Achilles, Best of the Greeks (
refusetofight) wrote2025-02-08 09:11 am
For @messageforyou
Thetis wings slow circles above the shore in the shape of a humble gull. Of all the many shapes she could take, this is the most unremarkable to mortals. They’re a common nuisance, curious and daring.
This isn’t the first time Thetis has watched her unexpected granddaughter play on the shore. She’s been a seal, watching from the safety of the surf, a keen-eyed osprey roosting at the top of a tree. In animal shape, her emotions are no less turbulent.
The girl’s hair shines like flax in the sun as she delights in the waves and warm sand. Thetis might as well be watching a memory: those peaceful, lazy days with her son, bookended by the pain of his conception and the grief of his death.
Every time she visits, she promises herself that this will be the last. The same as she did with Neoptolemus. But she finds herself gripped by guilt. She could have saved her grandson from the vile mortals who would use him like they used Achilles. She could have hidden him away again, perhaps this time in her father’s realm. But what would be the use? They would still find him. Neoptolemus is still mortal. He would still die.
What do the Fates have planned for this child? Lord Hermes’ divinity shines bright within her. She’ll be coveted by mortals, yes, but not as a weapon—as a beautiful lover and mother to powerful sons. Thetis knows the special agony of that life.
But for now, Lyra is a happy child, delighting in a beautiful day. Thetis pulls her wings in to stoop lower until she can hear the girl’s laughter on the breeze. Lower still and she can see her smile. Against her better judgement, the aching protest of her old wounds, she finally lights on the sand a few yards away.
This isn’t the first time Thetis has watched her unexpected granddaughter play on the shore. She’s been a seal, watching from the safety of the surf, a keen-eyed osprey roosting at the top of a tree. In animal shape, her emotions are no less turbulent.
The girl’s hair shines like flax in the sun as she delights in the waves and warm sand. Thetis might as well be watching a memory: those peaceful, lazy days with her son, bookended by the pain of his conception and the grief of his death.
Every time she visits, she promises herself that this will be the last. The same as she did with Neoptolemus. But she finds herself gripped by guilt. She could have saved her grandson from the vile mortals who would use him like they used Achilles. She could have hidden him away again, perhaps this time in her father’s realm. But what would be the use? They would still find him. Neoptolemus is still mortal. He would still die.
What do the Fates have planned for this child? Lord Hermes’ divinity shines bright within her. She’ll be coveted by mortals, yes, but not as a weapon—as a beautiful lover and mother to powerful sons. Thetis knows the special agony of that life.
But for now, Lyra is a happy child, delighting in a beautiful day. Thetis pulls her wings in to stoop lower until she can hear the girl’s laughter on the breeze. Lower still and she can see her smile. Against her better judgement, the aching protest of her old wounds, she finally lights on the sand a few yards away.

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Patroclus, meanwhile, doesn’t relish the idea of being left alone with a goddess who has never been very fond of him and another who could probably snuff his shade as easily as a candle flame.
Achilles nods to both his mother and his lover before continuing his journey without them. It’s difficult to imagine that Troy once crowned this rise, but he knows it to be true on a deep level—like he can still feel ten years of blood under his feet. The Morrígan must have delighted in that struggle; it changed many mortals.
He exhales and descends the opposite slope to enter the fog that obscures the goddess’ trials.
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“I’ve nothing to say. I came here for his sake.” Pat nods in the direction Achilles disappeared. He pauses for the length of a breath. After the agony that Mimir showed him, he can’t help but ache for Neoptolemus. In some ways, he has more in common with the lad than Achilles. So he adds, “… And for his son.”
Thetis tilts her head, mildly surprised. She wasn’t sure what Patroclus made of Achilles’ son (in truth, she didn’t care), but that admission is still unexpected. Usually mortals are jealous creatures who want their lover’s full attention. Surely a creature as unremarkable as Patroclus would be no different.
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“I didn’t make the journey in pursuit of your knowledge and I have no interest in striking a deal.” Gods never offer anything for free, of that much he’s absolutely certain. There’s always a price. “Are you skeptical of my motives? Is it so strange to help someone you love?”
He has the distinct feeling he’s about to be needled with questions. While Thetis listens and watches him, no less. It truly is a testament to his love for Achilles.
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“It sounds as if you have questions for me. Ask me what you will, and I’ll answer truly,” Patroclus says, the exhaustion apparent in his voice. “I am no demigod, no hero. Don’t expect to be delighted by such stories of valor and bravery.”
