Author's Note:
Please enjoy this companion piece to "Hades and Persephone (Receiver of Many)". This story stars Aphrodite and Ares, as they appeared in Receiver of Many, meeting each other for the first time on the last day of the Gigantomachy. A little treat for sticking with me and reading my story for going on two years now...
~s
* * *
"Mimas!"
The creature came to a halt, dust drifting around his scaled feet.
"Turn around, you dog!" The God of War felt the earth shake as the giant spun on his heels. Sweat beaded under Ares' helm, stinging his eyes. The sun beat down on his red cloak, stifling him.
"Who dares to call the last son of Ouranos a dog?!" The giant's bellowing shook the very air.
Pompous idiot
, Ares thought. The Gigantes were
certainly
not
the last sons of Ouranos; that infamous honor belonged to the Titans, defeated by his father aeons ago. These beastly creatures wriggled out of the earth long after Cronus spilt his father's blood upon it. Abominations, the lot of them. They had plagued his family and their worshippers, but Gigantes could be killed. The war against them had raged for seven years from Olympus itself to Thrace and Phlegra, and Ares had chased the last of their kind across the burning hot mountains and valleys of Asia. Today he would end them, but the God of War was not so foolish as to underestimate his opponent. He clenched his teeth, spear in hand, on the balls of his feet. He stayed silent. He waited.
Mimas paced around him and leaned down, face to face with Ares. "You must be hard of hearing, speck," Spittle landed on his armor. "Who challenges the last true scion of the Heavens?!"
"The son of Almighty Zeus!" The warrior lifted his helm and the giant uprighted. Sunlight hit Ares, temporarily blinding him. The giant had positioned himself facing east. Clever.
Mimas laughed. "Go home little god, I know who you are. You're the coward!" He raised his club again. "And like the rest you're easily defeated."
A shadow rose, blocking the sun, and Ares realized that it was the creature's great club, whittled from a whole oak tree, ripped from the earth. He leapt out of the way and the bared roots crashed to the earth next to him, spraying another cloud of hot dust, blinding him further. Those were his father's trees. Ares got his bearings and planted his feet into the earth, his spear ready at his side.
"Easily?!" Ares snorted. "You are the only one remaining! Have you not heard? We destroyed the rest of your kin."
Mimas' eyes narrowed for only a moment. He smirked. "You think I care that those weaklings are dead? I survived, I remain, I would have killed them
myself
once we were finished with you. You Olympians did me a favor. And everyone knows you are a
coward
, Ares! Now do what you do best. Run and hide!" The club swung over his head, blocking out the sun again.
The God of War tore off his cloak and helm and rolled left, leaving his shield behind. The club shook the earth and covered him in dust and grit. He could taste it on his teeth, feel it cake his arms and legs. He picked up his sword and spear, running under the cover of dust. Mimas waited for it to clear, revealing a red mass of cloth, and the red crest of Ares' helm. He rifled through the discarded pieces to see if the god hid underneath.
Mimas guffawed. "Already run back to your whore mother, did you? Just like all the other bastards spawned by your
Almighty
Zeus."
"I think not," Ares growled from behind the hulking Giant.
Mimas turned toward the sound of Ares' voice too late. His spear sailed through the air and into the back of the giant's knee, the tip burrowing through flesh and bone until it poked out the other side. Mimas howled, dropping his club. His hand reached back to pull out the projectile, but his arm went limp, the tendons in his elbow cut with the swing of a sword. His ankle gave out, sliced through as methodically as his arm. Mimas cursed. Ares leapt and plunged his blade into the giant's thigh. He climbed, then lodged his sword between Mimas' ribs and scampered up his back. The monster swatting fruitlessly as he collapsed to one knee. Ares felt his heart clench as Mimas' scaled fingers slapped haphazardly next to his head, threatening to crush him. He froze.
I am Deathless... none can harm me... I am Deathless... none can harm me...
he chanted to himself, trying to keep his heart from racing, trying to keep that loathsome weakness from creeping up his throat. He concentrated and pulled through the fear, just as Enyo had taught him. Ares plunged his sword into the creature's shoulder blade. Mimas screamed. The God of War climbed high enough to reach his neck.
"And I'm no bastard." Ares growled into his ear. He sliced the vein just under it, and was coated with a spurt of blood, hot and thick on his skin, mixing with the dust and sand of the earth, anointing him triumphant. Mimas staggered and fell and Ares fell with him, his sword raised overhead, his face contorted by a wild-eyed cry of bloodlust and pure joy.
Never turn your back unless you know they're dead
, the voice of Enyo echoed in his mind.
An injured animal is the most dangerous kind.
The giant landed on his side, seizing and thrashing as his lifeblood drained onto the sand.
Kill them a second time if you must.
Ares plunged his sword into Mimas' windpipe, anchoring his feet as the dying giant flopped onto his back. "My mother is Hera the Queen of Heaven! I am the true heir to Olympus and any who oppose my father shall perish!" He hacked at the creature's throat, determined to take his head off. A gift for Father Zeus to show him that he alone had defeated the last of their retreating enemiesโ that he was worthy. Mimas lay still.
You fought nobly
, he thought, hacking into his neck.
But you're dead all the same.
He caught sight of the giant's lifeless eyes and stopped. What did those orbs see? What horrific vision fixed the gaze of any man or creature once Thanatos had reaped its soul? Ares swallowed and backed away. Perhaps a head was too much work. He would have to lug the heavy thing behind him. He wagered that Mimas' fanged jawbone weighed more than he did. Ares hopped off the giant's carcass and sauntered to the side of his head, then sliced at the base of the creature's ear, sawing back and forth.
Dishonorable butcher
, he could hear Athena castigating him, even though she was two hundred leagues away, safe in her own little town by the sea. He shook his head. Strategy and diplomacy hadn't ended the Gigantesโ bloodshed had. Useless, judgmental Athena. Another bastard.
The bastard that bares your father's aegis
, his own voice reminded him. He clenched his teeth and continued carving until the ear came looseโ a piece of Mimas the size of Ares' shield. He wiped his face clean on the edge of his cloak, then fastened the cloth to his bronze cuirass.