Achilles, Best of the Greeks (
refusetofight) wrote2024-10-08 06:59 pm
For @messageforyou
The palace at Skyros is only a loose sketch; Achilles dreaming memory can only paint it in sparing detail after so many years. The shapes and colors describe the place as much as Achilles’ emotions: The palace itself is washed out and bland, but the sunny rocks, the glittering sea, and the endless horizon just beyond are vibrant, tantalizing with the lure of fateful heroism.
It felt like a prison after the freedom of his bright, sunny youth on Phthia and his adventures on Mount Pelion. He was bored, impatient, but respected his mother’s wishes even as he resented them.
The dream palace is hollow and quiet. Lycomedes’ table is empty. His daughters’ looms are left abandoned. Achilles imagines the real Skyros must be in the same sorry state; he left Deidamia unwed and Lycomedes had no sons to defend his meager kingdom.
Achilles walks the halls and thumbs the shells encircling his wrist. He has no dream guide this time, but he came here on his own instincts: visit a memory both he and Pyrrhus share. Eventually, he finds an abandoned lyre and settles to play in a central courtyard where plucked notes echo hauntingly between colonnades—the only sound in the palace other than the sigh of the sea.
It felt like a prison after the freedom of his bright, sunny youth on Phthia and his adventures on Mount Pelion. He was bored, impatient, but respected his mother’s wishes even as he resented them.
The dream palace is hollow and quiet. Lycomedes’ table is empty. His daughters’ looms are left abandoned. Achilles imagines the real Skyros must be in the same sorry state; he left Deidamia unwed and Lycomedes had no sons to defend his meager kingdom.
Achilles walks the halls and thumbs the shells encircling his wrist. He has no dream guide this time, but he came here on his own instincts: visit a memory both he and Pyrrhus share. Eventually, he finds an abandoned lyre and settles to play in a central courtyard where plucked notes echo hauntingly between colonnades—the only sound in the palace other than the sigh of the sea.

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“He—Prince Zagreus—has used those feet as an effective weapon, yes. If I were not a shade, the consequences of a kick might have been more dire. But you asked for amusing … hm.”
Achilles rifles through his memories to find something that won’t land him in too much trouble, but might still set Pyrrhus at ease. “One of the gods—I’ll not say who—once showed me what dogs will look like hundreds of years hence.”
The fluffy cloud defies description, so Achilles invokes the memory for Pyrrhus, careful to scrub it of any hint of Apollo. “Suffice to say, gods do not always shift their shape into noble creatures.”
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The absurd canine wiggles a tail somewhere under its fluff and gives Pyrrhus’ hand a sniff before giving into excited licking with its tiny tongue. “I was just as shocked, but humans will breed dogs again and again until they look this way, or so I’m told.”
Achilles shrugs. “As to why, I can’t begin to guess. The sorry thing couldn’t hunt anything bigger than a field mouse and could never hope to protect a flock from wolves.”
Even in his memory, the dog manages to look annoyed at this accusation. “Maybe they’re made to be companions for women and children,” he offers charitably.
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The fluffy cloud flops on its back, pedaling its legs in the air in a bid for belly rubs. Achilles’ memory is heavily modified for Pyrrhus’ benefit—Apollo would never sink to this level of adorable performance.
“What else can I say about the gods?” Achilles muses, before offering some harmless tidbits: “Lord Hermes’ wings are actually attached—not part of his hat or sandals. Lady Aphrodite prefers to go about completely unclothed. The twin sons of Lady Nyx, Sleep and Death, couldn’t be more different in demeanor. The former is a bit of a jester, the latter is reserved and serious.”
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“Other gods …” Achilles hums, mentally leafing through his codex. “I must say, many of them have wings. Like Hermes, Atlas is said to have had feathered wings upon his head, but they were ripped away. Eris, goddess of strife, has a full pair upon her back. The Furies have wings as well, though they resemble a bat’s …”
The happy cloud abruptly rolls back upright to paw at Pyrrhus’ legs. It’s officially lap time and the dog isn’t about to take no for an answer. Achilles watches his son’s enjoyment and imagines a different life. One where he gave Pyrrhus his choice of pups from a litter to raise, perhaps with Pat’s help. In that life, Pyrrhus would have no lack of friends, furry and otherwise. “Will you see to it that Molossus gets an animal companion?”
