PREVIOUSLY-
The mob didn't wait for a second invitation.
They ran.
All of them.
In the temple's shadow, Sigmund turned to Nyx.
"He's getting dramatic."
"Prr—He's earned it."
--x---
A FEW DAYS LATER-
The war chamber stank of steel, blood, and old fire. Emberlight flickered across the obsidian walls, casting long shadows behind Ares and his chosen few.
He stood shirtless beneath the great iron war-mask mounted above the hearth, arms crossed, the cords of his neck tensed like drawn chains. A crack of distant thunder framed his words.
"She's alive,"
Ares said flatly.
A silence followed. Kydoimos, crouched in the corner with a pike resting across his lap, grinned without warmth.
"Not for long, if we wish it."
"No,"
Ares snapped. His voice hit the stone like a falling axe.
"Alive. Intact. Useful."
The others—Deimos, Phobos, and a third who hadn't spoken yet—exchanged looks. War-things bred for slaughter, not restraint.
Ares uncrossed his arms. His eyes, twin coals, turned toward the flickering brazier at the centre of the room.
"You know what she is now. What the curse made her. Eyes that turn men to stone. A gaze that ends wars before they start."
Deimos scoffed, tossing a cracked helmet into the flames.
"She's a monster. Even the sea god tossed her aside."
Ares turned his head, slow and deliberate.
"Yes. And monsters win wars. You think I care how she screams? What gods did to her? I care what she can do."
Phobos leaned forward, voice low.
"She won't come willingly."
"She doesn't need to."
At that, the third warspawn finally spoke. A woman—black-armored, her helm hanging from her belt, eyes sharp as obsidian shards.
"If we cage her," she said,
"She'll curse us. Fight. It'll be like trying to ride a storm."
Ares smiled, slow and bitter.
"Then bind her with storms."
He stepped toward the table where maps of mortal realms lay splayed—tiny cities drawn in ink, ripe for ruin. He jabbed a finger against a red circle in the north.
"She sleeps here. Temple ruins, swallowed by vines and rot. You'll go. No legions, no noise. Quiet as winter wolves."
Kydoimos chuckled, rising.
"And when she wakes?"
Ares turned, voice cold.
"She'll see my face. And realize this is the only war where she gets to choose which side of the spear she's on."
His hand closed around his own weapon—no ornament, no gleam. Just black iron and godblood.
"Bring me the gorgon," he said.
"And make sure she understands: Olympus wages war not just with blades and armies—"
He looked up, eyes burning.
"—but with the forgotten, the feared, the broken. The things even gods turned away from."
Silence fell. And then, the warspawn bowed.
Orders were clear.
War was coming.
The marble clouds parted like teeth, and Perseus stepped into the court of Olympus.
He looked young—too young for the weight of prophecy—but there was a quiet edge to him, like a blade kept in shadow. Bronze bracers clung to his forearms, a red chlamys slung over one shoulder.
His hair was dark, windswept. His eyes held the same steady defiance that had once made a tyrant-king flinch.
He didn't bow. Just waited.
The gods were already watching.
Athena stepped forward first, clad in stormlight and silence. Her spear struck the stone once.
"You were called."
"I came," Perseus said.
From behind a column, Hermes grinned.
"So grim. You'll fit right in."
A beat of stillness.
Then Zeus spoke—his voice not loud, but final.
"Medusa stirs again."
Perseus's expression didn't change, but something in the air did. A colder tension.
"She has been hunted before," Athena said.
"But now? Now others seek to bind her. To turn her gift of death into a weapon."
"And you want me to kill her?" Perseus asked.
"We want you to reach her first," Zeus replied.
No answer came. Just the sound of distant wind and crackling cloud.
Athena raised her hand. Four sacred items appeared, each hovering in the space between thought and storm.
"This," she said, reaching first to the air,
"Is the Harpe—a curved blade once used to castrate Uranus. It cuts more than flesh."
She handed it to him. Perseus took it, feeling the strange weight—like it remembered things.
Hermes approached next, holding out a pair of golden sandals, feathered at the heels. Talaria.
