#Ariadne; stay close to people who feel like sunlight
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Es gibt Menschen im Leben, die einen besonderen Platz in unserem Herzen einnehmen, und du bist definitiv einer dieser Menschen fĂŒr mich. Deine Freundschaft bedeutet mir mehr, als Worte es je ausdrĂŒcken könnten.
Du bringst so viel Freude und Licht in mein Leben, und ich schĂ€tze all die wunderbaren Momente, die wir zusammen erleben. Egal, ob wir zusammen lachen, weinen oder einfach nur die Stille genieĂen â jeder Augenblick mit dir ist kostbar.
Ich möchte, dass du weiĂt, dass ich immer fĂŒr dich da bin. Egal, was passiert oder wie schwierig die Zeiten auch sein mögen, du kannst dich immer auf mich verlassen. Deine Sorgen sind meine Sorgen, und deine Freuden sind meine Freuden.
Danke, dass du so eine unglaubliche Freundin bist und mein Leben auf so viele Weisen bereicherst. Ich freue mich auf all die Abenteuer, die noch vor uns liegen, und darauf, weiterhin an deiner Seite zu sein.
@xtoariadnesdarklightx
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After all these years you mean so much to me. I am grateful to have you in my life. From now on nothing can separate us. @xtoariadnesdarklightx
When I lost you, a big part of me was gone. Whatever lies ahead, I will be there for you. The years spent without each other have changed nothing @grace-winter.
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The Lady of the Labyrinth
My entry for @dionysia-ta-astika's City Dionysia contest! I'm very proud of myself for having finished it in a week, and I thought I'd share it here on my own blog.
Hail Dionysus!
*** Everything was lost. My brother was dead. My love was gone.
I was also stranded on a deserted island. I stared out at the vast, empty expanse of the sea. The sunlight on the waves winked at me with a thousand eyes, as though diamonds had been scattered across the surface of the water. Anyone would find this beach tranquil, I suppose, if they were here under different circumstances than mine.
My brotherâs name was Asterion.
Most people didnât know his name, or even that he had one. To most people, he was the Minotaur, a horrible monster with the body of a man and the head of a bull that eats people. Asterion was a monster, and he did eat people.
Beneath my fatherâs shining palace, he prowled the twists and turns of the Labyrinth that my fatherâs genius architect built. The Labyrinth was mine, once. Daedalus made it for me as a dancing path, when I was a little girl. But now it is a dark, disorienting maze of seemingly endless passageways, and I was still the only person who knew how to navigate it. When I could have time alone, I would go to the Labyrinth. I felt my way through its pitch-black corridors, memorizing the nicks and cracks in the rough stone, trying to calm my thoughts. I spoke to Asterion through the walls: âYou have never seen the sun,â I said to him. âDo you ever wonder what itâs like in the outside world? Or do you like it down here?â I received no answer from the surrounding darkness. If I did hear something â a snort, or hooves on stone, I would have to run as fast as I could away from the sound. Even I couldnât go too near Asterion â I wouldnât want to run the risk that he might attack me.
âWhy do you go down there?â My sister, Phaedra, asked me. âWhat could possibly be appealing about that dark, dismal place?â
âI like it down there,â I said, trying to sound as matter-of-fact as I could. âIt is peaceful. And I donât mind the dark.â
She looked at me like I had suddenly sprouted bullâs horns myself. âYou know you risk your life every time you enter the Labyrinth, right?â
âHeâs our brother,â I said. I donât know what I intended to explain by saying that. I felt like I had a responsibility to him that extended beyond simply being his sister. I tried to see a man in him, although he sniffed and bellowed and charged like a bull. He could gore me to death like a bull, but I did not fear him. âI canât say I love him, but I feel something.â
âYou shouldnât feel any sympathy for him. Heâs a freak of nature. The gods cursed us with him for our fatherâs arrogance. He is a shame upon our kingdom.â
She was right, of course. The gods gifted us a beautiful white bull that we were meant to sacrifice to Poseidon, but my father decided to keep it instead. And Poseidon cursed us⊠Asterion is the unholy offspring of my mother and the bull. And it gets worse. Every seven years, seven young men and seven young women from the city of Athens were brought to the Labyrinth to be fed to my brother. This was because my other brother, whom I was too young to remember, died while in Athens. Athens pays for this slight with the lives of other young people.
