. Something he never would have anticipated. A fresh upswell of affection glints in his eyes and he wraps Hermes in an almost painfully tight embrace. "Make no mistake: I'm grateful to have you. And for all of your surpassing kindness."
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"You're not the angry sort. I know it well. I wouldn't be here if you were." He'd never put Pat in harm's way (again) by taking up with a jealous, vindictive god, nor would he ever risk bringing messy conflict to his master's house.
Achilles head tilts a few degrees at Hermes' change of tone, and his own smile flattens to match. "Of course." His fond embrace relaxes, fingers laced loosely at the small of Hermes' back. "What is it?"
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"Hermes—" is all Achilles manages to say edgewise before the god launches into his usual, frustrating appeal to his better judgement: if Achilles is punished as a traitor, Zagreus could suffer without guidance, Patroclus would languish without his other half—everyone else he cares about and who cares for him stands to lose in some way.
What's more, if Zeus crushes this uprising, many of their allies will disappear with it. Hermes, of course. Athena. Maybe even Poseidon. Anyone left won't have the power, or won't risk suffering the same fate as their brethren. Zeus will become even more vigilant and vicious. Who could Achilles appeal to? Hephaestus? Apollo? Would he defy his father for his beloved younger brother?
The hero's head hangs in thought, the thumbs of his clasped hands strumming at the bands of Hermes' belt. Even if Achilles was in a position to try, he doesn't have a fraction of Hermes' sway over Olympian matters ...
But a shade does have an eternity to stubbornly wait and strike when he spies an opening.
"I can't promise inaction," he finally says with a deep heaviness. He can't bring himself to meet Hermes' eyes. "But I promise that I won't allow rage and grief to make a fool of me."
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Just as they did before.
But all this talk ignites that very same pride; his voice grows hushed and vehement, and his hands grip into fists around the folds of Hermes' tunic. "What is the point of survival, if it's only to spend one's existence with a bowed head—standing by like a coward as others suffer under the whims of a tyrant?"
He shakes his head grimly, twisting his curls. "That is why I can't promise more, Hermes. To do so would mean surrender."
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For a time, Achilles thought that the last of his heroism had drained with his lifeblood. His grief was so great that he welcomed death and its numb rest. But only the anxiety over his own legend, all of his greed and selfish pride had been purged, not his drive to action. His service to the House of Hades infused him with a new, durable sense of purpose.
"On my honor, I promise you that I will act with care. I won't waste any chance I have to set things right." He moves a hand to hook around the back of Hermes' neck, heavy and beseeching. "And you—promise me the same."
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"The future we've dreamed up today—hold it close." Achilles tugs him in tight for another kiss, fingers buried in the back of his hair, and an arm firm around his waist. This time he imagines the relief of a triumphant return from a battle decisively won, then parts his lips enough to breathe, "Listen for my prayers."
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*groggily emerges from the maw of the holidays*
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