"Speed keeps you alive," he said. "Also, they're faster than regret."
Then came the Cap of Hades—plain, black, and heavy with silence. Not a helm for battle, but for vanishing.
"It hides you from mortal and divine eyes," Athena said. "Even hers."
Last, a bronze shield, Aegis burnished until it gleamed like still water. She tilted it toward him.
"Don't face her gaze. Use this."
Perseus slid it onto his arm, then accepted the final item without a word: a leather kibisis, bound with sacred knots. A bag to carry the impossible.
"The road leads north," Athena said.
"Beyond Thessaly. Beyond where gods once walked. She sleeps among broken pillars, in the ruins of her sisters."
Hermes leaned in, whispering with a crooked grin.
"Don't fall for her. Or do. Up to you."
Perseus strapped the blade to his hip. Tightened the sandals. Slung the pouch over his back.
He looked up at the gods—three titans of fate and war—and said only one thing:
"Am I expected to return?"
Athena didn't blink.
"Only the bag must."
He said nothing more.
Then he turned.
And leapt from the edge of Olympus—vanishing into cloud.
LOCATION- BEYOND OCEANUS IN A RUINED TEMPLE
"Theo. Left entrance. Keep watch."
Sigmund's voice was low but firm.
Theobald nodded, tightening his grip on the haft of his axe as he strode away from the altar.
"Rook," he added over his shoulder,
"Stay with them. Perseus could arrive any moment."
At the far end of the ruined chamber, Lira knelt beside the silent figure curled near a shattered column. Medusa neither spoke nor wept—she simply remained still, arms folded over her knees, blindfold fluttering faintly in the breeze that whispered through the broken temple.
Her silence hung heavy, like fog before a storm.
Nyx and Rook flanked her—one crouched low, muscles coiled, the other perched with ruffled feathers, eyes scanning every shadow. Guardians, quiet and watchful.
STEP.
STEP.
The sound of approaching footsteps echoed—heavy, deliberate. Iron on stone.
A silhouette emerged through the broken archway. Theobald squinted toward it, his brow arching in curiosity.
"Hey!" he called, half amused.
"You there—who are you?"
The figure stepped fully into view.
He was massive. Well over seven feet. A hulking colossus of corded muscle, twisted beneath banded iron and seared with old scars that ran like ancient script across his flesh. His long, black hair hung in thick cords down his back, swaying as he moved. His skin was pale, his eyes blank—pupil-less, as if carved from white marble.
Resting across one broad shoulder was a greataxe, monstrous in scale—its blade chipped from wars long past, its haft wrapped in torn leather and dried sinew.
"Kydoimos,"
The giant said, voice like stone grating against stone.
Theobald's eyes widened, lips parting with recognition and barely-contained glee.
"Kydoimos…?" he echoed.
"The Kydoimos? The din of war, the daemon of battlefield chaos?"
The towering figure gave a small nod. Then, awkwardly, he scratched the side of his nose—almost sheepishly.
Theo's smile widened into a full grin. He twirled his axe between his fingers like a street performer flipping a coin.
"Well then,"
He said, voice practically buzzing with excitement,
"I want to fight you."
Kydoimos paused. His head tilted to one side—an oddly childlike gesture from a creature so massive. The expression on his scarred face was one of simple confusion."
"You're here for Medusa, aren't you?"
Theobald asked, his tone sharpening.
The daemon nodded slowly.
"Then you'll have to go through me first."
Kydoimos considered this. Then something in his mind clicked. His white eyes blinked. His expression brightened.
"Okay," he said simply.
Then he gave Theobald a thumbs up.
The temple groaned as the two faced each other in the broken threshold.
Salt breeze hissed through shattered walls. Smoke curled from shattered braziers. The cracked statues of long-forgotten gods seemed to watch in silence as the boy who ate monsters stood grinning before the embodiment of war's chaos.
Kydoimos.
The battlefield daemon.
The din made flesh.
He stood awkwardly, like a child given too much attention, shifting his grip on the war axe slung over his shoulder.
His voice was deep and disarmingly plain.
"Start."
Theobald's face lit up like a child handed a festival drum.