I suppose itâs no different than war, or at least, thatâs what my father says. All cities send their youths to die for the polis. How was this any different? I could hardly bear the prisonersâ wails of desperation or their pleas for me to help them. When I heard they were coming, I begged my father to set them free, asserting that it was wrong to sacrifice humans to anything. If the gods had cast Tantalus into Tartarus for feeding them his son, then why should we knowingly feed humans to a monster? He laughed at me and asked why I had no pride in my family.
I hated the thought of the fourteen young people being fed to him, but I also couldnât imagine killing my own brother, even if he was a monster.
I was too young to remember the last time the prisoners came to the Labyrinth. They had come, and my brother had gorged himself on their flesh, and I was none the wiser. This time, I knew, and the horror of it struck me silent as the tributes were paraded through the city like animal sacrifices to the gods, so that we could all see those who were doomed to die. I could hardly bear to look at them. Some of those girls were barely older than me. It felt wrong to sit by and watch as they were brought to the Labyrinth. But what could I do to save their lives? Supplicating my father would not work, and the only other option was helping them to escape, somehow. How could I do that?
In spite of myself, I caught sight of one of the young men. He was handsome, and he had a defiant, blazing look in his eye. He looked straight at my father on his throne. âI am Theseus of Athens!â he declared. âI have come to slay your monstrous son!â
My father had laughed at him, but he consumed my thoughts. That may be because he was absolutely gorgeous, but it was also because if he succeeded at killing Asterion, he would solve all my problems. I wouldnât have to take my own brotherâs life, but he would devour no more innocent lives. And, if this youth survived, he might take me away with him. I knew the Labyrinth better than anyone. Even if he did survive, he could never make it in and out without my help.
Forgive me, Asterion.
The prisoners were held in two dank cells near the entrance to the Labyrinth. The women were kept in one, and the men were kept in the other. Many of the prisoners were crying â not just the women, but the men, too. In my familiarity with the Labyrinth and its inhabitant, I had forgotten just how terrifying both would be to anyone else. The Labyrinthâs darkness and maddening complexity would intimidate anyone, and the prospect of being eaten by a monster within its depths was horrific.
Only Theseus seemed calm. His boldness in front of my father hadnât been an act. His jaw was set, and he still had raw determination in his steely eyes. He was really going to do it, wasnât he? He actually meant to kill Asterion. He shone like gold in the gloom of the dungeon â he could have been Apollo. If our circumstances were different, I might have wanted to stroke his chest. âWho are you?â he demanded when I approached the cell, as though I were the one behind bars, and had requested an audience with him.
âI am Ariadne,â I said, âdaughter of Minos, princess of Crete.â
âI am Theseus, son of Aegeus, prince of Athens,â he returned.
Prince of Athens. That explained his noble bearing and proud mien, not to mention his handsome features⊠and yet⊠âThere is no way the King of Athens would have sent his own son to be fed to the Minotaur,â I said. âWhy are you really here?â
âI said, didnât I? Iâm here to slay the Minotaur. I volunteered as tribute.â He smirked. âI promised my father that I would return alive. No more of our people will be sacrificed to the monster!â
âYou speak with a lot of confidence for someone who is currently in a prison cell,â I said. âWhat are you going to do, Theseus? Do you have a plan?â
âOf course I have a plan!â he said, a little defensively. âI am going to break out of this cell. And then I will conquer the Labyrinthââ
âHow? Youâll be dead of starvation before you even reach the Minotaur, assuming he doesnât find you first.â
His eyes narrowed. âAre you taunting me?â
I leaned forward, looking directly into his eyes. âNo. I was actually going to offer to help you. I know the Labyrinth. I go into it all the time.â
âNo, you donât. Youâre trying to get me to sleep with you. Or trying to deceive me on behalf of Minos.â
I opened my mouth to speak, but couldnât find anything to say in response to that. For a moment I just stared at him. Was he always this self-assured, even in the worst of circumstances? If he wanted to sleep with me, I certainly wouldnât complain, but why would he assume that I would deceive him? Well, perhaps it was his right to be suspicious, in a strange land where he was kept as a prisoner. âI⊠no,â I finally replied. âIâm being serious. Iâm here to help you.â
âWhy, then?â
âI think it is very noble of you to want to save the other Athenians, and I agree that no more innocent lives should be lost.â
He smiled slightly, but still looked suspicious. âYou have no loyalty to your father?â
âMy father is cruel and selfish. Why else do you think my mother gave birth to a monster, anyway?â
âThe monster is your brother? What was his father, a bull?â
âYes.â
That seemed to have stunned him into silence. I felt some satisfaction at that. âListen to me. Without my help, you will not get through the Labyrinth. If you want to kill the Minotaur, you need me.â
âWhatâs the catch?â he asked. âYouâre going to want something in return, arenât you? What?â
âTake me off this accursed rock,â I said. âI am sick of Crete, Iâm sick of my father, and I donât want to have to put up with whatever punishment he might give me for helping you.â
âWell, you are a princess, and I suppose you would make a fine bride for me.â
My heart leapt at those words, and I felt myself blushing. Perhaps I should have known better. âReally? You would marry me?â
âIf you help me to slay the Minotaur, then yes, I will marry you.â
âDeal.â
Theseus remained in my thoughts from that point onward. When I closed my eyes, I saw his face, and I imagined the feel of his skin. Iâd never seen a man like him before, and oh, if I married him⊠would I be happy? Happier than I was here, at least? He seemed like the kind of man that Phaedra and I dreamed we would marry as young girls â strong, brave, handsome, and willing to put himself on the line for the sake of his people. All such admirable qualities.
