I love this design for the blossom adaptor and the connection, the way it looks like a mechanical flower!! đşâ¤ď¸ This character is lovely and so much much fun to explore!
This is my character Ava. I made her a new character sheet for the Avatar Universe. (james cemorn avatar) Her original design is almost the same, just blue skin and glowy eyes coz she is half alien in her main story đ
In the Avatar AU she is an artifical made Human. The cybernetic spine is in her main story and in her AU story the main reason why she is stronger than normal humans.
I hope you like her :3
More Infos about her Original Look and Story:
She is originally half Human half the alien species Xa'vor, I created myself :3
Thats her Original Story look: (beware: old drawings xD)
Thats how the Xa'vor species looks like: (left my OC Cinzia and right the mother of Ava in her main story)
I kept my OC as close as I could to her main story, just changed her skin and eye color, to fit the more Human look :D
Fun fact, her red curles are after me, coz in the past I made her inspired after me :D but she is not a self insert.
If you read this far: Here is a cookie đŞ thank you for your attention and interestđ
âIâd rather die tomorrow, than live a hundred years without knowing you.â
Oh gosh the moment of the death of the baby đđđ
Man I love how you write poor Odysseus, he had to go forward, yet now that he sees all this suffering he is barely keeping it together... The way he can't take how his men do such cruel acts, how they massacre the king searching for sanctuary in the altar, and he's now seeing their true rage being spilled into these people and rulers and it burns him as well....
Neoptolemus is quite a character, gosh I like how you wrote Odysseus so perturbed at how much such a youth, and a child he brought with him to this war, is enjoying the bloodbath so much and is letting his rage take over! They exchange words like pure poison and knifes! The way you wrote the tension is intense, especially when he reminds him of the man Odysseus let to drown, and Odysseus knowing he both didn't but did kill that man at the same time, because he also did nothing to help him.
And gosh saying that the royal family line of Troy should be cut really went back to haunt Odysseus... He knew there was gonna be death and blood, but to actually see it and to see his men actually enjoying it is another level for him, he was even hoping for some to be spared if they surrendered gosh...
But the peak of it all is definitely when baby Astyanax is brought so roughly and so terrified đ˘ It's so touching how Odysseus is doing the best he can to spare the poor child, he did not want to kill a baby like this... It's heartbreaking the way he is even attempting to buy the baby some more time so he at least can come up with some plan to save him, but Neoptolemus simply doesn't let him... I really like how you went with the version of Neoptolemus being the one to kill the poor baby, it fits well with the way you wrote Odysseus, and gosh his absolute shock and distress when he sees him dropping him đ˘đ˘ also it's just so heartbreaking how baby Astyanax confuses Neoptolemus with his father đđ it makes it all so much raw and tragic! Poor little one so terribly young to even understand what was happening! And the way they keep chanting "Sacker of cities" which adds so many more needles into Odysseus heart and soul, you really showed his broken heart and rage so well and how it connects to his name, especially when Neoptolemus praises him in their victory to mock him and to call him the true killer here in such an arrogant way...
The image of the burnt broken city, the slaves, the burnt dead and more surely sound like a hellscape! And Odysseus too exhausted physically and mentally covered in dried blood... Man the scene with Adromache adds even more weight to the heartache... The way she walks full of dignity even tho her whole home and loved ones burn all around her, yet she loses complete composure upon seeing the one who she blames for all that happened! I love how Odysseus doesn't want to face her knowing the part he took on all of this... And how he tried to deny that he killed her baby but can't continue talking!
The way she completely breaks down when she notices her dead baby being carried đđ and the way Odysseus orders them to let her mourn... You can capture emotions so well in your writing and you definitely captured the gut wrenching pain of a mother wailing and screaming for her lost baby, and it definitely hits Odysseus hard too! It's so fitting how his mind immediately goes to his own son that he remembers as a baby because of her words similar to his wife screaming for their own baby!
Oh boy I remember you telling me about this! Such a savage scene Palamedes really went with the lowest move there gosh, someone please arrest him on the spot! đ Poor Odysseus was trying so hard to keep his insanity plan but just couldn't help it when his baby was put in harm's way like that! It's so touching the way he immediately stops and checks for his son's safety like that, and his own insanity cover blown but him not caring in his anger, and asking if Palamedes is the one who is insane instead hahaha poor child! Oh man and him telling him not to forget as a challenge!
Oh gosh and Adromache uncovering the fabrics and seeing her baby mangled like that đ˘đ˘ that was such a dark and fitting detail to add to the gravity of it all the way you described how the poor little one's remains were looking like đ°đ˘ enough to make any mother go insane... And poor Odysseus actually tried to prevent her from doing it... And his mind actually pinched his heart and guilt more by making him picture his own son in such a way...
Him finally wanting to help her get up to keep her dignity and her spitting on his face was definitely the ultimate burn for him... I love how she returns from grief to anger so quickly with just his act to approach her, she doesn't want anything for the one she considers responsible for this đ˘
And Odysseus drowns in such guilt but tries so hard... he knows it would only make everything worse for himself to show weakness so he makes the others take her away like that... And she returns to her Queen stance again, tho it's still so heartbreaking that she does not want to get separated from her son's body đ˘
Oh man Meriones asking that "Are you alright" hits different with your writing describing the turmoil and storm of emotions going on through Odysseus head all throughout this story đ˘ and the way he winces and realizes he must unclench his fist speaks so much louder than his reply đ˘
This shows the heaviness and the true ugliness of war even to the victorious side... How the trauma remains for everyone đ
Fantastic work as always girl, your use of words and emotions are always amazing through the narrative and characters, their humanity is always so natural â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¨â¨â¨đđ
Thank you for the mention â¤ď¸
Continuing from Part 1;
Guilt (P2)
"And no, that was what you feared...not what you knew. There was no way you would know the magnitude of it...you gave them the city just like you promised. What theh did with it was their responsibility"
If only it were that simple, Odysseus thought
Odysseus could feel his head buzzing all the time. He was feeling tired of killing that night. As he had promised they had plundered Troy in just one fateful night. Odysseus had lost counting at how many lives had fallen under his sword. The palace of Troy had fallen. Troy was burning. As he cut his way through with with sword he remembered bodies falling down; armed or not; soldiers who barely had time to rouse themselves from sleep to come to save their city and yet they rushed at him bravely. Odysseus couldn't decide if he admired them or felt sorry for them.
"Odysseus!" The voice of a soldier brought him back to the present
"What is it?"
"Priam is dead!"
"Dead?!"
That piece of information he feared but he hoped he could prevent.
"Where?"
The man bringing the news was way too nervous for comfort.
"Where!" Odysseus demanded again
"T-To the altar of Zeus...he was slain upon the altar!"
Odysseus nearly dropped his sword! Had they stooped so low, then, in anger and hate?
"Who!" Odysseus demanded, "who did such a blasphemous act?!"
"N-Neoptolemous..."
Odysseus could hardly remember rushing to the scene. Perhaps he remembered the hall drenched in blood and there he saw the dead body of the king; neck gushed open and blood all over the floor. The haunting image of the expression of horror to the old man's face as well as the stain of blood upon the altar were a blurry mess in his brain. All he knew was that he saw that child he had brought to this war, with his face smeared with blood, having a self-complacent smirk on his face. He almost seemed possessed. That damn armor seemed to be one with his skin.
"HAVE YOU LOST YOUR GODDAMN MIND?!" Odysseus bellowed, "How could you do that?! Have you so little respect for the laws of humans that you've stooped to the level of beasts?!"
The way that Neoptolemus looked at him was pure mockery and arrogance gained from victory.
"Now come on, Sacker of Cities...don't pretend that you would have left that man live! He was the king of Troy...just his existence would be a threat. You would have him executed anyways".
Odysseus couldn't remember grabbing the boy by the throat but he was beyond himself. His eyes were two bottomless pools of blackness.
"Do you want to end up like Thersites?!" He threatened in a dangerous whisper, "Do not challenge me, boy!"
"Or what?" Neoptolemus challenged back, "Will you do to me what you did to Palamedes?"
Odysseus was so shocked he could hardly speak. He felt like he had been punched in the stomach. The shock was enough to make him release the threat of the youth and take a few steps back.
"I have no idea what you're talking about" he said
Neoptolemus laughed.
"You are a liar, Odysseus! But then again you always were, weren't you?"
"Palamedes drowned in the sea! It was an accident!"
For a moment the image of ruffling waters had passed through his mind. Palamedes struggling under the surface... Odysseus remembered being frozen. He never tried to jump after him even jf he were an excellent swimmer. He was cold and motionless like a statue. The voice of the arrogant son of Achilles brought him back to reality.
"Yeah, how convenient indeed that he had that small... 'accident' when you and Diomedes were at the same boat with him during that fishing expedition! How convenient indeed!"
"This isn't about me!" Odysseus snapped at him, "This has to do with the hubris you performed here! We do NOT kill those who seek the sanctuary of the gods!"
"Times have changed, old man! You said so yourself! Besides wasn't you the one who implied that the line of the royal family of Troy should be cut? Priam shouldn't live anyways!"
Yes, Odysseus thought,he had said that and by that time he believed jt, however the old man had sought sanctuary. If they waited for him to get exhausted maybe... He could have surrendered. Murder upon sacred place was definitely NOT the way to do it. They could have offered him a nobler death than that! Odysseus didn't have time to reply. He heard a baby cry. He turned around to see in horror a man bringing baby Astyanax and handing him to Neoptolemus. The infant, barely one year of age, was crying woefully as he was handled not at all gently by Neoptolemus, who seemed untouched by the cries. Id anything he seemed to enjoy it
"What about the heir of Troy, Odysseus? What shall happen to him?"
"You can't be serious! It's just a baby!"
"A baby that is almost at the age of walking! Soon at the age of fighting. Will you let him live, Odysseus? You were the one who convinced the council, remember? You said we should all uproot the family of Priam from this earth!".