"Yesss!"
Rook, perched nearby, tilted his head.
"Krr—Is now really the time, boy?"
But Theo wasn't listening. His blood was already singing.
He dropped into a loose stance, axe low, knees bent.
The warm wind caught his crimson hair as he beamed at Kydoimos.
"I've always wanted to test myself against someone like you."
Kydoimos stared at him blankly. Then, ever so slowly, he set the massive greataxe down beside him with a dull THUD.
Then he cracked his knuckles.
"Okay,"
He said, tone mild,
"Let's try fists first."
WHOOM!
He vanished from sight.
BOOM!
Theo ducked just in time as a fist like a battering ram exploded the marble behind him.
CRACK!
Theo flipped, his axe swiping upward—Kydoimos blocked with his forearm. Stone shattered from the shockwave.
The daemon smiled faintly.
"You're strong."
Theo's grin turned feral.
"Damn right I am!"
CLANG!
The axe struck the banded iron of Kydoimos' ribs—but it skidded like a pebble over riverstone. Kydoimos didn't budge.
Instead—
WHAM!
Theo flew back, carving a trench across the temple floor.
He rolled up onto one knee, coughing dust.
From the altar, Sigmund watched through narrowed eyes.
"…That daemon. He's holding back."
"Prr—More like… curious,"
Nyx muttered beside him.
Back in the fray—
Kydoimos lifted his hand, examining the shallow dent Theo's strike had left on his arm.
Then nodded approvingly.
"You ate something strong,"
He said casually.
Theo spun his axe in one hand, planting it in the floor to steady himself.
"Kraken. Some eelborn. Maybe a bite of hydra once…"
Kydoimos's eyes lit up.
"Hydra tastes terrible."
Both paused.
Then burst out laughing.
"Right? So bitter!"
They grinned at each other across the rubble.
Then both moved at once.
BOOM! WHOOM! CLANG! BAM!
Each strike was a chorus of thunder. Axe to knuckle. Fist to axe handle. Dust rising like a curtain of war.
Behind them, Rook muttered:
"Krr—They've forgotten the woman we're trying to protect."
Nyx groaned.
"Prr—They'll probably become friends halfway through the duel."
BOOM!
Theo flew backward, skidding across stone with sparks blooming beneath his heels. He braced with one hand, flipping upright with a huff of breath, grin undimmed.
Across from him, Kydoimos shook out his knuckles.
The daemon's towering form stood unmarred, body steaming faintly from the heat of their exchanges.
"You're fast for a glutton,"
Kydoimos said simply.
"And you're not just chaos, you've got rhythm,"
Theo replied, stretching his neck with a satisfying POP.
Kydoimos tilted his head again—he did that often, like a curious dog.
"What's your name?"
"Theobald Umbra. Monster Eater. Survivor of the Thalassor. Devourer of weird crab legs. And proud wielder of one suspicious bird."
"Krr."
Rook flapped from a broken beam, unimpressed.
"You forgot egg thief."
Theo grinned wider.
"Also egg thief."
Kydoimos nodded solemnly.
"I like you."
CLANG!
Their fists met again, dust spiralling upward like storm clouds.
Behind them—
Lira was adjusting the mercury cocoon around Medusa, whispering quiet reassurances. Her breath came slower now, but her fingers still trembled.
Medusa stirred slightly under the cocoon's warm sheen.
Sigmund kept his eyes on the far end of the temple, where the smoke wavered like the breath of a sleeping beast. His sword was drawn, resting tip-down on the marble.
"…Something's coming."
Nyx tensed.
CRACK.
The far archway buckled as a new figure stepped through.
A man. Barefoot. Tanned. Lean muscle carved like statues from a time before war was named.
His cloak shimmered like sunlight on waves, and in his hand—long and gleaming—he held a blade of celestial bronze.
His hair was raven-black, bound by a circlet of laurels. His eyes—storm-grey—were fixed ahead.
He walked slowly. Like someone who had never once in life been rushed.
Lira's breath caught.
"Is that…"
Sigmund muttered,
"Perseus."
"Medusa."
The name rolled off Perseus's tongue like a judgment.