I returned to Theseus when the prisoners were locked into the Labyrinthâs abyssal maw. âEveryone else, stay back!â he ordered, as though he were directing troops. âI will go into the Labyrinth and kill the Minotaur. Stay here, and you will be safe.â He suddenly turned to me. âWhat have you brought to help me?â
I held out a humble ball of yarn. âThis.â
He took it from my hand and raised an eyebrow at it, looking as though he might throw it into the dark. âWhat am I supposed to do with this?â
âDaedalus gave it to me when I first started exploring the Labyrinth.â
âDaedalus? Iâve heard of Daedalus. He is supposed to be the most brilliant architect in the world, right?â
âHe built this Labyrinth, and he gave me the yarn. All you have to do is tie the end here and carry it through the maze. Then you can follow it back out.â
Theseus looked impressed. âHe must be a genius to have thought of something like that!â
He may have been a genius, but I was still intelligent enough to figure it out on my own. All Daedalus had done was hand me the ball of yarn, and I immediately understood what I was meant to do with it. But I didnât bother correcting Theseus. âDo you have a weapon?â
âNo,â said Theseus. âIâm not worried. Iâll kill the beast with my bare hands.â
I blinked at him, dumbfounded. I suppose if anyone could do it, he could; he was almost as musclebound as the bull-man. But still. Only an extremely impressive hero with divine lineage could hope to kill a monster bare-handed, that or a total idiot. âYou are going to die.â
âNonsense!â He smiled. âHavenât died yet! And I have faced many deadly trials before.â
I smiled back. âIâm sure you have, but, well, itâs your funeral.â
âDo you want this monster dead, or not?â he demanded.
âWoah, I wasnât being serious, IâŠâ To be asked that question point-blank was unsettling. It threw my whole dilemma into focus. But seeing the terrified faces of the other tributes huddled naked in the entrance to the Labyrinth gave me my answer. âYes.â
âI shall go then.â He tied the yarn to the gate and strode with it into the dark. I admired his confidence, even if the odds were against him. He turned the first corner, and was gone. I stared into the darkness for a moment.
One of the girls gripped the hem of my dress. âPlease,â she whispered. âPlease help us, my lady. We did nothing to be here. If he dies, will you help us escape?â
I didnât look at her. I kept staring into the Labyrinthâs depths. âI will do what I can,â I said slowly. Then I followed Theseus. I heard her gasp behind me, as if her last hope had just walked away.
I overtook Theseus quickly. He was moving slowly, blindly hitting walls and getting disoriented by the serpentine turns. He jumped when he heard me behind him, turned on his heel and braced for attack, staring me down with the intensity of a bull about to charge. Then he softened. âOh. Itâs you. What are you doing here? I donât need your help.â
âI know this place better than you do,â I said matter-of-factly.
He huffed in response. âGet back to the entrance. The Minotaur could arrive at any moment.â
I walked ahead of him. âI know. Every time I explore the Labyrinth, I risk death.â
âWhy would you explore this place?â he asked, following me. âWhat could it possibly offer a girl like you?â
âPeace. Solitude. Time away from my father.â
âThis Labyrinth is maddening!â His growing frustration echoed off the walls. âHow are you not mad? Perhaps you are mad, with the things you say.â
âIâve never considered that I might be mad.â
âOnly if you were mad would you willingly choose to be in this dark prison.â
âYou willingly chose to be here.â
He had no response. We walked in silence for a while, dragging the thread behind us. It was almost impossible to see the thread in the dark. I could tell that Theseus was starting to get agitated. The twining paths of the Labyrinth must be making him feel like we were making no progress. The grim silence and high stone walls made us feel completely cut off from the outside world, like there was no world at all beyond the Labyrinth. âDo you think this is what Hades is like?â he asked. âA deep cavern, under the earth, where there is nothing to do but walk endlessly?â
I couldnât tell whether that was a sincere philosophical question, or whether he was asking indignantly. âI donât know. The Fields of Asphodel are supposed to be open, and full of the white flowers⊠Not quite like this.â
âIt makes no difference to me anyway. I will assuredly go to Elysium when I die, and it is the most agreeable part of Hades.â
If Hades is exactly like this, I thought, then perhaps it wouldnât be so bad. There are worse things than this.