Yes, once again Odysseus had said that,however he had absolutely forgotten in the heat od the moment how old the heir actually was. The child was barely one. He could hardly speak yet alone walknand fight. Only now had he realized in horror what that promise he partially made would mean. He didn't expect to be brought before the consequences so fast!
"Weren't you the one who persuaded all the Greeks to uproot Priam's long family out of Troy?"
"Yes, but-..."
"So you take your word back? Decide!"
"Decide what?!"
"How he shall die, of course! You can't expect us to raise the son of king Hector, do you? Which will be? Sword or fall?"
The baby...the infant; no older than 1 year of age, was not much older than Telemachus... it was an innocent creature! He watched in terror as Neoptolemus held the baby to the edge of the wall.
"Choose, Odysseus!" Neoptolemus challenged, " or are you taking your words back?"
"This is madness!"
"You said to the council the other night that you would throw all of Priam's line outside these walls!" Neoptolemus insisted, "I believe the phrase you strategically used was 'we can throw them all out of the city of Troy!" I believe everyone agreed with such a sensible idea"
"Odysseus?"
It was the voice of Talthybius. Of course it would be that sleek worm! Odysseus cursed under his teeth. He was supposed to be their messenger and yet he found hik way too compassionate on the Trojan matter. Perhaps he should have gotten rid of him off his position a long time ago!
"Did you really tell the kings to kill this infant? Drag him out of his mother's bosom when she sought sanctuary in her husband's tomb and kill him in such a manner?"
Odysseus pointed his blood-stained sword at the scared messenger.
"Shut your mouth or I'll shut it for you!" He threatened, eyes set aflame
He didn't need any more of those throwing accusations at him and he had enough of this for one night! One madman before him was enough; he didn't need a Troy-friendly coward as wellm
"Stay back! This is none of your concern!"
As Talthybius took some steps back, alarmed at this sudden attack from the furious king of Ithaca, Neoptolemus seemed to enjoy this scene more than the idea of throwing the baby off the walls or stabbing him to death.
"Decide, old man!" He urged again, "Do you take your word back? Every person in that hall heard you and agreed with you! Shown in this pilgrim of the night that you have SOME sense of honor!"
Odysseus was frozen in place. His own words that he didn't mean that way were now twisted in such a horrendous manner before him and bound him like chains. He could not take that word back. His brain was also stuck and his usual eloquent tongue could not find an excuse not to do it now...
"So be it..." he said defeated, "But let us choose a more humane method! Not this, Neoptolemus! Not this!"
He needed to buy himself some time. He needed to think of any reason, ANY excuse to keep this baby alive. Neoptolemus, though, being a true son of his father's, wouldn't let him do that either.
"Not on your life, son of LaĂŤrtes! This is the child of the man who thought he could kill my father! His bloody uncle actually succeeded! His filthy kin DARED to harm a man whose mother was a goddess! He needs to die and he shall now!"
At that moment he dragged the toddler almost effortlessly with one hand; strength given only by wrath and hatred, he let him hanging on the wall. The child was crying woefully and then Odysseus thought he heard him speak;
"PAPA!"
He froze. In some terrible realization he figured the horrendous truth. Neoptolemousbhad inherited the golden locks of his father's and his light yes that included the sea and sky. He, Odysseus, was dark of hair, black of eyes, lightly olive tanned white skin...he was similar to HIM...to Hector of Troy. The infant was calling HIM to save him! Panic took over him and he forgot all logic, all his attempts to find excuses. Now the child...the baby...someone's SON (Telemachus!)needed HIS assistance.
"Neoptolemus no! It's just a baby! Let the poor creature go!"
"Very poor choice of words, Odysseus!"
And Neoptolemus did exactly what he was told...he let go! The baby fell out of the palace walls, leaving gravity take the body rapidly down.
"NOOOOOOO!" Odysseus yelled helplessly but that's all he could do.
He ran at the edge only to see a tiny bloody dot at the bass kd the wall. The haunting cries had stopped...forever.
"NEOPTOLEMUS!" Odysseus bellowed furiously, "you killed him! You killed an infant!"
"No, Odysseus!" Neoptolemus replied, "You did. Your plan, your advise, your sin."
Odysseus felt dizzy...his stomach twisted dangerously but he did herculean effort to hold himself back. There was so much he wanted to say...so much he wanted to scream but he found it impossible to utter a single sound.
"TROY HAS FALLEN!" the happy cry from the inside of the castle drew them out of this, "WAR IS OVER! HOORAY! HOORAY FOR THE SACKER OF CITIES!"
Odysseus felt like losing strength off his legs. He didn't even know how to feel. However he knew one thing. He was feeling ENRAGED. It was as if the name that was given to him by his grandfather now suddenly made sense! He glared daggers yo Neoptolemus but the arrogant boy only smiled self-complacently...
"Looks like you were right, old man... You DID take the city in one night..."
Odysseus looked beyond the walls. If was true. The sun was rising...although his light was now duller in his eyes; the fires were stronger...
*
The walls of Troy had fallen and the real damage was apparent the next morning following the massacre. The houses had burnt almost to the ground and only the strongest walls were still standing upright; sad reminder of their previous glory. Odysseus was standing there with some of his men, watching the march of wounded or future slaves coming out of the city in chains or ropes. The ways were known. They would be distributed to some of the kings among them and the rest would be given by luck to the rest of the people. After that thy should gather and burn the dead before they would be good to go... Odysseus looked aged almost ten years more. He had dark circles under his eyes and he still didn't have time to wash himself from the blood. The thick liquid had formed a crust upon him by that moment. Helen was secured and brought out of the city to safety by Menelaus. So everything seemed to be in place. Then, why would he feel as if he had to use all his will to endure it and keep a stone calm face? His attention was drawn to the part of the procession. It was Andromache, the queen and widow of Hector. Odysseus grimaced. He had hoped he wouldn't face that woman. She was walking upright with the dignity even the greatest of Queens would be jealous of, as if she were the mighty Hera. Even if she was in chains she was still holding her head high. Odysseus learnt that she was to be given to Neoptolemous. He watched the queen marching to be given to the man that murdered her son... The man they now called Sacker of Cities didn't know which was sadder for her. He had tried to persuade Neoptolemous to take another but all his pleas or even manipulation fell on deaf ears. In the end he wondered if it mattered... At that moment his onyx eyes locked with the eyes of the queen. And then he saw her face transform from purr dignity to pure hatred in a matter of seconds!
"ODYSSEUS!" she yelled at him, pulling the chains with all her strength, "YOU SPAWN OF THIEVES AND RAGGED SCHEMER! THIS IS ALL YOUR DOING! GODS SHALL THROW THEIR RAGE UPON YOU!"
Odysseus didn't have time to defend himself.
"It was all your idea! Your plan! You scheming bastard could not fight with honor! But how could you! HOW COULD YOU!"
Her rage gave her strength anew as she managed to crawl closer. Even Odysseus took half a step back.
"HE WAS JUST ONE YEAR OLD ODYSSEUS!DO YOU HAVE NO HEART?!"
The king of Ithaca froze. He had no idea how she had found out about it but then it hit him. Talthybius! Of course! He must have talked to her.
"HE WAS JUST A BABY! HOW COULD YOU!"
"I didn't..." he whispered more to himself than anything else
"CURSE UPON YOU!" she drew her chains again and even the soldier needed to pull back, "I knew they wouldn't let him live! But this?! THIS?! HE WAS JUST ONE YEAR OLD ODYSSEUS! Just one year-..."
And then there was a heart-wrenching cry. Suddenly her anger turned into outpost pain. Odysseus turned his head and realized the reason. The small wrapped up ball could be nothing else but the remains of her son. One of the Greeks was transferring them to the pyre for the funeral. Odysseus cursed everything he believed in. He had hoped they would be spared at least of that! Both her and him. Andromache fell on her knees trying to release herself and get closer to the wrapped up package.
"MY BOY!" she cried, "AH! MY BOY!"
The soldier was ready to take the package away but Odysseus stopped him.
"No! Let her mourn!"
Unwillingly the man placed the child on the ground as she crawled over it, hands still tied up, not allowing her to wrap her arms around the remains of her son or even scratch her cheeks to mourn... Odysseus watched her kneel almost like an animal mourning her calf, leaning her forehead against the bloodied cloth
"MY BEAUTIFUL BOY!" Andromache's voice rose in an inhuman tone of cries and woe
The king of Ithaca felt his heart pinch. Yes, he has heard that cry before. It was an eternity ago in Ithaca...when Palamedes had come to pick him up...
*
Odysseus was plowing the field, singing an incoherent song. He was moving his head to an unmatched rhythm. He had tied one donkey and one cow to the plow, plowing in a totally messy way. He seemed to pay no mind. Odysseus was very keen upon his disguise as a madman. Palamedes was watching the scene with Penelope from afar as his beloved queen was playing with their son in her arms.
"He has been doing that all day..." Penelope said in her melodious voice, "He listens to no one when they tell him that this is not right. My husband insists that this is the best way to plow the field."
Penelope knew her part very well. They had agreed upon it after all. Part of it was her idea too. She didn't want him to go to war and he didn't want either. Not now that they had their son to take care of. Palamedes looked suspiciously at the scene.
"I find it hard to believe the mighty Odysseus losing his mind like this...it is so fast and so sad to be true..."
He approached closer.
"Come on, Odysseus, son of LaĂŤrtes! We have work to do, we have to get ready for the war!"
Odysseus didn't reply and continued his work. Penelope approached.
"My lord, as you see, my husband is a very sick man. He cannot help you in this war. I am afraid you must find someone else..."
Palamedes looked at her sideways before turning his gaze back at Odysseus.
"Such a shame though..." he whispered as if to himself, "Such a brilliant mind...be condemned in such a way... Seems such a waste..."
He eyed Penelope and something inside her heart flattered. She didn't like that look.
"But perhaps..." Palamedes started, "I might have a cure for his...illness..."
Penelope raised a brow.
"My lord?"