He walked toward them, each step echoing across the broken floor. The chaos of Theo and Kydoimos' duel seemed to fade into silence.
"Return her to me,"
He said, voice quiet—too quiet.
Sigmund stepped forward, one arm limp, the other resting on his sword.
"She doesn't belong to you."
Perseus blinked slowly.
"I carry the aegis. I have slain monsters since boyhood. You—outsiders—have no right to decide her fate."
"She isn't a monster."
"She turned men to stone with her gaze."
"She was defiled in Athena's temple and punished for it."
"…Blasphemy."
Perseus's tone hardened.
"She is cursed. Nothing more."
Lira stepped forward now, mercury swirling around her ankles like nervous spirits.
"She is alive. And she has been alone. If you were truly a hero, you would have seen that."
The room stilled.
Even Kydoimos had stopped. His massive head turned toward Perseus. Theo slowly lowered his axe.
Perseus looked at each of them—strangers, allies, enemies—all standing between him and the woman he was told to kill.
"…So be it."
He raised his blade.
"Then you will fall as her guardians."
CLANG!
Perseus's blade struck against Sigmund's with a shattering clang, force surging down Sigmund's broken arm like fire in his veins. He gritted his teeth, boot sliding backward across cracked marble.
The aegis shimmered behind Perseus—Athena's shield. He pressed forward, strikes clean, brutal, and measured like the tide itself.
"You're bleeding,"
Perseus said calmly.
"I'm breathing,"
Sigmund snapped, blocking the next blow with his shoulder, using the momentum to spin.
SWISH!
His sword lashed out, grazing Perseus's ribs. No blood. Just scratched bronze. The hero's breastplate was something else—divine, unyielding.
BOOM!
A column shattered behind them.
Lira stepped into the fray, mercury rippling like waves around her form. Spears and chains, mist and vapor—every state of mercury moved with grace, forming a shield, then a blade, then a whip.
Perseus turned his gaze to her. His eyes were colder than steel.
"You toy with tricks and metal. This is a battlefield, girl."
Lira didn't respond. Her answer came as a spinning orb of mercury slammed toward his head.
He ducked. Too slow.
CRACK!
The orb struck his helm, leaving a dent. His eyes flared.
The ground shook.
"ENOUGH!"
Kydoimos's voice rumbled like a drumbeat inside the bones of everyone present.
He moved.
A blur of iron and muscle, his greataxe swung downward like an avalanche.
Perseus barely raised his shield.
BOOM!
The altar split in two. A shockwave blasted the stained-glass windows, sending shards into the air like confetti from a violent god.
Theobald shielded his face, Rook fluttering above him, feathers flaring. Nyx was already moving—low, silent, a white blur circling the edges of the chaos.
Perseus landed hard, boots carving furrows in the stone.
Kydoimos's chest rose and fell slowly, nostrils flaring. His white, pupil-less gaze narrowed.
"You are not a warrior of judgment," he muttered.
"You are a blade wielded by ignorance."
Perseus roared, darting forward with impossible speed, his blade lashing at Kydoimos's exposed chest.
But Kydoimos turned. The greataxe spun like a wheel of fate.
CLANG!
Sparks. Screams of metal.
Theo dove in from the side, swinging his axe low.
Perseus leapt back, but Nyx was already behind him.
SLASH!
A cut opened across the back of Perseus's thigh. Not deep, but clean.
"Prr," Nyx growled. "Not fast enough, hero."
Perseus twisted, swiping at the leopard, but Rook dove from above, talons flashing.
SCRAAAW!
Blood sprayed across the altar.
Perseus staggered. For the first time, he looked uncertain.
"Who are you people?"
Theo grinned wide.
"The ones that don't let victims die in silence."
CLANG! CLANG!
Kydoimos returned, slower this time. Not from fatigue—but reverence. Each swing of his greataxe was like a rite, a test.
Perseus blocked and twisted, but Sigmund returned. Lira flanked from the other side, casting a blinding cloud of mercury mist.
Perseus coughed, stepping back.
"Your eyes are filled with mercy," he spat.
