LOGINHypatos asking for stew instead of ambrosia? That may seem small, but for this stubborn Spartan, it says a LOT.
A malicious current of whispers passed through Olympus recently. It buzzed through the town on the wings of pegasi and in muttered conversations between acquaintances. Eugenius, Lord Ares, had declared he would marry.Kyltië, daughter of a mid-ranked noble military family, was to be his bride. She was barely seventeen winters old. It wasn’t who he was marrying that got people talking; it was when.Five years after Arete died, rumors were swirling that Eugenius had been courting her family and others’ as early as months after her death. Eugenius had waited long enough that it didn’t look like he was impatiently trying to replace her while still observing an appropriate mourning period.People were calling it disrespectful at best. Having your feelings hurt and discarded like that would have me salty, too.“Aresson waited five years to replace her!” I heard from the regulars at the Pegasus on more than one occasion.“It’s disgusting how quickly he just moved on.” I even heard that once
Androkles had turned sixteen, and the atmosphere around House Ares had shifted from a simmering tension to a palpable, predatory focus. It was as if a switch had been flipped, and the boy was no longer a potential heir but a weapon being readied for war. Eugenius and Nikos had begun openly preparing him for adulthood in ways that made my stomach turn. Nikos had become a constant, venomous presence. He had been forced to step down when Diokles, the great-great-grandson of the original immortal Zeus, came of age. Diokles had possessed a power far greater than Nikos's own diluted divinity, and the jealousy had curdled in Nikos's soul. He saw Androkles not as a son, but as a vessel, a way to maintain his grip on power. Nikos's creed had been simple and chilling: the one who controls The Destroyer is the true ruler. I watched, sickened, as they began to mold the boy. The lessons were no longer about history or strategy; they were about manipulation and cruelty. Eugenius had held court
Another two years bled into the next, the seasons turning like pages in a book I had forgotten I was still writing. Sometimes, in the quiet moments before the tavern came alive, I stood behind the bar and marveled at how completely Olympus had become my life. I knew regular customers by name, not just their orders. I understood the intricate web of House rivalries—the simmering feud between House Hermes and House Apollo, the quiet contempt House Poseidon held for the landlocked nobility. I had unintentionally become a quiet source of information for travelers and soldiers alike, a repository of gossip and facts they knew they could trust. My parents' letters still arrived, filled with tales of distant lands and the open road, but they read like stories from a life that belonged to someone else. The wild wanderer they had raised had become a stranger to me. More importantly, Hypatos had woven himself into my daily existence so thoroughly that I noticed his absence before I noted an
Two years had passed since that chimera stole Arete from me, and the wound was no longer a gaping, bleeding hole but a deep, aching scar I carried with me every day. Androkles had turned thirteen, his boyish softness sharpening into the hard, angular planes of adolescence. My role had evolved beyond simple stewardship into something far more complex: combat instructor, political advisor, and, most begrudgingly, a reluctant guardian. I didn’t care for him much most days, but despite ourselves, he found himself seeking me out more often than the yes-men and dusty scrolls tutors father hired him. He’d jump me in the library, demanding critiques on some ancient battle plan, or ambush me in the armory, requesting insights into northern blade metallurgy. But where things truly came undone was in the training yard. The Spartan agoge was a brutal system, designed to forge boys into men through pain and endurance. Androkles took it to a terrifying extreme. He pushed himself recklessly hard,
Several months passed after the night I stayed with Hypatos. The world kept turning, seasons changed, and the tavern’s clientele ebbed and flowed, but one thing remained constant: Hypatos began returning regularly to The Obnoxious Pegasus. He no longer disappeared into the seedy lower-city taverns, a fact that Boreas acknowledged with a silent, grateful nod. He still drank heavily, the amber ambrosia a constant companion, but the destructive edge had dulled. He was no longer a force of chaos, but a monument to sorrow, quiet and contained. I noticed he unconsciously sought me out now. It wasn’t anything overt, just a subtle shift in his habits. He chose the table closest to where I was wiping down the bar or took the stool that gave him a clear line of sight to me as I moved through the room. It was as if my presence had become a fixed point in his chaotic internal map, a landmark he could navigate by. Our conversations became part of their nightly routine, a dry, sarcastic dance we
One year. Three hundred and sixty-five days of having Arete as my charge. One year of stolen conversations in the Pegasus tavern with Saea, her acidic humor smoothing some of the roughness from each day. One year of stolen moments with Arete herself, slipping into dark corners to press desperately shut mouths together, hands grasping clothing and skin until hers was all I could see or feel, and my life as Keeper to House Ares didn’t seem quite so empty. It hadn’t been enough.Time itself seemed to pause while the messenger spoke. He was young, probably no older than I was before I was cast down from grace. Dust coated his cheekbones, and he kept his eyes focused on the floor when he spoke to Eugenius in the main hall of our estate. I’d been polishing ceremonial armor in a dark corner when he’d arrived, but I heard him.Chimera.Attack.On the road to Erasmus’s estate.Lady Arete…
The miserable reality of serving ten-year-old Androkles settled over me like a shroud.I woke each morning with the same thought: today, I will have to wipe the smug look off that boy’s face. I fully expected him to be spoiled and cruel, a miniature version of Nikos, Lord Zeus,
The Fates must despise me. Every glimmer of hope they've dangled before me has been snatched away or tainted by their cruel hands. My first love was forced to marry another. My wife, Pavlina, was stolen too soon by the creeping shadow of cancer. A chimera claimed my right arm, and with it, my ran
Truthfully, there had been whispers flying around The Obnoxious Pegasus long before sweet ambrosia had met sweaty brows.As a satyr, my hearing was keen. Over the last few months, I’ve taken to listening to conversations around me. Those sneaky sods at the tables near the hearth by t
Six years. That was how long I had been pouring ambrosia at The Obnoxious Pegasus—a lifetime for a satyr.My kind were born to wander, chasing adventures across wild hills and into warm beds, never lingering long enough for the grass to grow beneath our hooves. My parents s







