refusetofight: (At peace)
Achilles, Best of the Greeks ([personal profile] 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.
messageforyou: (Lotta side eye)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-11-27 06:02 pm (UTC)(link)
The king watches the hand in the sand. He doesn't withdraw, but he doesn't reach for it, either. Having this conversation is progress, but he's not yet willing to let his guard down entirely.

"I gave you no reason to leave me the first time," the king says. Hazy memories swim around them, the memory of holding Pergamus, Amphialus, Molossus the first time, the smell of newborn on their skin and tiny fingers still wrinkled. His love for them was instant, and he couldn't fathom leaving them. Why could his own father? "You left for other people, and for other pursuits. Why should I trust you won't again?"

If it was so easy to prioritize lovers and glory over a newborn, the king sees no reason why it wouldn't be equally easy to do so once more over a grown man. If another lover catches his fancy, will he stop spending time with his son? If the gods offer him some new work in the underworld for renown, will he forget about Pyrrhus once more?
messageforyou: (Little side eye)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-11-28 07:35 am (UTC)(link)
The king purses his lips, difficult to read as he takes in the memory of his own father holding him for the first time. He sees that his father didn't have the same experience, didn't have the same feelings, but he still doesn't understand. Why? Did Lady Hera just not touch him like she touched his sons? He hardly thinks he was ready when he had Pergamus, and he wasn't a good father to his eldest son. But he doesn't understand why Achilles had such a different experience than he did.

But perhaps he's not meant to understand. Maybe it was the machinations of the gods. Maybe Lady Hera wasn't paying attention that day, and gave all the love a parent would have for a child to Deidamia and missed Achilles. Maybe Achilles was never meant to be a father. Maybe something about Pyrrhus was inherently unlikable even then.

But the touch makes the king flinch and turn his attention back to his father's hand. The ring catches his attention. Perhaps the dream is making it more glamorous, but it's the finest work he's ever seen on a ring. If he didn't know better, he'd say it was just as fine as the armor Hephaestus had bestowed upon Achilles (and Odysseus then took). And there's something familiar about it, something that tickles the back of the king's mind, but either way it's unmistakably a lover's token of some kind. And certainly not a lover's token he had in life, because a ring so specific would have been spoken of when the Greeks discussed the division of his father's assets.

"Hmm." The king takes his father's hand, but rather than giving it an affectionate squeeze, he critically examines the ring on the finger before flicking his eyes to skeptically meet his father's. "No such distractions, indeed."

If Achilles cared more about being with a lover than his son once, the king sees no reason to believe he won't again.
messageforyou: (Suggestion of sorrow)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-11-29 06:50 am (UTC)(link)
The king hums noncommittally, skeptical, though exactly what he's skeptical of is unclear. That Achilles can have two lovers he cherishes and remains committed to? That having them won't change his dedication to his son?

This particular distraction helped me find you. The king cocks his head, narrowing his eyes at the ring. The dream twists with his hazy memories of the night Achilles visited, painstakingly committed to memory with stylus and wax. The whole had worked very hard to write everything down as soon as he could before it all slipped through his fingers. But one part of the memory stands out, something he didn't need to write down. He remembers the face of the man who was with Achilles. He doesn't remember his name, but he remembers his face, his own deduction that he was some kind of god, and the strange way his presence seemed to settle on his mind like a blanket, simultaneously comforting and suffocating. The different pieces feel different things about the man--Pyrrhus grateful, Neoptolemus curious--but the king feels skittish, unsure of how to approach such a potentially powerful wildcard.

"The man who was with you. The one who gave me gifts." He says it as if a fact. There isn't the same resentment he feels for Patroclus--as far as the king knows, Patroclus is the only lover who his father cared so much more about joining in death than returning to his devoted son in life--but there's wariness. He'd eat his sandals if this mystery man isn't a god, and the king doesn't know how to proceed when faced with someone who could probably crush him without a thought. "Who is he really?"
messageforyou: (!!??)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-11-30 06:36 pm (UTC)(link)
The king's suspicious expression breaks with genuine surprise for a moment. He wasn't exactly sure what he expected, but an Olympian wasn't it. For some reason, that dulls the trill of skittish nerves around the image of the stranger's face--if he's an Olympian, he can destroy anyone he wants with a flick of the fingers, and there's nothing a mortal can do about it. Might as well just accept it and try not to piss him off.

"Lord Hermes?" the king isn't very good at keeping his hackles up when he's surprised like this. There's curiosity, curiosity inherent in each piece of the whole but that has been kept hidden due to early lessons of how adults responded to his childhood curiosity.