"You call it justice. But justice has no tears."
Sigmund growled.
"No," he whispered.
"But it should."
WHACK!
The hilt of Sigmund's sword struck Perseus under the jaw. At the same moment—
BOOM!
Lira's mercury hammer slammed down on his shield from above.
CRACK!
The aegis split. The face of Medusa fractured, a jagged line running across her cheek.
Perseus fell to one knee.
Theo leapt in, his axe catching the sunlight.
But Kydoimos stopped him with a hand.
"No," the daemon said.
"He's done."
Perseus looked up at them—at the altar, at the broken windows, at Medusa asleep in her cocoon.
At mercy.
At power not born of gods, but of choice.
"…You… are all mad."
Sigmund spat blood.
"We're free."
Perseus slumped, sword falling from his grip.
The silence that followed felt like a prayer never finished.
Then—Nyx curled protectively around Medusa again. Rook fluttered to Theobald's shoulder. Lira wiped her brow and sat down hard on the stone.
"Stop."
Theobald's voice rang like a whipcrack across the hollow temple, halting Kydoimos mid-step as the towering daemon advanced toward Medusa.
"Our duel isn't over, Daemon,"
Theobald said, planting himself firmly between the warrior and the trembling figure curled near the column. His hands gripped his axe, knuckles white.
"You don't get to walk past me."
A faint, broken whisper slipped from within the mercury cocoon behind him.
"I… I don't want to live…"
The voice was Medusa's.
Slowly, shakily, she rose. Her bare feet shuffled against the cracked stone, trailing wisps of silver. She moved past Theobald and stopped before Sigmund, who watched her with grim, wary eyes.
"You've done enough,"
She murmured, her voice barely audible, as though each word scraped its way out of her throat.
"All of you. Sir Sigmund, your courage… your kindness… it was more than I ever expected. But I am tired. I no longer wish to live. I'm sorry."
Her shoulders sagged with the weight of centuries.
"No,"
Lira's voice rang clear. She surged forward, grabbing Medusa's shoulder, her mercury-wrapped fingers trembling.
"No! Don't say that. Don't just give up. We can still do something—we can speak the truth, maybe even tell the people what really happened."
Medusa blinked at her, startled.
And then—
THUMP.
She fell into Lira's arms.
Not out of weakness—but something else.
She embraced her.
Arms coiling around the mercury mage like vines around a beam of sunlight.
"Thank you," she whispered, voice raw.
"Dame Lira… thank you."
Sigmund watched, jaw clenched, lips tight.
His words came out like iron grating against stone.
"So that's it?"
His hand gripped Medusa's wrist, dragging her gaze up.
"You're surrendering? After everything?"
He shook her once, not harshly—but enough to rattle the fog in her eyes.
"Is this what you think they want? For you to kneel? For you to be broken?"
His eyes burned.
"This is exactly what the gods want."
Medusa stared at him, wide-eyed, lips parted. She opened her mouth to speak—then lowered her gaze again.
"I'm exhausted, Sigmund," she whispered.
"I've spent so long surviving… I don't know what living even means anymore."
Silence settled between them, heavy as stone.
Until—
"Hecate."
Lira's voice cut through it like a ray of dawn.
She turned to Medusa, her mercury coiling protectively around the woman's ankles like a loyal pet.
"Why don't you call on her?" she asked.
"Why not Hecate?"
Medusa's breath hitched. A single tear fell down her cheek, shimmering as it rolled.
"Hecate…?"
Her lips quivered.
"Do you think… she'd still hear me?"
"Try," Lira said gently.
"Please. Just once more."
Medusa's eyes flicked between them, her lips parting in disbelief. Her knees quaked beneath her. Then—she turned.
Far at the back of the crumbling sanctuary stood an altar, forgotten and shrouded in dust and ivy. Faint remnants of candles clung to its stone. Statues of ancient goddesses watched in silence.
She walked toward it.
Each step a prayer.
A chance.
A last offering.
Then—
SWISH.
A glint.
A dagger.
Flung through the air—fast, precise.
Its trajectory—Medusa's throat.
Thrown by a man who refused to let fate change its course.