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He crosses his arms and listens to Pyrrhus’ reservations about allowing Molossus the joy of a pet. His mind wanders again to Patroclus and his treasured mutts. Pat kept adorable, rambunctious pups from time to time, but one of Achilles’ favorites was a much older dog. It was about as heavy as a boulder and just as lazy. It liked nothing better than to sit at his feet by the fire, brown eyes still vigilant. The only sound it made was a low groan when it sank down to sleep and soft snores thereafter.
“You need not get him a young pup. Find him an old, patient mutt. It’s not as likely to get up to mischief or be overly-loud, and could very well protect Molossus from harm.” It could certainly kill any intruding snakes.
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“My dear lad,” Achilles sighs. He fully understands this protective instinct. “If you shield Molossus from all pain and loss, you deny him the chance to love.”
He gives the happy cloud a soft smile and an appreciative pat. It gives him some comfort to pretend this is Hermes in disguise. “A dog gives him a safe loss to face. One you can help him navigate.”
He finds Pyrrhus’ eyes. Now it’s easier to see glimmers of the boy and the young warrior within them. “Do you remember when you first experienced grief? Was anyone there for you?”
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“You learned to survive, but you still hesitate to live, lad.” He rises to his feet, gently patting Pyrrhus’ hair as he does. The dog offers its own comfort: nuzzling and licking the boy’s face. Achilles continues: “Living means accepting that there will be moments of peace and happiness, struggle and pain. You will never truly know which lies over the horizon.”
He places himself between Neoptolemus and the king. “There is precious little you—or any mortal—can control. But you can decide what sort of childhood you give Molossus.”
Achilles’ gaze flicks back to Pyrrhus, clinging to the happy cloud, then back to the king. “This is your decision, but while you still live, I hope you’ll consider giving him what I could never give you. Do not go to the Underworld burdened with regrets.”
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“Stand down, boy. His quarrel is with me.” And the king is right—Pyrrhus and Neoptolemus were abandoned and betrayed by his choices. Achilles made the king in the first place, and he faces him accordingly. “You’re correct. I made a choice. I chose the glory of war. I chose my devotion to a lover. I don’t deny it.”
He spreads his arms in invitation. “I am not a perfect man or a worthy father. Strike me, break my bones, rend my flesh to pieces, but please. Please. Stop hurting yourself. You are not to blame.”
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“Of course,” he breathes, an edge of exasperation creeping into his tone. “Beyond a doubt, you already far surpass me as a father. You’re present for Molossus—you know him well and you keep him happy and safe.”
Of that he’s genuinely proud. If Pyrrhus is overprotective of his son, that’s not a bad outcome at all. “Decisions about his upbringing—and your own life—are entirely yours to make.”
He gestures broadly in the direction Pyrrhus and Neoptolemus disappeared. “It’s not my desire to cause you more suffering than I already have.”
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Achilles steps closer, reaches out to wipe a streak of blood from the king’s face. If the wolf lashes out, so be it. Achilles made this wolf, after all, and he serves to be bitten.
“My desire is to know you. And that you may know me in turn.” He’s already taken it, hasn’t he? Achilles never asked if Pyrrhus wanted to know him. He only assumed their reunion was necessary and—hopefully—positive.
But Pyrrhus figured out a way to survive without him. He kept this delicate balance between three disparate parts and Achilles carelessly upended it all.
“Would you rather I never visited you?” he asks gently.
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Achilles takes stock of the dream wounds inflicted by the king’s younger self and winces. He was raised on his father’s embraces, his scratchy kisses on his forehead, his calloused hand ruffling his curls. Achilles shows affection through touch, and it pains him to see his son recoil from it.
“Remain wary if you must, but I’ve no desire to break you.” He extends a hand again, inviting. “I want to see you whole. Loving, ferocious, tender and steady in equal parts.”
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He presses his palm to the ground and slides it over the sand until his fingertips are only a few inches from the king’s own. “I’m grateful you’ve given me a chance at all. I know it’s your duty to protect them.”
His fingers flex against the sand, gripping into it like he wishes to grasp the king’s hand. “You are my son, Pyrrhus. You’re a better man than I imagined. Flawed, yes, but so am I. So is every man. I’ve no reason to leave you.“
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