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.

no subject
By contrast, Pyrrhus’ experience with love is brittle and sharp. Wounding. Yet he’s not so scarred and thickly calloused that he doesn’t still reach for it, doesn’t still give it in his own way. To Ophelia, Molossus, the servants of his house … his long-absent father.
Achilles hums at Pyrrhus’ answer. “Wise.”
He looks out toward the shimmering dream horizon and nods in approval. “Cultivate what you have. Leave Molossus and your people a prosperous kingdom. That is a worthy goal to my eyes. One I’m positive you’ll achieve—if you haven’t already.”
no subject
The mention of Menelaus draws his face into a grimace. If he met the man again, he’d be equally moved to violence.
“It pleases me that my blood is no longer entangled with that cursed house.” Achilles finds his jaw clenching in a passing swell of anger. He and his love are dead. His son is broken. “They took far too much from us.”
He grips Pyrrhus’ arm, firm and encouraging. “Show them the son of Achilles can live well without their favor.”
no subject
“Mmmm. Yes, a girl would be best.” Sons risk quarrels that sow rifts in families—especially with Molossus born of a concubine and any future boy born of Pyrrhus’ chosen queen. The latter could have a stronger claim to legitimacy.
Girls can be trouble, too, he wants to caution, but immediately thinks better of it. There’s nothing to suggest he has experience with daughters. Instead, he smiles and thinks of his own hopes for Lyra: “I’ve no doubt Ophelia would raise a daughter well. Not only to weave and dance and keep a house, but to give her husband guidance and strength, as she has for you.”
Either way, Achilles hopes Pyrrhus can enjoy one more healthy birth with the woman he so clearly adores. He deserves that much before the Fates cut his thread.
no subject
Dreams are difficult enough to remember—it must be all the worse for Pyrrhus and his fallible memory. He sees the anxiety in his son’s eyes and calmly takes his hand.
“Ah, yes. Pherenike of Corinth, wife of Kleon,” Achilles repeats patiently. “If the lad looks anything like his mother, he’ll have freckles and light-brown hair.”
He grips Pyrrhus’ hand tighter and recites his own promises: “And for my part, I will tell your mother about lovely Ophelia. The boys will have a reminder that you love them, and Pergamus that you regret yelling at him. Perhaps a story of Arachne for the little spider.”
no subject
The happy cloud startles as Pyrrhus’ begins to evaporate beneath it. It leaps onto Achilles’ solid lap and hunkers down, tail wagging in agitated surprise. Achilles doesn’t notice; he’s still clinging to the last threads of his son’s dreaming shape.
“Pyrrhus,” Achilles says hurriedly. “If nothing else, remember that I love you. I’m proud of you, lad.”
no subject
The happy cloud’s tongue lapping at his fingers pulls Achilles away from his thoughts. He sighs and gives the dog a grudging smile.
“And you.” The dog’s ears perk and its head cocks when it’s addressed. It ceases its smiling panting to look comically serious for a moment. “You stay here and keep him company while he sleeps, won’t you?”
The dog blinks, considering, then sneezes and resumes excited panting before scampering up into the sketch of Lycomedes’ palace. It assumes a place on the stone steps, watchful and waiting.
“Good pup,” Achilles says with a grateful nod before stepping into the inky, black void that precedes his own wakefulness.