(
Note to readers:
All characters in sex acts are 18 years or older, as well as mythical. Some Roman references have been borrowed backwards into Greek. Also, the central relationship and the characters' origins are complete inventions, unlike those in the traditional stories--but myths are myths, and mine are merely more recent. The depicted sex is FMF threesome with oral, plus anal fingering. There is also observation of male-male contact that could be foreplay. There are references to naughty stuff in Greek mythology, and to practices which are not depicted. Also, beware of a torrent of jokes, anachronisms, puns, and worse.)
***
Cupid snatched half the scrolls on his desk into a fistful, and threw them at the far wall. As they clattered off the stone and into an unrolling heap on the floor, he growled, "
Love?
They call this
love?
"
From behind a tapestried pillar, Psyche leaned around and looked at him. "What is it, Dear?" she asked, although she already knew.
He grabbed one of the scrolls still before him and brandished it. "This is the closest thing to a valid request in this batch! A mortal man pleading to court a widow in his village. I'd have to expend a Potential Infertility Exemption for it, because she might be past breeding age. Everything else...I swear, My Beloved, some of them make my flesh creep!"
Psyche stifled a smile at the thought of her own flesh creeping, which she enjoyed very much while they coupled. Despite his belly growing large and round as he aged, Cupid was still a fine lover, within his narrow definition of love.
"Are there men desiring men?" she asked, leaning against the pillar, and folding her arms under breasts covered by cloth-of-gold.
He stoppered what he knew to be an ill-advised retort, remembering that his life-partner had an assignment that was valued on Olympus, as much as his own. While he was in charge of forming close attachments of lovers, so that they would increase the mortal population, Psyche's role was to broaden and magnify the capabilities of the mortal mind. She'd had mixed results. Through her, philosophy and arts flourished, but so did deviant behavior.
"I accept," said Cupid carefully, "that warriors encamped together form, ah, attachments. You have correctly shown that this is beneficial, as they enter combat together. As to whether this feeling should be, um, expressed physically, I routinely forward such requests to Ares. It's out of my jurisdiction."
"Ares tells them to gird their loins and do more fighting," said Psyche, "and soon one or the other dies in battle. Do you see that as Problem Solved? And then there are men who are not warriors."
"My Dear," he said, yearning to bring forth his own special arrow and send it flying to her, "They too are irrelevant to my work. Very soon, I will have a performance review. I need to show Zeus that mortals are extending their realm, and thus the realm of Olympus. Population statistics are not enough, I must show happiness and enjoyment, for the young men giving their seed, and the young women receiving it."
She said, "There can be greater happiness without pregnancy. Remember, childbirth can kill both mother and offspring. A lose-lose situation. A woman might seek other options."
Now he could no longer contain his ire. "Do
not
praise to me that so-called poetess on Lesbos! Women entwining with women? What a dreadful waste!"
She merely smiled. "I take full responsibility for Sappho, and her wondrous works. Never forget, My Darling, that I have the full support of Athena, and all of the muses."
As she knew it would, this made his eyes widen. One of those muses, Terpsichore, was a frequent visitor to Psyche's temple, adjacent to the home Cupid shared with Psyche. Almost as frequently, Psyche detected Cupid's attempts to hide behind tapestries and observe the special dance the women performed.
Is our dance truly such a waste,
she thought,
if it inspires a man to spill his seed?
Not for the first time, Cupid regretted setting up his home office. Spending more time near his true love came at a cost. So many distractions!
Actually,
he corrected himself,
the same distraction, over and over.
"Zeus will surely demand to know what I have done this year to overcome such folly as what Sappho inspires."
She muttered, "Zeus engages in a great deal of folly himself."
Cupid waved that away. "Fake myths. Some mortal drunkard concocts a wild story, and it spreads from village to village, as though it were part of our canon."
"We shall see," said Psyche. "Leda has submitted feathers for genetic testing."
"Even if true, she consented." He exhaled in fatigue. "Whither my youth? Did I exhaust too much energy challenging Eros?"
"That was your first moment of glory," said Psyche, seeing Cupid even now as the man who won her heart. "Recently, a mortal bard told the tale very well."
She waved a hand, to conjure a thick cloud in the air between them. At its center, the cloud parted to show a mortal male seated on a stool before a wall, in a circle of light. He addressed groups of people in semi-darkness, seated at small tables.
"So, here's the deal. Sex used to be run by Eros. His idea for mortal propagation was, penises should blast relentlessly into vaginas. Even 'Thank you Ma'am' was seen as a waste of time.