"How did that happen? I thought he only delivered shades to the Underworld, not spend time with them." And the stories always make Hermes seem busy. Or maybe this is a distraction for him, something to keep him occupied in between tasks, and he's assisting Achilles with his son as a boon for a pampered lover. It seems like the sort of favor a god might do on a whim, if they happen to like a favored mortal enough.

The memories buzz. He doesn't remember the exact words said, but he remembers that Queen Medea recognized the stranger just as much as she recognized Achilles, and the stranger had bowed to her. The image plays over the dream, the stranger bowing with a smile, the vaguest suggestion of wings about his head as the king adjusts the memory according to his new knowledge. It's odd to think of an Olympian bowing to a mortal queen, but maybe it's the sort of thing that comes easy when one's authority is so absolute that not even pretending at subservience challenges it.
messageforyou: (Uh...?)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-01 04:18 am (UTC)(link)
The king sits back, eyebrows almost disappearing in his hairline. "Huh. I would never have guessed."

Although he supposes it makes sense. Hermes is one of the few gods that accesses the Underworld regularly, and a hero of legend fits neatly into the usual profile of a god's chosen lover. And the affair only beginning after Achilles died would explain why no one's ever heard anything about it.

There isn't the same resentment for Hermes as a lover as there is for Patroclus--not only does the painful history not exist there, but Pyrrhus' vague notion of gods being separate from humans and thus incapable of really stealing their affection plays in Achilles' favor, just as it did with Zagreus. If something is to be denied to a mortal, it's only an honor for it to be given to a god instead.

"...We're sure he doesn't want me to build a temple in his honor or something?"

Giving up Andromache's companionship seemed like a worthy sacrifice for what he was given--she seemed to be the person with the least power who he could do the most good by. But his wariness of offending an Olympian has him skeptical that even that is enough.
messageforyou: (Divine tenderness)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-01 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
The king frowns thoughtfully, his brow furrowing. Already, wrinkles are beginning to form between his brows, showing how often and hard he makes the expression.

"Noted."

A wax tablet and stylus appear out of nowhere, writing without assistance. This seems like important information, after all. The king would prefer they didn't do something to give an Olympian cause to disintegrate them and their family. Though luckily, the stories don't paint Hermes as one of the more temperamental gods.

The king seems to realize suddenly that they're still holding hands. He turns the hand in his, frowning at the ring. Then, he releases it, withdrawing into himself again, crossing his arms and staring out at the dream contemplatively.

"You said that your lovers don't change your dedication to me." The king narrows his eyes again, looking back at Achilles. "But they already did. You cared more about joining your lover in death than returning to your son in life. Why should I believe it's any different now? Why should I believe you'd ever put me first, when I wasn't even a consideration when I needed you the most?"

There's so much suppressed pain in that question. Pain that ripples out, reforming the hazy memory of kneeling at his father's tomb, at tracing his fingers along the letters of his father's name and barely even recognizing the name next to it. The boy about to go to war pressing his forehead against the stone of the tomb, wondering if his father could see him now, and wondering if he would have been proud. The feeling of his heart being ripped out of his chest. He twisted himself into knots, telling himself that his father simply had to go, simply had to die, because acknowledging the choice he made to leave his son behind was just too painful for him to handle. Because if he acknowledged the truth, it'd only be the final jewel in the crown of his self-image as inherently unlikable, inherently incapable of being loved or cared for by anyone other than his own mother, because not even his father saw something worth living for in him.

But the king handles it. The king sits in the back of their mind, holding onto all the painful truths, keeping them locked tight where they can't break the whole beyond repair. And now what is there to stop Achilles from ripping that lock apart and leaving them to fight for their life against despair once more?
messageforyou: (Lotta side eye)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-02 07:20 am (UTC)(link)
The king's suspicions indeed are as solid as the walls of Troy. They've been built and shored up ever since he set foot on the sands of battle, and the whole wouldn't have lasted this long if the king weren't keeping vulnerabilities closely guarded.

He huffs. He pulls at the hem of his cloak, his brow furrowed and his lips pursed.

"Fatherhood is easy, you know, when someone else has already done all the work." He pulls more at the cloak, but the memories around them churn. Half-remembered moments of bratty misbehavior from himself and from Molossus when they were the same age. Molossus flopping on his back and bellowing that he hates his father because the whole insisted on his son taking a bath. The whole loves his son, but Molossus is four and mulish and can cry and howl his hatred in the most painful way when he's doing the grueling work of fatherhood. "And it's even easier when you can come and go as you please, and you don't have to be there for the day to day."