Eventually, we passed the point where I usually turned back. I had never gotten this close to the center before. And then we heard it â the unmistakable sound of hooves. Cold terror gripped me. I did not expect to feel this afraid, especially not of my own brother, but the reality of the situation sank in. We were in a Labyrinth with a flesh-eating monster, and the exit was too far away for any chance of escape. Why did I follow him? Why did I think that was a good idea?
âOur quarry is upon us! You should leave,â said Theseus sternly. âThe monster eats the maidens first, so I hear.â
The instinct to run left me. âIâm not going anywhere.â
âSuit yourself, but you will not be able to fight against the Minotaur.â
âYou will protect me, will you?â Being with him felt safe, like he was a bodyguard.
âI will.â As soon as he said that, my fear was banished, and my confidence restored.
A few more turns, and we reached the center of the Labyrinth, a place I figured Iâd never enter. In the gloom, I couldnât actually see much, but I was able to see the hulking shape of my brother with his huge bullâs head and wicked-looking horns.
âThere is the beast!â A light suddenly blazed to life beside me, and I cringed away from its brightness. It was a torch.
âDid you have that the whole time?â
âI was saving it!â He handed me the torch and the end of the yarn, and I took them, nonplussed. I saw the floor of the Labyrinthâs center, full of human bones. âWait there, I will make swift work of this!â Theseus took a fighting stance, muscles tensed.
Asterion looked at me. I felt blind panic grip me, but he did not attack me. Perhaps he recognized me. He must have been familiar with my presence and voice by now, enough to know I wasnât a threat. I stared into his black bull eyes. They were soft, not fiery and enraged. This was my brother. âAsterion⊠Iâm so sorry, Asterion.â
âWhat are you doing? Get back!â
Theseusâ yell attracted Asterionâs attention. He roared and rushed forward with his powerful legs, horns lowered and ready to gore him to death. Theseus grabbed Asterionâs horns and hurled himself up onto the Minotaurâs back, holding him in a chokehold with both arms. âI shall send you to the pit of Tartarus, fiend!â Asterion thrashed and bucked and slammed Theseus against the wall, but soon enough, it was over. Theseus had strangled the Minotaur. Asterion lay dead.
Theseus picked himself up, looking exhausted but triumphant. âVictory! No Athenians will die today, or ever! This monster will never claim another human life!â He grinned at me. âSee, I told you I could do it with my bare hands!â
I stared at the mass of Asterionâs body. âI killed my brotherâŠâ
âNonsense!â Theseus took the torch back from me. The bones crunched under his feet as he walked. âIt is hardly your fault that you are the sister of a beast. We have done a good and heroic thing today. Look, look at the bones! Why are you crying, Ariadne?â
I suddenly looked at him instead of the Minotaurâs corpse. I donât think heâd said my name before. Even in the dim torchlight, he still looked bright, with clear eyes and golden hair and bronze skin slick with sweat. âI couldnât have done this without you, Ariadne.â He smiled at me. âThank you. Together we have saved many lives.â
He kissed me, and the torch went out.
The following events were a blur. After we had successfully followed the thread out of the Labyrinth, Theseus triumphantly announced to my father that the Minotaur was dead, and demanded me and my sister as prizes. My father was furious â of course he was. He had essentially just lost all of his children, and all because one had died in Athens before I was old enough to remember. I, however, was elated, and so was Phaedra. Phaedra was as eager to leave Crete as I was, and she seemed just as taken with Theseusâ handsomeness. She didnât seem distressed that Asterion was dead, and why would she? The grateful Athenians went back to their ship, many of them sobbing with relief. I didnât look at my father as I followed Theseus to the ship. I never wanted to look at him again. We passed by Talos, and I left Knossos and the Labyrinth behind me.