No sooner had she voiced that word and Palamedes yanked Telemachus out of her arms.
"NO!" Penelope cried out surprised, "What are you doing?! Stop!"
Telemachus screeched and cried as Palamedes ran towards the field.
"NO! MY BOY!" Penelope cried out
Odysseus barely had time to see with the corner of his eye Palamedes throw his infant son to the front of the two giant animals plowing! His mind did not think twice.
"WOOO BOY! WOO! WOO!" his mighty hands pulled the reigns stopping the plow barely a few inches away from the crying baby
Rushing to the spot he picked up his precious son to his hands, he raised him to his head, he inspected those little limbs and that soft head... He sighed in relief when he found no major injuries to that little body.
"Shh..sh sh...my boy..." he cooed at his son, "It's okay...it's okay..."
His gaze was fiery as he looked up to Palamedes.
"ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR DAMNED MIND?!" he bellowed, "You nearly killed my son!"
Palamedes seemed uninterested at that coy as he smirked.
"Welcome back to the world of sanity, Odysseus. So now I believe we can talk about the preparations of the war, according to the oath you gave. Let us cut this charade and be men..."
Ashamed, humbled but above all ENRAGED, Odysseus looked up from his kneeling position, still cooing his son, trying to calm him.
"That was a low blow, even for you!" He growled at him
"You are the one to talk, son of LaĂŤrtes!" Palamedes retorted, "you are the one who always schemes to avoid his responsibilities!"
"Yes but I don't use innocent infants for it! I shall not forget this Palamedes!"
"I seriously hope you won't" Palamedes retorted, "So that we won't add 'oathbreaker' to your list of titles!"
*
Oh how enraged he had been! And yet now he remembered that moment for a totally different reason! Now he was seeing that woman who used to be a mighty queen screaming and crying over that small ball that used to be her son. She was doubling over and over, crying.
"MY BOY! NO NO NO! NO! MY SON!"
At some point she managed to grasp the cloth
"No! Don't-...!"
The cloth revealed a ball of flesh that the face and the little bones were no more recognizable. Odysseus shut his eyes closed for one secondm
"Telemachus!" He thought, "No! Not him...that's not him..."
Andromache screeched in woe as she doubled over at that small ball of flesh that used to play around a few days ago, hitting her chest with the last bits of her hands, pulling on her chains maniacally. Odysseus could take no more. He went close to her. She was a queen, she had to pull it together.
"Get up..." he whispered huskily, "please get up...for your son..."
Andromache shot her head up and spat straight on his face. The saliva from her mouth burnt his cheek like fire; like the fire that now existed in her eyes. Her woe had stopped, apart from those tears that turned her eyes red. Hatred returned...and it was all directed to him... The Man of Many Ways felt his heart turn into marble; hard and cold. He stood up to his full height wiping his cheek with his hand. He felt the dirt and blood smearing in combination with the spit. All of Troy's massacre had fallen upon him...
"Take her out of here!" He ordered in a low, cold voice
If I show weakness...I'm lost...
Andromache struggled only for one minute and that would be so that she wouldn't be separated from her son (the son that now a soldier was picking up again, sparing everyone from the unpleasant task seeing the child). She then followed her captures. She was a queen again. The only thing you could hear was some low cry.
"Odysseus..." Meriones approached him, "Are you alright?"
Odysseus winced in pain. He hadn't realized that he had clenched his fist so hard that it hurt him. He unclenched it.
"Yes..." he whispered, "Yes, I'm fine"
*
Sooo Part 2! Soon the closure will come! Dedication to some hood friends such as @aaronofithaca05 @simugeuge @prompted-wordsmith @loco-bird @jarondont
What a fantastic piece once again girl!! I'm glad you're getting praised for it because your brilliant writing really deserves it â¤ď¸đŤśđš And once again thank you SOOO much for the mention! It always means so much đŤâ¤ď¸
I have to admit, while I may not be familiar with all the figures and details referenced here, the emotions youâve portrayed, the loss, grief, and the emptiness left in the aftermath of battle come through so clearly. Youâve captured these feelings beautifully, and despite not knowing everything, I still have a vivid sense of whatâs happening.
I especially love how you delved into the aftermath of Achilles' revenge. Youâve portrayed such a raw and realistic emotion, the emptiness that lingers after vengeance is taken. Because no matter how much blood is spilled, the one heâs lost remain gone. The way you depicted Achillesâ heartbreak, his yearning for the loved one that can never return is so powerful.
The way you described his sense of emptiness is truly devastating. That feeling of nothingness is one of the hardest to bear, and you conveyed it with such depth! I also love the contrast between his feelings for the slave woman he left behind and the overwhelming grief for Patroclus. And it's also very touching that this feeling of him as his other half could be interpreted as both romantic (with the symbolisms of the empty cold bed and more) and as profound brotherly lovee, both extremely meaningful and absolutely crushing for Achilles at this moment. You also showed the pain of him not being there for Patroclus death quite well. As well as his guilt for not crying for his wife and son in contrast to that which it's so tragic!
The scene where Achilles pleads at Patroclusâ urn was especially gut-wrenching. His desperation in offering up his reasons as if striking a bargain, despite knowing itâs hopeless... It shows how his mind is completely under the grief at this point...
Achillesâ interaction with Antilochus was incredibly touching. The tenderness between them, the way Antilochus calls him back to reason with such affection is beautiful. The embrace, the gentle way he wipes away Achilles' tears, and even his soft plea for Achilles to be there for him⌠itâs all so sweet. You showed their closeness in such a tender way, and it was especially moving to see how Achilles was pulled from his despair when he realized Antilochus could be lost too. The moment Achilles' protective instinct kicked in was so well done!
Their connection by the prophecy of death is so tragic tho... but still so meaningful! I always find it profound when a characterâs will to live is reignited because of their care for someone else. Here, itâs all the more tragic because both Achilles and Antilochus are staring at their own potential deaths. Yet, their shared vulnerability and need for one anotherâs presence give this scene so much emotional depth!
Completely unrelated, but Achillesâ plea to Antilochus really reminded me of Caleb begging Dilla to stay, and their reconnection after years apart. It struck me with the same vibe!
Love the short scene with Odysseus at the end as well! His desperation to return home after years of war, mixed with the uncertainty of Achillesâ mental state despite the death of the strongest warrior of the enemy... Itâs bittersweet and so very human.
Your attention to detail really shines through too. The way you mention older characters like Nestor feeling the cold more deeply adds a great touch of realism! You are so good with such charming little details!
And you end up with a very nice duality as well! Achillesâ regained spirits is contrasted by Nestorâs look of grim reality, reminding Odysseus that while the young fight and die, the old are left to mourn and witness the fading of their legacies...
Once again amazing girl! Another powerful moment described so well really fantastic work!! â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸
The Lament of a Life (Achilles and Antilochus short songfic)
If someone asks me how the lament of Achilles looks like my answer would be the amazing aria with music composed by Vivaldi:
The lyrics go on a repeat like this:
So today is a bit chilly and so I was inspired by this amazing song and made this! (Sorry itis a random inspiration I had this morning from this piece thus the title "song-fic")
***
His eyelids were heavy. He didnât feel like getting up anymore. His bed seemed cold and inhospitable and yet he didnât feel like moving out of it. His eyes opened slowly and looked to the side. It was empty. He looked outside his tent. Also empty. There was nothing left; he didnât have the subject of his revenge anymore; he had given it back. Hectorâs body was buried and celebrated. His revenge had come to an end. And yet, he felt empty. Nothing mattered. Achilles, the Best and Noblest of all the Greeks was no longer feeling anything mattered. What would it matter now that the subject of his vengeance was gone, if the subject of all the affections he could offer to a human being was also gone? His soul was in turmoil throughout the process. He thought on Briseis, the woman that he felt so strongly for; merely a slave and yet so important for him, had started this domino of reactions which led him to the strike; his refusal to fight. Then his refusal led to this terrible result; the death of his other half. The flame that flickered inside him was gone, the moment Patroclusâs eyes turned glassy from death and he wasnât even there. During Patroclusâs last momentsâŚhe wasnât there! He remembered his wife; a woman he barely knew and yet she gave him a son, a son he adored despite his young years, a son that he never knew and a son that never knew him back. He could be lamenting for them; they wouldnât see him again possibly. Given the prophecy, he was to die in war. Possibly neither his wife nor his son, were included in the prophecy. He should be crying for them. He should be crying for the people that were around him and yetâŚhe was feeling weak; unwilling to even get out of his bed and eat because of⌠He slowly forced himself to sit up and he looked at the magnificent urn with two handles that was always within eye gaze from him. The intricate patterns were cold; just like his bed that could not give him warmth.
âCome backâŚâ he whispered in a voice chocked deep in his throat
Tears oozed out of his sea-blue eyes; his throat burning anew.
âI did what you askedâŚI offered you a burialâŚcome backâŚ! PleaseâŚcome back to me!â
His hand was shaking as it was reaching for the cold, golden urn; his other fixing the covers upon his naked chest, in a vain attempt to generate some warmth within.
âPleaseâŚâ he whispered again, âCome backâŚ!â
âAchillesâŚâ
The young and soft voice didnât surprise him neither made him react. Antilochus was standing right behind him, undoubtedly had entered his tent a little while prior, enough to hear his foolish and childish lament.
âHe wonât come backâŚâ the young man said as a matter of fact, âYou offered him a burial. He is in the land of Hades now⌠He will not come backâ
More tears arose from Achillesâs eyes as he clasped desperately the covers against his chest; his face buried to the pocket created by them as if his own eyes wanted to confirm what hurt so much was indeed the organ that was pumping his blood, giving him life inside. Yes, he knew. His cut hair was also a proof of that but hearing it again was somehow destroying that foolish illusion that if he begged hard enough, goddess Persephone would have mercy and send back Patroclus to him; his soul to talk to or at least restore his body to hold one more timeâŚ
âSoul of my soulâŚâ he mumbled in lament, âMy dear as my own heartâŚâ
âShhâŚâ Antilochus whispered in tears, hugging his shoulders affectionately, âI know⌠I know⌠Please donât do this to yourself⌠I know it hurts butâŚheâs gone⌠No matter what you doâŚhow much you meltâŚhe wonât come backâŚâ
âHeart of my heartâŚâ Achilles lamented again, âI want him backâŚ! I want him to come backâŚâ
âI knowâŚâ Antilochus said again, caressing his golden locks with his hands
Achilles seemed almost aged at that point in his sorrow. Antilochus almost felt tempted to look for white hairs in his golden head.