Achilles can stop coming whenever he wants. Take a break, get caught up in some distraction in the Underworld, and then deign to show up weeks later to catch up. That's the privilege of adult children. That's the privilege of being so far beyond a child's reach that one can wholly control the contact.

The king looks at Achilles through the corner of his eye, hackles still up.

"But we still want a father. And I suppose you've come around to wanting a son." The king draws up his knees and hugs them, looking distantly at the swirl of memories and not at Achilles. "I'll give you one chance. Don't fuck it up."
messageforyou: (Tender affection)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-03 06:00 am (UTC)(link)
There's a memory. One that's connected in the king's mind without any intervention from Hermes' gift. Long, long ago, long enough that he doesn't even remember how old he was, and he doesn't know why he was so angry, but he was so upset that he dared yell at his mother that he hated her and she was the worst mother ever. He remembers vividly the vision of his mother taking a sharp breath, her eyes immediately turning red and wet. And he remembers the way his stomach dropped through the floor, the regret so deep that he couldn't speak, and all he could do was start to cry and throw his arms around his mother's leg while pleading that he didn't mean it, he was sorry, please don't cry Mummy.

He remembers the way she kissed his head. The relief of his mother forgiving him for being a child, of knowing she loved him even when he wasn't likable.

The king doesn't lean into Achilles' touch, but he doesn't flinch away this time, either. Instead, he just closes his eyes, sighing through his nose.

And then the pieces knit together again. The boy and warrior filtering back in, and suddenly it's the whole there, and the fluffy dog is in his lap again.

The whole leans against Achilles, and it's unclear if he's entirely aware of the conversation one third of him just had with his father.

"I don't suppose you know if the gods are willing to take requests for animals in Elysium?" he says dryly, scratching the dog's ears. "I think I see the charm in this one."
messageforyou: (Snuggle the scarf)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-05 05:52 am (UTC)(link)
Pyrrhus' lips curve upward in a soft smile as his father kisses his head. There's distant memories of his mother doing the same, distant memories of doing the same himself to his own sons. Even Amphialus, so weak on his chest, he showered with kisses like he could kiss his son into health.

"I'd like that," he murmurs, smiling at how the pup delights in the combined attention of himself and his father. "I see why humans would make a little creature like this. It's like a toy that can love you as much as you love it."

And maybe that's just as valuable as a companion that hunts and guards. Humans need to love, and to be loved in turn. And the love between human and animal is so much less complicated than the love between humans.

"Besides, a fearsome warrior has no need for a fearsome dog," he says, affectionately tapping on the dog's paws, squishing the pads so the dog's toes stretch reflexively. "I can be fearsome enough for both of us."
messageforyou: (Tender affection)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-07 06:53 am (UTC)(link)
Pyrrhus leans into his father's weight, the soft smile growing deeper in his face. He moves on from squishing the dog's paws to gently resting his hands on its belly.

"Thank you for coming back," he says, soft and sincere. His eyes flick to his father's face, then back down at the dog. There's a flicker of playfulness. "Or maybe I should save my thanking for Lord Hermes."

He smooths the dog's ears back, watching them spring back to place. "I do feel I owe him a debt of gratitude, though. If he doesn't want a temple, perhaps he'll appreciate what's coming for Epirus. Ophelia has many ideas--she honestly seems more suited to governing than I am."

There's warm respect there. A distant memory of Ophelia's eyes lighting up as she pointed out all the different trade routes that pass through Epirus. Excitedly explaining how necessary passage through it was for any merchant hoping to go in either direction, with no easy way to circumvent it. You can leverage this. If you built roads for them to use and set up guards to keep them safe, you could ask a toll to maintain the service, and you could use the money you raise from that to build a school for children. The cities in Persia that use their retired soldiers to educate the public's children about letters and numbers are leagues ahead of the cities that neglect education, and if you teach more children how to write and handle arithmetic, you soon will have a reliable class of people who can maintain more thorough records of the trade...

It was all a little over Pyrrhus' head, but he was struck by her confidence and easy mastery of a topic that seemed impossibly complicated. She rarely spoke out of turn when her father was around, but when her father was gone, she was like a flame held between two hands--no matter how much the world tried, her brilliance spilled out from between the cracks.

