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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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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But Achilles thinks of inopportune knocks at the door or listening ears and forces himself to stop. He blinks and swallows back his desire.
It will have to wait. Achilles releases a long exhale and straightens the hem of Hermes' tunic with a weary smile. "When next we meet."
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He finds Hermes' neglected cup and tops it off from the amphora, stealing another sip before passing it along.
"It doesn't take much to please the chthonic natives, but the chef frets about impressing Olympians with only the best surface food." Achilles peers at the non-sweet offerings and helps himself to a tiny round of bread heaped high with mushrooms and—
The Greatest of the Greeks suddenly wrinkles his nose in clear revulsion. He quickly offers the morsel to Hermes instead, pinching it between thumb and index finger like something dredged from the bottom of a satyr's sack.
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He only turns back when Hermes tucks into the sweets. Achilles thinks of the dream and the tiny hummingbird asleep in his palms. His smile returns and he pinches a stray pomegranate seed from the platter, rolling it between his fingers before popping it in his mouth. "The chef will be pleased to hear your praise."
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"Do you know how many people have told me exactly that while they pushed every fiendish kind of onion on me?" Red, white, yellow, green. Pickled, caramelized, roasted, stewed.
He pops an olive in his mouth, deliciously salty with brine. "It was testament to Pat's devotion that, from the time we were boys, he ate every last onion that tried to spoil my food."
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"Don't invoke such horrors under this roof, lest your uncle take note," he says, giving Hermes' leg a chiding kick. But the talk of such dismal mortal societies brings with it another thought. "Aside from those doomed to eat onion soup, how is the surface?"
Achilles rolls another fig between his palms, and his fleeting silliness gives way to his usual sober tone. "The mortal world suffered while you slept. Have you been able to help them? Or would that risk your father's notice?"
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"All the more reason to end this quickly and as peaceably as you can." Achilles grasps Hermes' hand, turning it so he can twine their fingers.
"Our happiness together is but a small prize in all of this." He knows how much Hermes cares for humans, but as a man who suffered in part from the bickering of gods, he can't help but say it aloud: "Mortals have but one short life, and it's much too precious to be spent steeped in such discord."
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Hermes is right: Achilles isn't as cunning as brilliant Odysseus. Trickery isn't in his arsenal, and so it feels like he's watching Hermes go off to battle with nothing but a dagger in hand. A very sharp dagger, yes, but one he needs to get dangerously close to use on a very small opening in Zeus' metaphorical armor. And if he misses his mark ...
But this is Hermes. If anyone can wield that weapon effectively, it's him.
Some of the tense concern in Achilles' smile relaxes. "No, you won't fail. That clever mind has saved you before, and it will save you yet again. I know it."
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He runs his tongue over his teeth and a hand over his mouth to catch any stray crumbs or fig juice. Despite this care, however, he still misses one tiny, orange down feather clinging like an ember in his curls.
He positions himself by the door—face stoic, posture vigilant—and awaits the goddess' knock.
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"Of course, Lady Athena." He's in the middle of rising from a deferential bow when he catches her chilling expression. From eyes like hers, Achilles has no choice but to freeze in place like a shew under the shadow of a stooping owl. So he stays when she approaches, and when the tiny feather comes into view, pinched between her fingers.
The tone in her voice and her frigid scrutiny are somehow magnitudes worse than Apollo's blindingly bright rage. Achilles' mind scrambles for some kind of excuse, but even if he grasped one, he could never hope to speak it convincingly. Nor could he bring himself to lie to the goddess who granted him so much favor in life.
He wishes Chaos would generously open a portal beneath him so he might plummet into the endless, primordial void. But Chaos is not so charitable today and leaves Achilles to his struggle.
"My lady, I—" is all he manages to stammer before he hazards a glance at Hermes. He's the one with the silver tongue and no compunctions about lying.
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"No, Lady Athena, it's not unwelcome in the least," he replies, glad that he can say this with all honest confidence. He allows himself a modest smile and a polite nod to Hermes. "It's a great relief to see your brother well after his long absence."
Does Athena know his part in waking Hermes? Achilles has no clue. If she does, it would be up to certain of her siblings or Hermes himself to tell her. If she does know, will she begin to wonder? It would mark the second time Achilles has gone out of his way to help her brother.
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*groggily emerges from the maw of the holidays*
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