âAnd I am sorry that I cannot offer you any consolation⌠Forgive me. I am not him; I cannot take your sorrow awayâŚâ
Antilochus softly raised Achillesâs head, cupping his cheeks and making him look deep in the eyes. He moped the tears from his cheekbones with his thumbs.
âI know I am young and foolishâŚbut, please, take one bit of advice from me; stop looking at it! Stop looking at that urn! It will only hurt you more⌠You need to come back to us tooâŚwe need youâŚâ
He looked away.
âI need youâŚâ he whispered shyly, âYou are my hero, my idol⌠I need you back, strong and healthyâŚmaybe some of your previous happiness back⌠PleaseâŚplease my dearâŚwe all need you. Above all I doâŚâ
Achilles looked at him and for one moment he looked like a hurt animal facing the peasant that had released him from the hunterâs trap. However then he laughed; it was a dry, humorless, lamenting laugh.
âDonât be foolish!â he said self-pettily, âNo one shall need me! I shall die! I know I will!â
âDonât talk like that!â
âYou canât deny it, Antilochus! I know it to be true! It was predicted for me! I will die! I will die in this war! My mother told me someday I would die in this war if I decided to fight! I shall never go home! I shall never see my wife and son! I will die now! I know I will and I donât care! Nothing matters anymore!â
âDonât say that!â Antilochus retorted again
âI know the truthâ Achilles insisted, âI decided it for myself. I know what my fate is! That urn Im staring is waiting for me! I am to die!â
Antilochus looked away. He seemed hesitant; his arm rubbing his upper arm as if he was about to make that confession no one has heard before.
âIâll tell you a secretâŚâ he whispered, âSo am IâŚâ
Achilles seemed surprised and shocked for the first time in that conversation. Suddenly the lament gone; now there was fear in his eyes. Fear for yet another loss.
âMy father was hiding itâŚbut I overheard him. An oracle once told him to beware of an Ethiopian. At first I didnât knowâŚbut my father tried to hide it from me. I know now that I am to die somehow by someone from a foreign land⌠Maybe today maybe tomorrow maybe here maybe at home⌠I know though that I will die like thisâŚandâŚâ
He swallowed and looked back at Achilles. The elder man gasped seeing tears to Antilochusâs eyes.
ââŚAnd I am scared! I am scared, Achilles! I donât want to tell my father that for he would be ashamed of me and my cowardice butâŚI am scared! How can you take it, Achilles? How can you live knowing that you will dieâŚ?â
âAntilochusâŚâ
Antilochus quickly mopped his own tears, sniffing his nose, trying to find his composure.
âIâm sorryâŚâ he mumbled, âI donât know what came into me! I justâŚâ
He sighed.
âWe need you backâ he finally repeated, âYou are our strength and our courage. When you are out there we are afraid of nothing!â
âAntilochus!â
And Achilles did something the younger prince never expected; he embraced him.
âAntilochus, dear to my heartâŚdonât say such things please. Donât you say that you will die! I will not let you! IâŚI will protect you!â
âYouâŚyou willâŚ?â
âI will!â
Achilles kissed the top of his head and held him close. Maybe for the first time in weeks he didnât think of death and burials. Right now he was lamenting a life; this young man who was there apparently sharing his pain and fate. No, he wouldnât see yet another young person close to him die before him in battle!
âI will protect you! I will not let anything happen to you I promise!â
The two men remained there for quite some time, neither wanted to count the time. It was a shared lament for their short lives; a lament that was different than the one for the dead souls. Who would die first? If both of them were destined to die in the war against Troy, who would die first and who would watch the other die? Neither wanted to be the last. Neither wanted to see the other die. What weird and sad fate! Achilles was almost rocking the youth in his arms so worried of his upcoming death while he was almost welcoming his at that point; oftentimes kissing tenderly his temple. Antilochus was trying to evoke some of his warmth to Achilles for he was afraid for his upcoming death; his welcoming of it. He didnât want to hear fate yet alone his willingness to accept it. It was a weird way to connect that autumn morning. And yet he felt that at least Achilles might have found a reason to postpone his will to die. Antilochus broke the embrace first, standing up.
âLook at us!â he chuckled softly, âLooking like children playing at the gymnasium like this! We have a war to fight! I am sorryâŚI took your personal time, my lord AchillesâŚâ
âWait!â Achillesâs voice made him stop, âStayâŚpleaseâŚâ
It was a request; a pleading.
âPlease stay with me longerâŚâ he almost seemed worried, afraid
âAre you afraid of the dark and shadows?â
âYesâŚâ Achilles admitted, âMore like those inside my heart⌠Please stay a bit longerâŚâ
Antilochus smiled softly.
âOf course, my lordâŚâ he whispered, âI would be delightedâ
*
Outside the tents, the Greeks were already preparing for the events of the day. The kings were to negotiate their next step again given how the mourning period for Hector was over, how the killings would start anew. It was a sad prospect and they knew their own forces wouldnât last long. The spies were also informing them on movement on Troyâs part to call upon more allies to arrive to the battlefield. Odysseus was thinking all this as he pranced about the camp. He blew some warm air to his freezing fingers. Autumn was in for good. Soon winter would arrive again.
âYet another year to the foot of TroyâŚâ he thought miserably, âYet another year away from our homesâŚfor the sakes of this warâŚâ
He was also worried on Achilles. That last lament period shocked everyone. Achilles had just collapsed and then turned into blind rage. People were afraid on his sanity; that his mind would break. An out of control Achilles was much more dangerous than they would have thought. And their army needed their support. Before the Trojans had Hector to even the odds. Now their strongest warrior was gone. It would be their chance to have higher spirits and yet they didnât. Achilles was a mess. Once more they seemed to square one⌠He could only hope he would snap out of his grief enough to fight. His gloomy thoughts were interrupted when he saw old Nestor. Nestor was suffering more than the rest of them from the cold; he had a bear skin over his shoulders to keep his old bones warmer and yet he refused to stand back. Odysseus smiled.
âGood morning, my friendâ he said
âGood morningâ Nestor replied, âIt turned chilly!â
âYeahâŚâ Odysseus agreed, âSometimes I envy the young!â
âSpeaking of whichâŚmy son left the tent earlier this morning. He said he wanted to check on Achilles and I didnât hear from him since. Have you seen him?â
âNoâ Odysseus replied thoughtfully, âBut I was heading there myself to check on things. Maybe he is still thereâ
As if on a queue they heard light laughter coming from the direction where the Myrdmidons had camped. Â The distinct, clear laughter from Achilles made a small smile creep to Odysseusâs lips.
âItâs the first time I hear him laugh in weeksâŚâ he sounded almost hopeful, âYour son is a miracle-worker!â
Nestor smiled back.
âHe isâŚâ he whispered thoughtfully, âHe isâŚâ
Odysseusâs smile dropped when he saw a shadow in Nestorâs eyes. He didnât need to ask to know there was something ominous hanging over the two youths.
Yet another time he looked at the cloudy, gray sky and wondered to Athena how all that was even justifiedâŚif the youth were to perish and all the others would liveâŚ
***
So yeah...Achilles being depressed and Antilochus giving some consolation! TT_TT Achilles hoped to see Patroclus's ghost again (which is what inspired me from that amazing Aria as well!)
Also I wondered if Antilochus knew the warning Nestor got to "beware of an Ethiopian" if he would know or sense the warning was for himself instead of his father...what if he feared it all along...maybe that would be the connection with Achilles!
Set after the mourning period of Hector! As you can see I kept it a bit "homeric" in the essence that I love tenderness in his writing and then leave it unravel!
a small thanking thing in a way too for @smokey07 for honoring me with a mention! Anoher thankng for @h0bg0blin-meat for his sketch to one of my silly headcanons about Achilles and Patroclus! Still makes me giggle my friend!
Also I want you guys check out my brilliant friend's art and mentions on our characters trust me you won't regret it! Many parallels of the epic cycle were added unconsciously to our story! Hahahaha! @artsofmetamoor
My analysis on Achilles and Patroclus can be found here
Antilochus needed some love too there! Hehehe others write scary stories for October but I was like "nope I shall mention ghosts in angst!"
ARCANE LEAGUE OF LEGENDS: 2x02 - âWatch It All Burnâ âł "Do you drink tea, Ekko?"
Oh gosh here it isâ¨â¨â¨â¨â¨â¨â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸đđđđ
Just by the title, how the guilt and duty (or the sense of it) intertwine already hints and this absolute journey (and quite literally so) that this will be!! And what a ride girl this is both intense and so very inspiring đđ⨠it's so great to see how you put in motion all the explanations and perspectives you have given me about these epic tales!!
Oh man and it starts immediately with this poor guy struggling! I can only imagine how the hunger must be almost numbing to his body at this point... And all his efforts of enduring it only to find it was all in vain a mere moments later, for his companions just couldn't endure it themselves!! Oh man and the way you made him think his senses were messing with his head when he smelled cooked meat and then absolute panic, almost like the shock gave him sudden energy to rush there!!
And he begs and prays and curses even his sleep until his eyes land on what he mostly feared! Oh boy! And this definitely hits him even harder for the fact that he had lost the majority of his people in the last few years, now he must watch the rest doom themselves as they eat the forbidden animals!! This shows so well how human they are tho! How cruel their situation is, forced to remain without food dying slowly from it yet having such a temptation of the animals right close to them!
