Hermes (
messageforyou) wrote2024-12-20 06:06 pm
For
refusetofight
"I didn't mean it! I didn't mean it! He's not going to die, is he? I'm sorry Mistress, I'm sorry, please go help him, he didn't mean it--"
"Hush, girl." Medea doesn't like writing out runes of a summoning circle under pressure, but time is of the essence. The lamb she'd seized from the pasture hangs from its feet, bleating pitifully as she paints the circle with its blood. Lyra is shaking, her hair loose, her bright yellow curls smeared with her brother's blood. Her bracelet rattles with her trembles, and she rests a hand on it to stop the sound, and perhaps to check that it's still there. Her eyes are red and her face blotchy and swollen from tears, but unhurt. Medea made sure she'd be unhurt. "If you want a chance of repairing this, you'll be quiet until I summon your father."
Lyra sobs, scrubbing her eyes with the heels of her hands and trying as hard as she can to be quiet. She didn't mean to. She didn't think he'd recognize her. She just heard him talking about his new wife, and she wanted to ask questions, and it'd seemed so nice at first, he'd seemed so nice, he was just answering her questions and treating her like a curious little girl, he even showed her his spear, but then she moved too fast and the bracelet rattled and he saw it and--
How dare you, witch? She's mine!
He'd sounded so scary, like if an angry, wounded lion could talk.
She's Lord Hermes', not yours. Now leave before I take your head.
He'd been bleeding really badly. The comb wouldn't let him go. It just kept sinking more into his hand like a burrowing rodent. And his eye was all wrong after Mistress struck him, and he looked ready to eat them all alive--
Medea finishes the circle, barely taking the time to wipe the blood from her hands before putting them together. Her inner sanctum isn't as put together as usual, rushed as she was to grab everything she needed, and she breathes, "Achilles, father of Neoptolemus, father of Lyra, I call your shade to visit the land of the living once more. Right now. Do not keep us waiting."
Where previously her call was a firm but polite tug, now it's like she's trying to yank Achilles out of the Underworld by his hair.
"Hush, girl." Medea doesn't like writing out runes of a summoning circle under pressure, but time is of the essence. The lamb she'd seized from the pasture hangs from its feet, bleating pitifully as she paints the circle with its blood. Lyra is shaking, her hair loose, her bright yellow curls smeared with her brother's blood. Her bracelet rattles with her trembles, and she rests a hand on it to stop the sound, and perhaps to check that it's still there. Her eyes are red and her face blotchy and swollen from tears, but unhurt. Medea made sure she'd be unhurt. "If you want a chance of repairing this, you'll be quiet until I summon your father."
Lyra sobs, scrubbing her eyes with the heels of her hands and trying as hard as she can to be quiet. She didn't mean to. She didn't think he'd recognize her. She just heard him talking about his new wife, and she wanted to ask questions, and it'd seemed so nice at first, he'd seemed so nice, he was just answering her questions and treating her like a curious little girl, he even showed her his spear, but then she moved too fast and the bracelet rattled and he saw it and--
How dare you, witch? She's mine!
He'd sounded so scary, like if an angry, wounded lion could talk.
She's Lord Hermes', not yours. Now leave before I take your head.
He'd been bleeding really badly. The comb wouldn't let him go. It just kept sinking more into his hand like a burrowing rodent. And his eye was all wrong after Mistress struck him, and he looked ready to eat them all alive--
Medea finishes the circle, barely taking the time to wipe the blood from her hands before putting them together. Her inner sanctum isn't as put together as usual, rushed as she was to grab everything she needed, and she breathes, "Achilles, father of Neoptolemus, father of Lyra, I call your shade to visit the land of the living once more. Right now. Do not keep us waiting."
Where previously her call was a firm but polite tug, now it's like she's trying to yank Achilles out of the Underworld by his hair.

no subject
He wants Hermes to be cautious, of course, but waiting also makes Achilles anxious. The Olympians are much older. They survived the Titanomachy. One new god could hardly match their combined strength …
“Promise me you’ll be extra clever. Extra vigilant. Find its weakness quickly and end this.” Achilles presses his forehead to Hermes’, imploring. “It won’t be long before our fledgling flies the nest and travels the world. Make it safer for her.”
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He looks up at the stars and takes a centering breath. If circumstances were better, he’d relish the sight of the deep night sky, but his thoughts are too crowded with worry over his children.
