Hermes (
messageforyou) wrote2025-06-15 01:56 pm
For
refusetofight
Through the smoky miasma, thick and smelling of conflict and heat and pressure, on the other side is a forest. This one is less garish, less saturated than the rest of Tír na nÓg. Two fae creatures, odd feathered humanoids that resemble crows with cracked and broken beaks, sit at the rocks around a steaming hot spring, soap and strigils beside them.
The fae are seemingly mute, but won't allow Achilles to leave without a thorough wash. The sort that practically scrapes a whole layer of skin off, the sort where they insist on his hair to be cleaned and his nail beds scrubbed. His white tunic is whisked off to be burned, and only once he is deemed fit by the fae attendants to be properly cleaned of the remnants of the Morrígan does one bring the clothes he left behind with Hermes. They're neatly folded, but Hermes' scarf sits on top like a nest, holding Achilles' ring, his bracelet, and the stone with a hole in the middle. The scarf smells distinctly of Hermes, like cleverness and courage and Greece. Almost like Hermes is trying to give Achilles his blessing and support, even when they can't see each other before his trial.
After he's clean and dressed, the bath attendants point in the direction he's meant to walk, a plunge into the dark woods. There's the soft giggling of children within.
In the woods, children from all across time and the world huddle together. A boy holds a fist of straws, and each of the children draw a straw at once. They mumble amongst themselves, checking the straws, and three boys have the shortest one.
"Seems unfair to make him convince Stab," says a girl with messy red braids and two missing teeth.
"If you want a mulligan, you gotta give up treats until the next hunt," a blond boy with gray eyes and a short straw says, waving it in her face. She wrinkles her nose.
"I didn't say I want a mulligan!"
"Then shoo!"
As Achilles approaches, the children with longer straws scatter into the woods, some laughing. Three boys remain. One boy, with pale skin, ragged dirty blond hair and crooked teeth, wearing an oversized sweater and shorts and no shoes and a canvas bag big enough on him to almost drag on the ground. A second boy, skin dark as jet and head shaved, a pair of binoculars dangling from his neck, wearing loose sweatpants and an old linen button-down with sneakers with a check drawn on. A third boy, the smallest of them, maybe close to Lyra's age, looking like one of the people from the far east but with a permanent glower in his face, sitting on the ground and looking a little like he's drowning in the adult-sized jacket draped around him.
The blond boy jumps up on a tree stump to greet Achilles at eye level, putting his hands on his hips and smirking. "Hello, grownup! Here starts your trials! I call being the judge."
"Don't be silly. It's not a court trial." The boy in the button down approaches, holding an aluminum can colored bright red. He pops the tab, a sickly sweet smell rising in the air as the liquid inside hisses, and he holds the can out to Achilles. "My dad said men welcome each other with a beer, but if you get to Birdy she's going to make you drink a lot, so here's a coke instead."
The boy in the button down strategically stands between Achilles and the smallest boy. The smallest boy makes no movement to greet Achilles, instead staying on the ground, glowering at him with dark eyes.
The fae are seemingly mute, but won't allow Achilles to leave without a thorough wash. The sort that practically scrapes a whole layer of skin off, the sort where they insist on his hair to be cleaned and his nail beds scrubbed. His white tunic is whisked off to be burned, and only once he is deemed fit by the fae attendants to be properly cleaned of the remnants of the Morrígan does one bring the clothes he left behind with Hermes. They're neatly folded, but Hermes' scarf sits on top like a nest, holding Achilles' ring, his bracelet, and the stone with a hole in the middle. The scarf smells distinctly of Hermes, like cleverness and courage and Greece. Almost like Hermes is trying to give Achilles his blessing and support, even when they can't see each other before his trial.
After he's clean and dressed, the bath attendants point in the direction he's meant to walk, a plunge into the dark woods. There's the soft giggling of children within.
In the woods, children from all across time and the world huddle together. A boy holds a fist of straws, and each of the children draw a straw at once. They mumble amongst themselves, checking the straws, and three boys have the shortest one.
"Seems unfair to make him convince Stab," says a girl with messy red braids and two missing teeth.
"If you want a mulligan, you gotta give up treats until the next hunt," a blond boy with gray eyes and a short straw says, waving it in her face. She wrinkles her nose.
"I didn't say I want a mulligan!"
"Then shoo!"
As Achilles approaches, the children with longer straws scatter into the woods, some laughing. Three boys remain. One boy, with pale skin, ragged dirty blond hair and crooked teeth, wearing an oversized sweater and shorts and no shoes and a canvas bag big enough on him to almost drag on the ground. A second boy, skin dark as jet and head shaved, a pair of binoculars dangling from his neck, wearing loose sweatpants and an old linen button-down with sneakers with a check drawn on. A third boy, the smallest of them, maybe close to Lyra's age, looking like one of the people from the far east but with a permanent glower in his face, sitting on the ground and looking a little like he's drowning in the adult-sized jacket draped around him.
The blond boy jumps up on a tree stump to greet Achilles at eye level, putting his hands on his hips and smirking. "Hello, grownup! Here starts your trials! I call being the judge."
"Don't be silly. It's not a court trial." The boy in the button down approaches, holding an aluminum can colored bright red. He pops the tab, a sickly sweet smell rising in the air as the liquid inside hisses, and he holds the can out to Achilles. "My dad said men welcome each other with a beer, but if you get to Birdy she's going to make you drink a lot, so here's a coke instead."
The boy in the button down strategically stands between Achilles and the smallest boy. The smallest boy makes no movement to greet Achilles, instead staying on the ground, glowering at him with dark eyes.

