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I wished him for a companion.” Therapon was the word he used.
Our mouths opened under each other, and the warmth of his sweetened throat poured into mine. I could not think, could not do anything but drink him in, each breath as it came, the soft movements of his lips. It was a miracle. I was trembling, afraid to put him to flight. I did not know what to do, what he would like. I kissed his neck, the span of his chest, and tasted the salt. He seemed to swell beneath my touch, to ripen. He smelled like almonds and earth. He pressed against me, crushing my lips to wine. He went still as I took him in my hand, soft as the delicate velvet of petals. I knew
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the world would say Achilles was born for. That his hands and swift feet were fashioned for this alone—the cracking of Troy’s mighty walls. They would throw him among thousands of Trojan spears and watch with triumph as he stained his fair hands red.
Peleus
Pho...
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Antenor. Eurypylus. Machaon.
Agamemnon.
Odysseus.
Ajax.
Philoctetes,
Menoit...
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Idomeneus.
Diomedes.
Atreus
Menelaus
Agamemnon.
“Achilles,
Phthian
Phoinix
She would take him to the caves of the sea and teach him contempt for mortals. She would feed him with the food of the gods and burn his human blood from his veins. She would shape him into a figure meant to be painted on vases, to be sung of in songs, to fight against Troy. I imagined him in black armor, a dark helmet that left him nothing but eyes, bronze greaves that covered his feet. He stands with a spear in each hand and does not know me.
One of my hands went to clasp his knees, the other reached upwards, to seize his chin with my hand. The pose of supplication.
“Scyros.”
Phthian kings.
King Lycomedes,”
Deidameia,”
“Chironides,”
Deidameia’s women?”
Lycomedes. He was known to be kind enough, but a weak king, of limited resources. Euboia to the west and Ionia to the east had long eyed his lands; soon enough one of them would bring war, despite the inhospitable shoreline. If they heard a woman ruled here, it would be all the sooner.
The music began. The steps were intricate, and the girls moved through them featly. In spite of myself, I was impressed. Their dresses swirled, and jewelry swung around their wrists and ankles as they spun. They tossed their heads as they whirled, like high-spirited horses.
Deidameia was the most beautiful, of course. With her golden crown and unbound hair, she drew the eye, flashing her wrists prettily in the air. Her face was flushed with pleasure, and as I watched her, I saw her brightness grow brighter still. She was beaming at her partner, almost flirting. Now she would duck her eyes at the woman, now step close as if to tease with her touch. Curious, I craned my head to see the woman she danced with, but the crowd of white dresses obscured her.
“Pyrrha,
Achilles answered coolly, “My husband.”
Thetis stood in the doorway.
“You are bound to us now, King Lycomedes. You will continue to shelter Achilles here. You will say nothing of who he is. In return, your daughter will one day be able to claim a famous husband.” Her eyes went to a point above Deidameia’s head, then back. She added, “It is better than she would have done.”
not command
Automedon
chief priest, Calchas.
Diomedes
Meriones
Agam...
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Achilles
Priam.
Ajax
Menelaus.
Hector.
Philoctetes’,
Phoinix
Automedon,
Protesilaus, Prince of Phylace,
spinning spear, from Hector himself,