I love the way you wrote Odysseus' panic, the fact that internally he cannot blame his men, he knows any mortal would break in such a situation, yet he cannot contain his frustration either for he knows this action was their complete doom, and the gate possibly closing on them ever returning home! The detail of your description of the cows standing there almost mocking them gives a good idea of the cruel test, which seems like it was designed to fail, almost for the Gods to have the excuse that they needed!
Oh gosh I can almost hear his yells of desperation and frustration to his comrades! And such a human reaction of Eurylochus to get defensive and angry like that, it shows how men can simply break under such pressure, and that on pure survival mode you will take any risk and any chance you get to survive even if the only way out also leads to destruction... Plus after all these years, after all this suffering and now this agonizing hunger... his nerves and rage just surface even over common sense!
But of course the same can be said for Odysseus who also endured... who also suffered... for all in the hopes to save his men and see his family again only to watch it all go down the drain... That slap was deep! Your description of it even made me put my hand on my cheek hahaha damn!! Oh man and the way you describe him in the verge of tears from the sheer rage of it all, but also the grief of their eminent danger as he reminds them how a failed test from the Gods is a death sentence and even so much worse than that!
Oh man the way you wrote Eurylochus spitting that accusation to Odysseus now, like bitter poison accumulated! That it was his fault that all of this happened! I really like how you made Odysseus punch him even harder out of the sting of that accusation and even raise him by the shirt while the others can't stop him, but as he screams back how an ungrateful bastard he is and how much he has done for them he suddenly stops and internally his guilt starts to consume him and he ends up agreeing with Eurylochus...
Oh man and he thinks of all the actions that came back to bite him, with the cyclops and Poseidon and more... and not only doom him but all his people as well đ˘đ˘ the war and the years that lead to it already left such a bleeding wound on his heart, but the fact that he had more than 600 men by his side up until and after that dreadful war, only to lose nearly all of them in what he tough would be his last voyage home is just too much... Oh gosh the way his absolute rage gives place to numbness and his body becoming weak and his eyes gosh... It's somehow so much sadder than his boiling grief, like the fight died in him and his spirit (and gosh he's about to enter such a worse situation than the one with Circe that he mentioned đ)... And suddenly his guilt makes him want to try his best to save them once more! You gave such an awesome tornado of emotions in just one moment!!
I love how his hair covers his eyes and their darkness and how he just commands his men with all this storm inside his soul. And how he's desperate to find a way to make a sacrifice to save his people from the Gods... Man Eurylochus throws that as the sharpest of knives, using the title he probably used to say with respect, and now throw as an insult to Odysseus (while mocking him!!) and after he was so guilty to look at them anymore!
Man this description is truly sad... The way a person hardens and changes and how Odysseus witnesses that slowly and painfully happens to his friend, a heart becoming stone... And once again I love their tension even tho Odysseus understands it all he simply can't take it and it disturbs him so... And man once again how very human, Odysseus can't contain himself at the food anymore especially since the animals are dead anyway... Plus he knows there's no way to survive without food now that the gods surely will not allow them to have anything... This is so painful, the despair is real!
Yet I also love how Odysseus still curses him saying that he better forget what happened here or hell kill him hahaha that's somehow so funny even in the middle of the tragic situation đ
Oh man and here they go... And of course the situation does not allow them to stay close to shore they must head out to the absolute danger and hope for the best, tho unfortunately all the hope was not enough đ˘ Gosh this is definitely so unnerving! Knowing that without a doubt there must be consequences for the actions of eating the sacred animals yet nothing is happening for days, like a cat letting the mouse think it might be safe before it pounces!! Man I can so imagine Odysseus nerves breaking like that, and the fact that he too ate the meat just doesn't help! And man him not speaking while waiting for something to happen while his men are nervous all around him! And gosh a week has passed and Eurylochus is still suffering from that slap with a swollen cheek đ¤Ł
It's touching to see Polites still on Odysseus side despite it all, and how he's balancing it out with Eurylochus anger. It's like reading the personifications of empathy and anger having a conversation hehe oh boy his come back of "He's not God for me to perfect blasphemy"!
The Aiolus sack contained the winds right? And they were driven backwards... What was the seclusion on the hole? Sorry still learning hahaha oh but I remember Skylla and how her heads would eat the men, but Odysseus never told them as to not discourage them, and perhaps in an attempt to save them as well! I love how everyone has their points here, yes Odysseus did it to spare them but yes Eurylochus has the right to be upset at their eminent danger being hidden from them, even if he's being extremely harsh as well... I love how complex this situation is and how everyone has a hand in it, both Odysseus and his men and yet in their frustration they clash. But I love how Polites manages to soften him up slowly and to reflect on his thoughts... In the end they are all just tired men wishing to return to their families which makes the next events all the more heartbreaking... This is their last conversation like this...
And of course it's understandable that the men are pouring their frustration onto Odysseus especially after he ended up provoking a God (tho ironically they did the same with the animals they killed, even if it was a dire situation), and it's touching that Polites acknowledges the mistakes yet he also acknowledges all that Odysseus did for them (oh man saved from being Circe's pig is definitely a big one hahaha) ... And how the silence makes him more eager to approach him to help... And gosh Odysseus reaction too is chilling... But man so it is the silence of the surroundings and a red flag to what is about to happen! Especially as Odysseus shushes him to observe everything better...
Oh man Polites is about to get his answer to that "Have we ruined everything?" The Gods themselves seem to have heard the question and are about to answer!! đ¨
Gosh Odysseus realization!! You really made us accompany their dread so well with your writing and how wrong everything is in this instance... After days their judgement is finally coming... And the fact that Odysseus himself is so terrified really adds to the dread!!
And now I can see how you perfectly took reference from that Pocahontas scene and translated the moments into this story! Gosh how they thought Odysseus might be crazy right before hell just breaks loose... And Zeus thunder coming along with Poseidon's waves!! Man poor guy instantly begins to pray and you really made me picture the terrifying immense dark storm so well!
Gosh the sails being torn like that as the men tried so hard to secure them and Odysseus trying to guide them like a flock of terrified sheep following their guardian... The poor men rowing while their sails get destroyed only for the rows to be broken as well and the poor ship breaking like a toy in the Gods' hands oh man that description! Like I said before 2 Gods against this ship is just such an overkill! The hopelessness of these men against them... The way even Odysseus screams for the damage to be fixed even if he knows that it's hopeless and impossible at this point... And the way he can only pray and watch everything crumble around him, how raw your dialogs and descriptions are!
Oh man and here is the scene of the mast đą you captured this moment so well the suspense of the giant object falling, the way the pilot is crushed in such a gruesome manner and the splatter of the blood of his bones and head... đ¨ Oh man and the panic that comes right after of the men running not even listening to Odysseus anymore... And the scene of Odysseus running to grab the bloodied broken stern, how chillingly realistic the way you described the blood staining him, and how he hurts himself with the effort, and the splinters of the wood... The way he begs "not again" is so heartbreaking đ˘
And it seems as if all hope was broken at the same time that the steer broke on Odysseus hands!! Even if he's still screaming for his poor comrades to hold on... Oh man and here comes the end!! The way you wrote the thunderbolt striking is so scary!! The way he shields his ears and screams because the sound is painful and the light is blinding... And the remains of the ship both sinking and in flames is another level of hell... And Poseidon's giant wave appear to finish the job claiming his comrades and friends taking them away to the seas in a screaming mess đ˘
Man and here is the part where Odysseus fashioned his raft (or anything close to a raft he could build in such conditions) it's still crazy how he manages to gather the pieces so quickly as even his survival mode is both glowing and faltering with his companions taken... And once again your writing surely described well this moment I could picture it all, as he searches throughout the ship desperate for the materials... And the poor guy is still praying for them!! It's too heartbreaking how he prays to be allowed to save at least just one of them and take him home đđ
And he rows to their direction with his bare hands after the ship goes down, but of course he can't find them nor does he get any answers as he screams for them đđ I can fully picture those terrifying mountain waves...
Man the way he screams then falters once he realizes he's all alone, everyone else dead... And then him screaming he was the one who should have died in their place... Man the raw emotions, how he flows through them through your writing and dialogs đđ his heartbroken mind going back to the moment he left with all those six hundred men saying he would do anything for them to return safe... and now he lost them all...yet he remains...
Man his survival guilt and more really is hitting him hard now... He still can't believe it and he's still praying and screaming đ˘đ˘ you wrote his grief so well in the middle of this storm all alone, screaming and crying at the seas for them đ
Oh man and this man trully can't have peace... So exhausted right after this nightmare, broken at sea alone without his men, and he goes right back into another hell! And here comes the monster the moment he just got conscious!
Man I love legends of deep sea creatures and monsters and the way you described the moan and the vibrations and whirlpool of Charybdis is chilling in the best way possible for this scene! Can see why this is perfect inspiration for Caleb sucked by the whirlpool in that second scenario! đđ
Poor guy just prays and begs and everything keeps going wrong! (Tho ironically he's extremely lucky to survive all this at the same time!)
Every time poor Odysseus rows with his hands in despair is heartbreaking, and the way he replies to Circe's words he just remembered as if she was there! And I love how all of this connects to your title his guilt turning into his duty to survive so the death of his comrades was not in vain! It's perfect â¨đ
Oh and the iconic fig tree scene! It's so good through your writing as well and chilling and intense đąđą especially knowing he's so weak already yet he pulls himself and holds on for dear life! It's realistic the way you wrote his cries of pain from hanging from his arms like that... The pain of his weight being held by them and feeling like they will tear apart... And man the hellish view of the whirlpool as he can only hang over it even with his wet hands!! And the way he had to master all of his courage to jump down again as his raft finally appears from the hole!! Also loved the description of how the water felt like boiling to his cold skin!