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“I’ve never seen a land so verdant, so bountiful.” Achilles can’t begin to imagine how he would fight a war in a place like this. No horses could pass, much less a chariot. There’s scarcely room to swing a sword and not enough sight lines for archers to find, much less hit their target. Perhaps Odysseus would imagine some clever strategies. Traps and ambushes.
He takes another sip of coffee, committing the flavor to memory. It’s unlikely he’ll taste it again. Not for a very long time. “Your people must have wanted for nothing. What sparked such a lasting war?”
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The way Ember describes her war is more complex—a matter of maintaining power over land and its people, not a simple incursion to be withdrawn after goods and slaves have been taken. It’s more akin to a strange kind of siege, but the land itself is the impenetrable fortress.
“You did not fight for ideals, and I do not imagine you sought power or wealth.” Ember’s home in this realm is lovely, but not overly grandiose. “What drove you to fight so fiercely, and for so long?”
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“Lamb is much the same, and I believe that is why he thrives here. Few people understand what it is to fight so ferociously from such a young age.”
He sighs and shakes his head, rubs his brows with a thumb and index finger. “And I am not one of them. My ignorance only brought him more pain. It’s as you say: I am not a good father.”
He looks down at his cup of coffee to see his own reflection peering back up from the dark liquid. “Perhaps Lamb despised his life in Epirus—the same as you and your capital—but I don’t think so. It was painful, but he still knew love. I don’t believe he would discard something so hard-won.”
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“He didn’t know how to rule a kingdom, of course. My father could have mentored the lad, but he wanted nothing to do with him.” He winces, both at the bitterness of the coffee, and the words leaving his mouth. “I believe the concubine Lamb took from Troy grudgingly taught him the ways of statecraft and—given the tales of his brutality in battle—he was not well-liked by his peers.”
He takes a breath and his tone warms slightly. “But his slaves and house staff respected him; Lamb looked after them in his own way. They cared for him through his constant pain—old wounds from the war.”
Achilles swallows and runs a thumb along the rim of his cup. “He lost two young sons and blamed himself for their deaths. He cherishes his surviving boy. A good lad. Lamb had taken a new wife before the Morrígan took his name. I’m told she’ll give birth to a daughter.”
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“Ah. Well. That means he’s needed here, too,” he sighs, almost willing to admit that the Morrígan was justified in plucking Pyrrhus from his life. Almost.
“But it remains that he’s not like you or the lads. Or Birdy and Honey. He’s not a shade yet. He lives on time borrowed from the Fates.” His eyes return to Ember and after a long pause, he asks with earnest curiosity: “If Lamb was your son, what would you wish for him? This place of death and reprieve, or his last years of life?”
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He drains the last of his coffee and drums fingers on his cup.
“I gave my place in Elysium to Patroclus. He deserved the honor. In exchange for this, I swore to serve the House of Hades. Bending the knee to a strict master aggravated my pride but …” It still doesn’t measure up to the sacrifices others made, he knows. “It was what I needed. The work proved important, and led to a reunion with my beloved.”
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“Yes, I would. He’s sacrificed so much for me—I owe it to him to do the same.” He leans forward to place his empty cup on her table and settles back in his chair, face set and determined. “What would you ask of me, Miss Ember?”
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“A fitting request.” His jaw sets and he plucks up the spoon to examine it more closely. “One of Lamb’s eyes was ruined—due to my poor decisions.”
The silver feels a certain way against his fingers. Like it might slowly erode his shade’s flesh if he holds it too long. “I don’t suppose you would consider giving it to him. If such a thing can be arranged.”
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With no further preamble, he works the spoon under his right eyelid, tearing through the resistance of muscle and tissue. An indescribable, chthonic smell competes with coffee and tobacco as the spoon cauterizes the edges of his shade. It’s excruciating, but not in the same way as a living wound; there is no blood. Fibers of his essence snap apart like thousands of static shocks against the serrated teeth. He bites down hard against the pain, but he doesn’t stop until the eye is severed loose.
Smoke coils from his now-empty socket and through his sagging eyelid as he places his right eye in the offered box. Morbidly, he still sees through it after a fashion—vague strokes of light and shadow, dizzyingly out of sync with his remaining eye. Achilles closes the box, relieved by the complete darkness it affords.
He wordlessly sets the spoon beside it, the silver now tarnished by whatever magical processes carved his shade.
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It’s only now that he considers how Pat and Hermes might respond to his mutilation. Or poor Lyra … Styx.
But he’ll suffer that fresh pain when it comes. Right now there’s the important matter of Ember’s judgment. “And your decision? Will you allow me to see Lamb? Will you permit him to leave if he wishes?”
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He follows the shadow outdoors, quietly thankful when the verdant mountain air cleanses his senses of the thick scent of Ember’s cigars.
Achilles pauses at the sight of his son; he’s never seen Pyrrhus look so serene but for once when he was a newborn babe, asleep in his mother’s arms. He swallows hard. What if this is the best place for him?
Well. Regardless, of his choice or his fate, his son deserves this gift.
Achilles approaches the hammock and, in spite of his better judgment, grazes the flat of his knuckles along the man’s cheek. “Pyrrhus,” and then, in case that name is somehow lost to him, “Lamb?”
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Maybe the fluffy dog is part of that? Whatever the creature actually is, it gets a smile and an appreciative scratch behind the ears. Good pup.
“I was worried. Particularly after how we parted ways.” He reaches down and takes Pyrrhus’ hand, examining the strange bark growing over his flesh. Fae magic? “Forgive me, lad. I’m not the father I hoped I would be.”
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Nephos DOES have some suspiciously specific dog behaviors
A little cheesemonger …
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This is totally post-Mycenaean shit, but whatever man
Hadesgame basically throws out the rules anyway
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S’all good. I’ve been in the Work Void
And now I can’t remember if Pat ever saw the happy cloud
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