Thetis merely stands watch, the tide pooling around her feet as if it were inexorably drawn there. She expects very little from Patroclus, as she always has; Achilles’ interest in such an unremarkable mortal has only continued to baffle her. No doubt the Morrígan will find him equally banal.
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Patroclus is clearly struggling to find an answer. Yes, he killed Sarpedon—he scarcely remembers how, the battle was such panicked chaos—but what does it matter? He died shortly after and set Achilles on his destructive path. That’s no source of pride.
Instead, he reflects on the many days spent treating the wounded beside Machaon and Podalirius. Pat rubs his palms together and recalls his first major victory. “I set a man’s broken leg and it mended clean and whole. He was able to walk and fight again.”
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And then the Morrígan makes another request.
“My father’s love. I was not the son he wanted.” He spent his entire childhood in pursuit of his father’s approval—pushing himself to meet impossible standards—but he never ran the fastest at footraces, never threw as far or as accurately, never pinned his opponents in wrestling matches. After a while, his father barred him from participating in games at all to avoid further embarrassment. It was probably a blessing when Pat gave his father cause to banish him.
“I finally won it, I suppose, but only by winning a hero’s favor.” Cleaning wounds and mending bones would mean nothing. Glory and honor were the only currency that could buy his father’s pride.
Pat snorts and rolls his eyes. “And he must have been proud to learn I killed a son of Zeus.”
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“You should have asked him that question,” Pat jerks his head in the direction of Achilles’ exit. “He enjoys ruminating on the nature of love and the wounds it inflicts.”
Indeed, Achilles is more romantic, more poetic than he’ll ever be. Maybe because Achilles grew up surrounded by so much love. His heart is raw and tender. To Pat, affection is still a novelty, largely undeserved; barely a balm for the thick lattice of scars on his own heart.
“What do you think?” At a guess, Pat assumes the Morrígan finds great pleasure watching people struggle through the pain of heartbreak. “Is there such a thing as a heart that can’t be broken? Are love and loss not inextricably bound?”
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Why? Because his death would break her heart. It did break her heart. Such that she couldn’t stand to look at Neoptolemus. Such that she’s too deeply scarred to love either of her mortal grandchildren.
The goddess shifts, her hair drifts in an invisible current. Just enough to catch Patroclus’ eye. "My life was not kind, it's true, but it could have been much worse. I may never have known love at all."
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Pat knows what he needs: purpose. Something to occupy his eternity. Or, if Epimetheus is to be believed, some kind of corrective tincture for his chronically bad mood. Or … maybe another dog?
Yes, he’s positive another dog would make him feel better.
“First tell me the task. Then I will decide if the knowledge is worth the effort.”
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Pat found more comfort among the goats and horses and dogs.
It wasn’t until Pat was older that he realized how ill-suited she was to the role of wife and mother. Her simplicity was an affliction&mash;either from birth or after suffering illness or injury. Her family was probably eager to marry her off. His father all but ignored her after she gave him a (disappointing) son.
Patroclus’ anger at her was unwarranted, he now knows; he can’t imagine how lonely and miserable her life was after he left. He never said good-bye. (How did she die?) That shame has sat heavy at the back of his mind, stacked amid the clutter of his grief.
“You have my word,” he finally agrees, even as he’s afraid she’ll only meet him with blank confusion. “I will find her.”
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But this scene is tranquil, jovial. This easy companionship rings true, even in his own time. That, it seems, doesn’t change.
Though it’s strange to see women treated as equals and all of them—men and women both—focused on scholarly pursuits. He wishes he could be with all of these miraculous survivors, content, kind and thoughtful.
“None of them will go to war?” Pat asks at a whisper, as if they might hear him.
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“When?” Pat blurts. There’s a notable spark of energy in his eyes that wasn’t there before. “When will mortals live like this?”
Thetis has also been watching the students’ antics with her own mild curiosity. She can’t imagine how gods and humans could drift so far apart. Usually they’re in lock-step where it comes to values. Is this because Zeus and Hera were deposed and Athena rose to power? Men come to treat women with respect, as equals?
Thetis dares to derive her own tiny morsel of hope from this vision. If not for herself, then maybe for her son’s descendants.
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He clings to the lingering warmth of that safe, easy future instead. He holds it close like the cloak he left with Kelly and thinks of the way Hermes transformed her fear into awe. Maybe this is what gods are truly meant to do: reframe mortal understanding, for better or worse.
“This is why Neoptolemus should return, isn’t it?” Patroclus ventures. “He can still contribute to this shared struggle.”
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