Man and thankfully he was spared from another monster even if he still has more hell to endure... Poor man the way you described him just collapsing on his raft and just enduring the rest of it while wounded and weak... And the way he just cries, he just can't take it anymore, it was all too much his lost men and his family which seems so far away... đđ And he once again contemplates his low chances of survival and his survival guilt, thinking this is worse than his death on the ship oh man đđ
Man those words from his grandfather seem both encouraging and cruel... And that was such a good transition, how he's ready to give in to let go because the pain is too much yet the small glimmer of hope entices him to keep trying and fighting... To face death if it comes but still to try and live, that is so bittersweet the way he somehow finds his strength again and keeps paddling!
The raft being the remains of his lost favorite ship, the last reminder of his men also hits deep as it is the only thing he can hold on too... And he still holds on to it through storms and waves and burning suns đ until he at least has some rain and has to eat seaweed, oh man brutal!! And the way he is constantly almost falling and coming in and out of consciousness... (Dunno why this part made me imagine Ballard on the Titanic AU when he's holding on to some wood or something else when the ship sinks... Without the storms of course, but man, him feeling himself almost slipping and nearly losing consciousness with the bitter cold... Sorry!!) man the way he just stopped feeling the fish biting him and everything...
And finally he arrives at shore and he doesn't even notice it!! Poor guy's soul is closer and closer to the underworld at this point đ˘đ˘ Oh gosh and here comes the mysterious figure... Another challenge still for this man... And more grief to follow but at least he gets the chance to keep living even if he will remain more years away from home!! đđ
Gosh girl what a touching, brutal, gut wrenching and beautifully written piece!! I know I'm always saying this but it's true, the way you write emotions girl!! It's always too good!!đđđđâ¨â¨â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸ Beautiful piece! Truly amazing!! â¨â¨â¨â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸
Man that Dinosaur soundtrack is so fitting! The melody with the heavy notes portraying the danger is perfect for Charybdis!! And gosh of course that scene you showed me from the Les Triplets de Belville with the melancholic yet intense melody and the visuals of the seas and the giant waves đđđđđâ¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸
Amazing girl as always a masterpiece!!â¨â¨â¨
Survivor's Guilt and Survivor's Duty (P1)
Odysseus was hungry. That much he knew. Gods were really cruel with them the days that went through. He had returned from yet another hunt without any success. Not even a single rabbit was visible to Heliosâs island. He was already feeling weary and light-headed with hunger; which was why he thought he was hallucinating when he smelt the finest smell of roasting meat he ever met in his life. However it took him no more than two brain cells of his infamous mind to connect the dots and realize what had happened.
âNo! Gods no, let it be not what I think it is! Please gods no!â
His legs grew wings as he began sprinting towards the direction of the smell.
âWhy did you lull me to that pointless sleep?! Why! It was all to ruin me? To ruin them?!â
He ran with all the strength of his feet to the field only to find what he hoped in all gods he believed in to be a hallucination. He saw what remained of his men from that eventful 3 year journey having lit a fire and roasting a fine cow to the pike, happy and well-fed. In the past days his men just broke. They could withstand hunger no longer and understandably they had only one source of nutrition on that island; those fat, well-kept cows that seemed to be mocking them. Of course his men would do that! Odysseus could not blame them and yet he pulled his long hair in desperation seeing the scene.
âARE YOU ALL MENTAL? HAVE YOU LOST YOUR MINDS?!â he yelled desperately drawing their attention, âI told you not to do that! These sacred animals will be our doom!â
Eurylochus, his trusted commander came forward. His eyes were full of snare and gathered anger.
âCaptain,â he started, âdid you expect us to starve to death? Not even one little bird was flying around and all the grass in this place turned poisonous for us! We would die anyways! This time we were doomed either way!â
The loud voice of the furious man was cut off from the sound of flesh striking against flesh and then Eurylochusâs head turned to the side. Odysseus was huffing and puffing; nostrils flattering aflame as he gathered his strong hand back.
âYou fools!â he growled tears burning his onyx eyes, âyou damned fools! This was a test! A test for our faith and we failed! We failed miserably! Havenât you learnt anything? Insulting the gods is never a good idea! We should rather die of starvation than this! The gods will show no mercy on us now! We are doomed!â
âYou would know of that!â Eurylochus suddenly bellowed beyond himself, âYou doomed us all, Odysseus! If you havenât done that we would be in our country by now! These three years happened because of you!â
This time it was a punch that stroke his cheek, not a slap. Eurylochus fell on the sand but he had no time to breathe for Odysseus grabbed him by the shirt lifting him up to his feet again. The comrades rushed there to grab him (oh they remembered his rage the other time nearly cost Eurylochus his life!) however Odysseus was almost as unmovable as a statue at that point. His face was red with fury.
âI tried to save us all!â he yelled, âUngrateful bastard, I tried to save us all! I faced the beast that could have eaten us all! After everything I did for you! I-âŚâ
He stopped. He shivered from top to bottom. Eurylochus was right. All had happened because of him. He had insulted Poseidon by blinding his son; he was arrogant enough to brag about itâŚno, even further back; Troy fell because of him. So many men died because of him. Ten years they fought a brutal war; they had endured the weather, the living conditions, the battles⌠More than 600 men started and finished the war with barely any lossâŚand nowâŚless than 3 years out in the sea and⌠They started 12 ships and now they were oneâŚless than 40 men left in one final shipâŚand all was initiated because of himâŚhe could not deny it. He found no words to defend himself. Gradually he let go of Eurylochus, who wiped the blood off his lip with his fist. He noticed his men had gathered around to separate them from each other but it didnât seem necessary anymore. The comrades had let him go, noticing he was almost limb in their arms. His onyx eyes were bottomless. No, it shouldnât end like that! He had committed hubris to save his men and he doomed them, he had forced himself to bed a woman for one year after gods requested to rectify it and yet here they were again. None of the sacrifices seemed to be enough to wash that sin away. No, he couldnât let them die like that! He had to try! He had promised he would repent! He had to save them before that happened!
âGather up your stuff, men!â he ordered, eyes still shadowed by his hair, âWe must go as soon as possible!â
âGo?â Polites asked, âGo where?â
âAt ANY land!â Odysseus whispered, âAnywhere but here! We must offer a sacrifice of some kind! We must wash away this hubris!â
As he turned his back at them âoh he couldnât face them now!- Eurylochus stood up and looked at him with eyes resembling knives.
âShould we take the rest of the meat tooâŚCaptain?â that word was almost spat like an insult, âOr shall we hope Poseidon will grace us with a meal?â
Odysseus winced. Eurylochus; his brave and loyal friend; the type of person that sure, didnât tell him always nice things but he was always honest with him and always told him some things that needed to be said; now he seemed gone; All their adventures and torments had hardened him, killing his old comrade and giving him in his place a bitter, hateful man who could understand no longer the difference between insolence, disrespect and honesty or couldnât care less to tell them apart. Odysseus couldnât blame him but at that moment he found his transformation disturbing and concerning. He glared daggers at him. The mention of the meat of the slain animals made even his mouth water. He was hungry too. They wouldnât survive without food and yes, Poseidon sure wouldnât allow them to fill their bellies with his fish given the situation and the sea birds even if they graced them with their presence, which he doubted, were inedible and poisonous. Gods forgive me, he thought, but I am just a man!
âDamn you!â he cursed under his husky breath, âTake what you wish! If we survive this, pray to all gods that I will forget this because by all gods one day Iâm gonna kill you!â
He could hardly remember the process but he knew they were on their way again; so fast and so hastily inside their last black ship in the openness of the Mediterranean Sea. If it was in his hand, Odysseus would have stayed close to the shore but of course gods were cruel for yet another time as Heliosâs magnificent isle lay in the middle of open sea. He had no choice but to head for the sea and hope for the best. He knew there were lands close by; if they could reach them⌠For six days the trip was uneventful and his comrades had as provisions the meat from the slain animals to feast upon. Even Odysseus had to admit he had tasted the magnificent flesh of the animals, for he could withstand hunger no more. However six days of such a trip and he was always expecting the worst, which never seemed to be coming. His nerves just broke. It was the seventh day of their journey; still no sight of any land and still he hadnât spoken a word. He was staring at the endless blue of the wine-dark sea and he didnât speak a word. He could sense his comradesâ tension in the air; he could almost cut it with a knife! And yet, Odysseus could not focus on that. Polites looked up from the deck towards him and then towards Eurylochus who still had his cheek swollen.
âHeâs so lost in thoughtâŚâ Polites commented
âHe should be!â Eurylochus replied bitterly, âHe might be our king but sometimes he has a lot of nerve to talk to us that way! It was HIS hubris that brought us to this position!â
âNow that is both unfair and blasphemous to our king!â Polites replied
âHe is no god for me to perform blasphemy!â Eurylochus replied as a matter of fact
Polites sighed.
âWe have our own share of responsibility, you know! If we hadnât opened that damned sack we might have reached home as well!â
Eurylochus winced at the reminder of Aiolus sack. Yes, that truly was their mistake. They got overcome by greed and distrust.
âAnd, besides, what Odysseus said is true. You and I were never there. We didnât experience the week of seclusion in that hole. Perhaps we would have done the sameâŚâ
Eurylochus sighed defeated.
âYeahâŚperhaps youâre right. And he DID spend a year entertaining Circe till our comrades healed⌠HoweverâŚâ his face darkened a bit, âI still cannot shake it off, Polites! It is majorly his fault we ended up like this! And he DID keep secrets from us. Or have you forgotten how he kept his mouth shut about Skylla? Six of our comrades deadâŚand we didnât even know what was comingâŚâ
âHe wanted to spare usâŚâ
âYeah I am sure he suffered, alright, but we still had the right to know! Perhaps we could have come up with a plan together. Perhaps we could have fought back!â
âFight back an immortal six-headed dragon? I am not sure how that would have worked butâŚeven if you are right and he should have told us, that doesnât change the fact that he is here with us now. If he wanted he could have stayed with the witch, Circe and sent us off and we would have no directions and no warnings.â
âHe didnât do that for us, Politesâ
âNot entirely, I agree, but wouldnât be fair to say that he did it for us as well?â
Eurylochus sighed.