“I’m ready,” he says, rising to his feet and offering Hermes his hand. The bracelet on his wrist shifts, shells clicking delicately against one another. “We should go to our daughter.”
no subject
His lips press flat at Medea, still annoyed by her callous disregard for his son’s wounds. This is the only fleeting sign of his displeasure; no point in arguing now. Certainly not in front of Lyra.
“Oh, fledgling.” Achilles pointedly ignores Medea and kneels beside the bed. His face softens and he swallows back the tightness that’s returned to his throat. “Don’t despair. I found your brother. His wounds will mend.”
no subject
He’s fairly certain of that; he recalls Pyrrhus’ pause when Achilles asked him about Lyra. He hopes all of his son’s anger is entirely reserved for his father and not his sister. “But I don’t think he will return to Athens for a long while.”
He runs a thumb over his daughter’s brow, then kisses her forehead before giving her a tired, but reassuring smile. “Give him some time, and then we will send him a letter. He needs to know we are not mad or afraid.”
Achilles looks over his shoulder at Hermes, inviting him closer. “Your papa will see it’s delivered.”
no subject
He feels guilt churn in his gut. Pyrrhus should have known this comfort growing up. “We should tell him that we still love him.”
Achilles scoops her hair out of her face, and behind a shoulder. She looks much better than she did earlier and her laughter is heartening. “This was my fault, fledgling. I’m sorry your first meeting went so terribly. I should have prepared him for this.”
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He shifts into a more comfortable seat on the floor and nuzzles a kiss against the crown of Lyra’s head. The smell of calming soap fills his nose.
“I’ve seen Ophelia in his dreams. She’s very beautiful indeed.” Made all the more beautiful through the lens of Pyrrhus’ love for her. The same way Lykos was painted with more generous strokes. “After all your brother’s endured, he deserves people who love and care for him.”
Achilles rests a hand over her matching shell bracelet. “Even if he doesn’t want that from us right now, he isn’t alone. He has Ophelia and Molossus and the kind servants who look after him.”
no subject
Achilles spares a brief glance at Medea, then Hermes. “But your papa and I have our reasons for choosing who we did.”
Even after her treatment of Pyrrhus, Achilles is doing his best to keep faith in Medea. She was doing her duty. Remember Apollo’s prophecy. Who knows what could have happened …
But both of his children have still suffered so much tonight. He wants to be angry at someone. Himself. Medea. The Fates.
no subject
Achilles also isn’t sure it would be good for anyone if Pyrrhus was under Hermes’ close scrutiny. Medea doesn’t seem at all intimidated by watchful Olympians, and if she ever fails at her duties, Achilles won’t be as distraught by her punishment as he would Pyrrhus’.
He nods at Hermes’ reminders. Lyra might instinctively know these things, but experiencing them firsthand is different.
“It’s been difficult to convince your brother that I love him.” Or that anyone loves him. He thinks of Pyrrhus’ tablets and the words that underpinned his dreams. “People tell themselves stories for years and years. Stories that are hard to rewrite, especially those they learned them when they were young.”
no subject
His eyes switch to Medea, drawn by her motion, but he doesn’t know what to make of it. Maybe Hermes would, but Achilles finds the woman impossible to read.
His attention returns to Lyra and he hums agreement at her assessment. “I think your brother wants to trust people—desperately—but he’s afraid. He would much rather be lonely than be hurt again.”
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Achilles watches her small hands toy with Hermes’ feathers. Her fingertips are rosy in their warm glow. “I told Pyrrhus that you convinced me to find him. I told him how much you love him … How you want him to be loved.
“I hope he will remember that. His memories fade quickly without his tablets.” Achilles stomach drops. Will Pyrrhus’ hand still hold a stylus after his injury? How will he keep hold of his fleeting memories?
“We’ll remind him in our letter. We both love him,” he says, resolute.
no subject
This moment will shape his daughter’s life; she’ll remember her brother’s anger and her own fear. She needs to remember her fathers’ care and understanding.
He rubs Lyra’s back in soothing circles. This experience was punishment enough; he can’t bring himself to chide her further. “Life is full of mistakes and hard lessons, my love. I don’t expect you to be perfect, but I expect you to learn from this.”
Achilles rests his cheek on his daughter’s head and says, “You and I—with some help from your papa—we can make this right. But that won’t always be so.”
no subject
… And Pyrrhus’ too. This wasn’t how his children should have met one another.
“Think on what you’ll write to your brother and practice your letters, fledgling.” He finds her hands and imagines the determined intensity in her face as she masters each stroke of her pen. “But for now, drink your sleeping draught.”
He turns a smile to Hermes. “While it takes hold, perhaps your papa can tell you about his travels in distant lands.”
At least the good stories.