Pyrrhus' smile falters a moment. "Lord Hermes wouldn't object if it were a woman managing trade and commerce, would he?"
messageforyou: (Divine tenderness)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-08 10:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Pyrrhus isn't threatened by Ophelia's brand of assertiveness. She's careful about appearances, careful about being reserved and cautious in mixed company. It was only when they were alone when she asked him why he didn't take more advantage of Epirus' position in the trade network, and only after he asked what she would do that she lit up and explained her plans. She's like him--she understands how important it is to perform the role of a man or woman in front of others, even if one doesn't always perfectly fit the role. It's only with trust and privacy that one can be more true to themselves.

"I don't imagine she'd be public about her role even if I allowed it," Pyrrhus says, remembering her father, piggish and self-indulgent and foolish. The memory seems to come with an internal reminder that he can't just kill the man. He has to keep reminding himself of that. "She's well acquainted with the egos of men. And I'm well acquainted with masking who runs what in my household."

More memories. Korinna pulling on her ears compulsively as she stares at a diagram she's drawn in chalk for how best to organize his agricultural land, mumbling about the placement of rivers and sunlight and labor and how it should affect what goes where. Agricultural planning goes over his head just as thoroughly as trade and mercantile policy, so he just tells Korinna to make a plan she thinks is best and tell the farmers he made it and orders them to follow it. Aspasia prowling the grounds, supervising the slaves like a hound watching a flock, managing the labor and cleaning and even the discipline without bothering him about it because he's already told her he trusts her to maintain order in the house. Lykos compiling the notes he makes during important conversations, keeping track of the needs and desires of different important families far more thoroughly than Pyrrhus ever could, and knowing how to pull up his notes and remind Pyrrhus of everything about a family before a new meeting.

Pyrrhus' cheeks color. His eyes lower in shame, his shoulders hunching.

"There are a lot of things I'm not good at," he confesses. "I've learned to delegate."

And he's embarrassed admitting it to his father. Embarrassed that he can't manage his own slaves, manage his own land, manage his own citizens, manage his own governance. Sometimes he wonders if he's really a king if he can't do any of those things. And the last person he wants to admit all this to is his father.
messageforyou: (Curious and wreathed in orange)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-09 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
His brow raises in surprise, then creases with skepticism. He's not so sure he believes that part of being a good king is finding and accepting the knowledge of those who know more than himself. Perhaps either of his grandfathers could have given him more guidance, but both held him at arm's length, and he wasn't invited into the room to listen when either of them spoke to advisors.

Advisors? He supposes these people are indeed his advisors. Not scholars hand-picked from the citizenry, but former slaves and merchant daughters. But then again, he's never really gotten along with his social peers, and these people who are supposed to be beneath him seem to be much more reliable and worthy company anyway.

He leans into his father's affection, but he's still a little skeptical. "Lord Hades has advisors? Who would he trust to act on his behalf?" He tries to search his memory for stories of people who work with Lord Hades, but the god of the Underworld isn't commonly spoken of by the living, and Pyrrhus' mediocre education didn't give him much more information than the basics.
messageforyou: (Paternal look)

[personal profile] messageforyou 2024-12-09 04:53 am (UTC)(link)
Pyrrhus grunts in acknowledgement, his brow furrowing further in thought. There's a tug in the dream, cognitive dissonance tangling his reaction. He'd always fantasized about having his father's approval, but when faced with it, he realizes he'd never expected his actions in adulthood to really gain that approval. If anything would please the mythic Achilles, it'd be the sacking of Troy and the conquering of Epirus. And yet it seems that those are the least interesting things to his father, and he's most pleased by the things Pyrrhus most hides from others.

This feels like something he'll have to meditate over with his wax tablets. He has feelings about it. Mostly good feelings. But feelings that are hard to identify and put into words without quiet and a record in wax.

"You would find Korinna interesting. Everyone does. She seems slow in every respect on first impression, but she's brilliant. She was born a slave, but she can do complex arithmetic in her head that I can barely do on a tablet."

More memories. Korinna likes to pull her ears and walk in circles and mumble to herself when she's thinking, and despises making eye contact even when speaking directly to someone. Aspasia had been ready to discipline the behavior out of her, but the odd habits don't bother Pyrrhus so long as Korinna doesn't do it with company, and Aspasia never assigns her to attend to guests anyway. And her little compulsions seem to help her think, and Pyrrhus is hardly suited to deny someone an oddity that helps them think.

"Did you ever think about what it'd be like to be a king?" Pyrrhus asks softly, finding himself curious about what his father would have imagined for his own future, knowing how likely it was that he'd barely have one.

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