âFine, but seriously it was such a long trip and even longer way⌠I just want to go home!â
âWe all doâŚâ Polites whispered concerned.
Yes, ten years of war plus three years of wandering and dangerâŚmore than five hundred good men dead⌠Everyone could understand the feeling.
âI agree with Eurylochus, thoughâŚâ said another man, âIt was all a big mess that initiated when Odysseus insulted Lord Poseidon. I had warned him that day! I said, stop provoking him! He didnât listen⌠We are all paying the price nowâŚâ
Polites sighed. Yes, he couldnât deny that but still it seemed rather unfair to say it was just Odysseusâs fault. If anything, Odysseus was sacrificing many things along the way to protect and save them. He shivered in disgust remembering that he was told he had turned into a swine because he entered Circeâs palace. He felt grateful to Odysseus for rescuing him from such a fate. And yet⌠He still couldnât shake that ominous feeling that something would happen and Odysseusâs silence wouldnât help. Not bearing it any longer he slowly approached Odysseus. He didnât acknowledge his presence. The silence was deafening. Only the cricking of the ship and the sound of the waves could be heard. There was no land at sight anywhere. It was quietâŚWAY too quietâŚ
âOdysseusâŚâ Polites started, âweâŚâ
âSh!â Odysseus harshly shushed him
âPlease, I have to say itâŚâ Polites insisted, âWe were starving we made a mistake but-âŚâ
âQuiet!â came yet another whisper
Polites gulped soundly, opening and closing his fist nervously.
âOdysseusâŚâ he started, âHave we ruined everythingâŚ?â
Odysseus looked at him and he seemed ready to reply but then he raised his head sharply towards the sail and then to the ripples of the waves. All color left his face.
âOdysseusâŚ? What is itâŚ?â
âThat is Eastern WindâŚâ Odysseus whispered almost in a panic, âThat is Zephyr that is blowing at us! Thatâs not normal! Not at this time of year!â
He almost jumped from his standing point, suddenly seen afraid maybe for the first time in a long time if not ever in his life before.
âMEN! PREPARE YOURSELVES! STORM MIGHT BE COMING!â
His comrades didnât have enough time to question if he lost it or not (given the clear skies around them) because in a few minutes the weather changed so drastically and rapidly that people could only suspect a god was causing it. Black clouds filled the sky in a matter of a few minutes and then suddenly the distant sound of a thunder was heard.
âNoâŚâ Odysseus whispered, âNoâŚplease, lord Zeus no! Forgive usâŚplease!â
Strong winds raised as a matter of seconds and suddenly the deep blue sea turned into a full-fledged storm. The waves rose in angry white foam and the skies were black like coal with flashes of lightning and thunder. Rain followed that was cold and whipping their faces like needles. The men cried out in fear.
âEURYLOCHUS!â Odysseus bellowed on top of his lungs, âSECURE THE SAIL!â
âSECURE THE SAILS!â Eurylochus transferred the order, âALL HANDS ON DECK!â
The panic galore was not allowing the orders to properly pass however the soul of the sailor cannot be abided by panic! All hands on deck began to work frantically; they commenced running up and down grabbing the chords and the lines, some of them already climbing to the mast to secure the sail. However it seemed the rage of gods was stronger than the determination of men and their burning wish for survival. A strong current of wind torn the sail to peaces sending quite a few falling on the deck.
âLEAVE IT!â Odysseus yelled as a strong wave splashed over him, âBEFORE THE WIND! HOLD ON TIGHTLY MEN!â
As the ship was played around on the waves like a toy, the terrified warriors and tired sailors would be desperately trying to use the rows to turn the ship; do something, ANYTHING to prevent themselves from crushing on the waves. The sail was now torn to shreds; like the cape of a dethroned king, aimlessly whipping against the mast at the strong wind.
âBEFORE THE WIND!â Odysseus kept screaming over the wind, grabbing the line of the sail in a desperate attempt to keep the material from hitting anyone on deck, âROW MEN! ROW!â
The ship was being pushed mercilessly upon the waves; creaking and moaning against the wind. Three pairs of rows snapped like twigs leaving the ship spinning aimlessly to the winds. The black ship began to tear apart as cracks and gushes appeared to the sides. The deck started taking water both from below and above from the waves.
âSHEâS TAKING WATER!â one of the sailors cried
âREPAIR THE DAMAGES!â Odysseus cried out in desperation running as he was already ankle-deep in water, âWE MUST KEEP HER AFLOAT!â
It was a pointless order and he knew it. No matter how many times they stuffed torn pieces of the sail in the holes it would be pointless. They were already soaked to the bone, they had no way of lighting fire or softening the wax to fix anything. They were just trying to delay the inevitable and they were failing miserably.
âLord ZeusâŚfather of all mankind and gods please forgive us!â Odysseus prayed again, âPlease, we shall repent! Give us a chance! Poseidon! Oh, Poseidon, please give me a chance!â
The disturbing creaking of wood being slowly broken didnât need much for Odysseus to understand.
âWATCH OUT!â he cried out
Both the fore-stays of the mast snapped like twigs. The mast began to fall in a disturbing creak and collapsed to the stern. The pilot did not have time but to look up at his upcoming doom as the mast crushed him. Even above the tempest the men heard the disturbing sound of bones breaking as his head was crushed and blood splattered upon the stern. The body fell into the black sea, lifeless and soulless. At the sight of that death there was panic galore. No one heard the orders Odysseus was screaming; no one had any mind but to run up and down aimlessly like ants that were seeing their colony collapse. All they could do was scream their upcoming doom. In a foolish hope or rather a crazy need to survive, Odysseus rushed to the half-broken stern, grabbing the remains of the steer; his hands being died with the blood of the pilot.
âNo! No! NO!â
He used all the strength of his mighty hands to do somethingâŚANYTHING to steer the ship away the storm. His hands began bleeding out of the effort upon the splints of the destroyed wood.
âGods no! Not again! No! No!â
The waves were raising the ship to the heaven and dropping it back down like a walnut shell as people were holding for dear life at the remains of their already tearing apart ship. The steer snapped in the hands of Odysseus and fell into the black sea never to be seen again.
âPREPARE FOR IMPACT!â Odysseus cried out, âHOLD ON!â
Therewith the worst came; a thunderbolt stroke the ship and the sudden flash and tremendous sound left them all blind and deaf. Odysseus screamed in pain shielding his ears. The ship cracked from side to side down in the middle; splintering in the winds like it was a pile of leaves. Ears buzzing and his nose filled with smoke from the fiery fire that lit upon the sad remains of the deck, Odysseus staggered to his feet, struggling to get two steps straight, trying to see through the sulphurous smoke (the only thing he could see was his comrades or what was left of them staggering on the ruins of their ship like drunk) when the last tidal wave came to finish the job. The wave must have been as tall as the remains of the ship as it flooded with tremendous force on the deck sweeping everythingâŚand everyone! Odysseus got violently banged against the hull but he watched in terror through his cloudy from water eyes his comrades falling into the water screaming aimlessly for it was the only thing they could do.
âNOOOOOO!â Odysseus could only cry out as he ran to the rim
He watched the bodies of his men almost like small white dots to the absolute blackness; already almost a mile away, sometimes disappearing under the waves at the force of the tempest. Odysseus nearly lost the remains of his wits as he ran about the ship trying to find literally ANYTHING he could use. Another surge torn apart parts of the keel and the mast snapped from it. Odysseus reacted almost automatically as he rushed to the broken ropes and parts of the keel and mast. His hands and thick fingers began working frantically, almost completely unconsciously as water was hurting his eyes and rain was feeling as if piercing his flesh. All his Being was screaming for him to save himself; to survive! However that tiny part of his brain was tingling to him; maybe there are some men who are still alive! Maybe there is time!
âPlease Athena! Please AthenaâŚlet me save them! It canât be too late!â he was mumbling as he was securing the ropes so that the two pieces of wood would tie together, âPlease, Pallas please! Let me save just one! Please! Let me return home just one! Please! Please! It canât be too late! I canât lose them all!â
Yet another thunder from the skies made him jump and then the remains of his favorite ship were torn apart! Odysseus grabbed upon his last raft of salvation. He jumped into the merciless ocean, rowing frantically with his hand towards the direction he saw his men disappear.
âEURYLOCHUS!â he cried out over the waves, âPOLITES! ANYONE! ANSWER ME!â
The only answer he got was thunder and wind. The waves were tall like mountains!
âPOLITES!â he called out again
Tears filled his eyes as his voice broke.
âSOMEONE!...P-Please! Anyone! AnyoneâŚ!â
There was nothing on siteâŚjust waves and storm.
âNoâŚâ Odysseus cried, âNOOOOOOOO!!!â
Realization was crueler than what he would expectâŚthere was no oneâŚjust himself! He criedâŚhe cried loudly as he never cried before.
âNOOO! WHY! WHY! WHY!â he yelled over the waves, âIT SHOULD HAVE BEEN ME! IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN-âŚâ
His mind and wits nearly escaped him. He remembered that day before their sail for TroyâŚthere were more than six hundred menâŚwaiting for their dangerous tripâŚ
*
Odysseus was standing before his men; the future fleet that was ready for this uncertain trip. Odysseus, dressed in his fine clothes, his long hair neatly brushed and beard trimmed, was looking at them seriously.
âWe are heading for a dangerous trip, my menâŚâ he said, âThe road is long and we have no idea how long it will take for us to finish with the holy castle of Troy⌠If we result in warâŚthere is no guarantee it will end soonâŚâ
His onyx eyes stared deeply within countless others of pairs.
âI cannot lie to you, menâŚI cannot promise you that we shall all return home safelyâ
He drew a deep breath.
âHowever I promise you this; I shall do ANYTHING within my power so we can return home safely! I wonât disappoint you!â
*
Back to the present Odysseus cried. He weakly hit his fist upon the mast.
âNoâŚâ he sobbed, âI wonât disappoint youâŚ!â
Six hundred menâŚthey were all goneâŚdisappeared⌠He began hyperventilating. No, it couldnât be true!
âNoâŚNo, Athena! No Athena!â he cried trying to fist the water beneath him as if it were sand, âNo, PallasâŚ! No⌠No, my menâŚ! NOOOOO! NOOOOOOOO!â
He yelled till his throat was soreâŚtill his voice was goneâŚhe sobbed and cried tears almost as plenty as the waves of the sea. The storm was roaming around him⌠There was no one there to hear his lament⌠His voice was carried around by the windâŚhis tears were washed away by sea and rainâŚHis body was borne by the direful windsâŚ
Six hundred men had started that fateful journeyâŚ
Now there was only oneâŚ
Now he was alone.
*
The tempest began slowly to subside and the eastern wind gave his place to a breeze from the south. Odysseus was hanging helplessly upon his supposed raft. The nightly fight with the waves had exhausted him and his tears had long now dried out like the salt in his curly hair. His head was already dropping in fatigue when something made him look up. His eyes widened in terror.
âNoâŚâ he whispered
He recognized the location. In his pure terror he recognized the narrow path of Skylla and Charybdis; the passage he had struggled so much to get his men out of; the passage that cost the life of six of his comrades. What was worseâŚhe heard an unworldly moan from deep down the sea. His feet felt the low frequency vibrationâŚand then there was a whirlpool. Charybdis had awakened!
âNo!â Odysseus cried out, âNo, gods, no!â
The merciless current and the frightening groaning from deep down the sea started drawing him. Odysseus at the edge of his wit began frantically rowing with his hand; desperate in his fear to get away from the deathly current that would suck anything to its path! At that moment he remembered Circeâs warnings;
âYou must not be there when she sucks it down; for no one could save you from the ruin not even the Earthshaker himselfâŚâ
âI HAVE TO TRY, CIRCE!â Odysseus yelled towards the sky in his panic, âI have to try or else my menâs deaths were for nothing!â
The merciless current though wouldnât bulge as Odysseus realized in terror his pitiful attempts could never save him from this hellish force. The two pieces of wood that were forming his only salvation were being dragged in the ruthless elix. The water was already foaming when he reached the grotto. In panic he scanned the perimeter. Only then his eyes remembered what his brain had erased in fear; the fig tree! Circe had said there was that fig tree shadowing Charybdis! The massive roots and branches were hanging over him; it was his only hope! With strength only panic and adrenaline could give him, Odysseus pushed himself on top of the last remains of his ship and kicked as hard as he could. He had only one chance. His wounded and red hands grasped for dear life onto the rough branches and thank goodness his fingers closed around them!
âARGH!â Odysseus cried in pain feeling as though his arms would be uprooted out of his own weight, âGODS!â
His legs helplessly hanging over the abyss were desperately moving trying to find a footing but there was none! His arms didnât have the strength to pull him up at the tree either so he could only hang and hold for dear life. Odysseus dared to look down and saw in terror the gaping hole sucking in the sea and with it his only safety raft. His wet hands would slip and fall if it werenât for the sheer determination that held him! He prayed to all gods that he knew and didnât know that this time, just this time, he would find salvation; that his small raft would be vomited out of that whirlpool otherwise he would be lost⌠The growling rumble from beneath the watery abyss signaled the begin of the outside movement to what it seemed like an eternity later.
âPlease godsâŚpleaseâŚpleaseâŚâ he was thinking like a mantra
And then he spotted it! The small brownish outline of his mast and keel. He would have a chance! Fear was biting his stomach as he looked down at the whirlpool vomiting out seawater. He knew he had to act quickly or he would have no hope to swim to his raft in that condition. Charybdis below him seemed ready to swallow him even if she was vomiting out the water. What if she really swallowed him if he let go? What if he would be destroyed by some wave? Odysseus looked and looked and the seconds seemed like eons to his tormented heart that was flattering within his chest. He shut his eyes closed; to not see; to not fear and he made his decision
He let go of the branch.
Gravity claimed his body as he fell to the empty space and within the foaming water. The water was hot; hotter than human body temperature and to the tormented king of Ithaca who was freezing from water that seemed like a boiling cauldron. His ears were filled with the sound of bubbles and the hellish growling of Charybdis. He didnât dare to look; only he paddled like his life depended on it (and it did!) . The suction force that was pushing him upwards this time was with him. Odysseus felt his lungs burning for air and he nearly breathed in the sea water as he hadnât got a proper breath before diving in the sea. And he was pushed up and up till he was vomited out of the water and drew a soundly breath. He swam frantically till his raft and grabbed onto it with his wounded hands for dear life coughing salted water; nose and eyes aflame from the salt. He rowed and rowed with his hand almost immediately after he caught some breaths. He turned around towards the OTHER dreadful site.
âIf Skylla comes outâŚIâm lost!â he thought
However the dreadful cave that hosted the monster that claimed the lives of six of his crew remained dark and silent. Nothing came out. Odysseus wasted no time and rowed and paddled like crazy to get as far away as possible from that dreadful area. He didnât know how far Charybdis or Skyllaâs ranges were but he certainly didnât want to know! That was knowledge that even Odysseus of Ithaca, the Man of many Ways could pass on! After what seemed like a full eternity and when the sun was setting for good at the horizon, Odysseus had covered enough distance to see the grotto from afar. He collapsed onto his mast, drawing raspy breaths till his chest began to hurt. He seemed he had no more strength to move. His hands were full of wounds from the ship and the tree branches and hurt from salted water, his lips were torn from the sea and salt had crusted onto his face and hair. Then Odysseus broke down. He cried silently alone in the middle of the sea; he cried for his men he lost, he cried for his dreams that seemed to becoming fainter and fainter; the dreams to embrace his wife and son and he cried for himself. He had barely any hope to survive. He had no men; sea had claimed them. He had no vessel; the storm had claimed it. He had no food or water; those were gone long time ago. He barely had any clothes on for even those were soaked and already tearing apart from the wind and sea. What was the point to keep going, he thought? What would be the point to struggle? He had slim to no possibilities to escape. He was alone in the open sea without protection in Poseidonâs territory. Any kind of sea creature from the usual sharks till the dangerous creatures he faced so far, could potentially kill him.
âI should have died there!â he thought, âAlas this fate is worse than the death in the ship! This agony! Oh, gods I canât bear it anymore!â
âYou are made to endure, OdysseusâŚâ
That was what his grandfather had told him when he visited him in Parnassus what seemed like an eternity prior; almost in another life. However even the tormented Odysseus had his limits. And now these seemed surpassed. Maybe he should let go; allow the sea to take him and end his torment. Maybe he could meet his family in a few decades in the underworld⌠Why struggle for the inevitable? And yet a small voice to the back of his head made him think that he could not give up just yet; that he had to keep trying and if the sea would claim him then so let it be written, so let it be done. However he had to try and fulfill the prophecy of Tiresias. He felt like he owned this to the 600 lives that were lost under his command. He looked up at the stars that seemed to have started to form. Yes, he would follow the directions that the night dress of Nyx was pointing at. Finding strength anew, the Man Tormented paddled slowly and steadily away from the dreadful spotâŚ
*
Odysseus traveled once more; this time alone and grabbing upon the last remains of his beloved black ship⌠The night came cold and he was shivering. By the morning another storm caught up with him and his mast was once more drifted by the huge waves that resembled white top mountains, tearing apart his clothes and his flesh. And yet his hands endured⌠It was as if his heart and hands combined turned into oak or stones. The Man of many Torments endured. Next day the sun was merciless over his head, sending him almost to the brief of hallucinations and heat as sweat was running down his already wounded body. The night the gods felt pity on him and sent a drizzle rain. Odysseus raised his head to the heavens trying to grab as much of the fresh god-sent water as if that would be enough to quench his insatiable thirst and the burning of the salt. Once a passing seaweed came close to him to which Odysseus made some sort of imitation of a meal for himself. How many times he nearly slipped off his life-raft he lost countâŚhow many times he probably actually fainted on it he could no longer remember. And yet, the King of Ithaca enduredâŚin strength that he had no idea he had. It was as if both his body and spirit had decided he had a duty to survive. He survived the agony and pain as well as the anxiety and fear every time something touched his foot beneath the waves or a passing fish would bite his legs. He had long stopped feeling much.
By night before the tenth day of his painful journey he had collapsed. He didnât feel the sand beneath his body as his raft finally beached at a sandy beach. He didnât move as some crab or beach beetle walked over his sea-beaten body. By dawn some hints of his consciousness returned. It was only for a brief second that the rays of sun touched his salt-crusted cheek but Odysseus saw or at least he thought he saw a tall slender figure picking something up from the beach many meters away from him (maybe a seashell). The figure turned towards him and walked there.
And then everything turned blackâŚ
~~~~~
Ooookay guys this the first part from my Odyssey story! Poor Odysseus loses everything and gets beached in Ogygia.
Rhapsody 12 must be the most intense or one of the most intense of all the Odyssey and honest the way that Homer describes how Odysseus survived had to be kept as it was from my part!
Poor Odysseus must have passed from all the stages of grief at once!
Now I get extremely inspired by music and soundtracks for my stories. For example the Charybdis description was heavily inspired by the amazing Disney soundtrack for the movie "Dinosaur" with the title "The End of Our Island"
For his eventful journey I was partially inspired by Mozart's "Kyrie" from the Great Mass in C Minor and also the scene from the film "Les Triplettes de Belville" for the battle with the elements especially the storm and all.
For the sinking itself I was inspired by various soundtracks and pieces of music.
For my story I kinda take the hypothesis that Ogygia was in fact the small island of Gozo in Malta
As the other time I shall tag some of my amazing commentors/rebloggers and friends! (again forgive me if I forget anyone)
@loco-bird @aaronofithaca05 @tunguszka20 @doob-or-something @jarondont @prompted-wordsmith @simugeuge @fangirlofallthefanthings @ilov3b00kss0much
Reblogs and random thoughts from the void. Art blog is @yararts
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