Crete faded into the horizon, and before me was sunshine and new possibilities. Theseus glowed with triumph and pride, smiling at me and kissing me when he announced to the other Athenians that he would marry me, and that I would become their queen. They fell to their knees and showered me and Theseus with gratitude for having saved their lives. I felt almost as if I were a goddess. Wine flowed freely in celebration, and I took more joy in it than I had in a long time.
It did not last long. Soon after the first few hours I was, if possible, even more miserable on Theseusâ ship than I had been in Knossos. I quickly became tired of his boasts about how he had strangled the beast, without crediting me at all, or so much as mentioning the ball of yarn, even though the other Athenians had seen me give it to him and seen me follow him into the Labyrinth. Every time he told the story, it got further from the truth, and emphasized his own heroism over mine. Is this how it would be when I was queen? No matter what I did, Iâd be shunted to the side? Then, Theseus seemed to be doting on Phaedra. She usually attracted more attention. She was prettier than me. She had blond hair that shined in the sunlight and the bright eyes of our mother Pasiphae, the daughter of Helios. My hair and eyes were dark, like the Labyrinth.
I left the celebration, finding a quiet spot on deck. I sat by the edge of the ship, staring out into the open waves and trying not to think about Asterion, but the image of him lying dead in the torchlight haunted me. âAre you okay, Ariadne?â Phaedra asked me. âWhat is wrong? We are finally out of there, all thanks to you! No more Minotaur, no more tributes having to die, no more Father⊠We will have a new life in Athens.â I stayed silent. âYou look despondent. Somethingâs wrong.â
I looked up into her eyes. âItâs like you said, Phaedra. Asterion is dead.â
âDo you⊠mourn him?â
âHe was our brother, and I killed him!â
âTheseus killed him! You did nothing!â I knew that she meant to reassure me, but it touched a raw nerve.
âHe would not have if I hadnât led him straight to the center of the Labyrinth!â
âAriadneâŠâ Phaedra put her hand on my shoulder. âYou⊠youâre⊠youâll be okay. You are just a little bit disoriented.â She left me alone.
I looked at the Athenians, who laughed and danced and celebrated their lives. I didnât feel like dancing. I already missed the Labyrinth. My guilt drew my thoughts back to Knossos. I wanted to hide in the Labyrinth forever, like Asterion had, or else throw myself into the sea for my guilt. The brightness of the waves was glaring compared to the soothing darkness of the Labyrinth.
Theseus approached me from behind. He had been ignoring me until now, maybe because I was so sorrowful. I could feel that he was angry at me, and my skin crawled, but I didnât turn. âWhat cause do you have to weep, Ariadne? You should be happy!â he said.
âI am sorry, Theseus. Part of me still mourns for my brother.â
âWhat is the matter with you? All you have done is sit and stare at the water! If you loved that Labyrinth so much, perhaps you should have stayed there! Now please, put this sorrow behind you. You have no cause for it.â He sighed, softening. âWhen we arrive in Athens, we shall marry, and there will be much rejoicing.â
âLeave me alone.â The bitterness in my voice rang louder than Iâd intended.
He scowled at me.âYou are joyless, passionless, and thankless,â he spat, and stalked off. The word useless went unsaid; I could tell he was reconsidering making me his wife.
âTheseus, wait!â I yelled, suddenly sounding desperate.
I stood up, and he turned back to look at me, and I felt as if I were naked under his gaze and that of the others on the ship, which had all quieted and turned in my direction. His eyes were cold, and his nostrils flared just as Asterionâs had. âWhat, Ariadne? You have shown me neither gratitude nor pleasure, you have not acted like a princess. What do you have to say for yourself?â
Shamed, I said nothing. I sat back down. Then, as he was about to turn away again, I suddenly found my voice. âWhy are you being cruel?â
âI am not being cruel. You are being difficult.â
By the time we reached Naxos, I was feeling heartbroken as well as grief-stricken. Theseus was giving me the silent treatment. I think he expected me to come running to him begging for forgiveness. We stopped on the island to rest, primarily because Theseus had dreamt that he would stop here during his homecoming.
I took off my sandals and walked along the edge of the surf to clear my thoughts. The beach was bright and wide and open, the exact opposite of the Labyrinth. Even in the sand, I felt his heavy footsteps approaching behind me. âAriadne, we need to talk.â
I continued to face away from him. âWhat?â
âAriadne, I find your attitude disagreeable.â
I turned on my heel to face him, planting myself in the sand. âIâve found your attitude disagreeable! All you have done since we left Crete is boast about your heroics, and youâve barely given me any creditââ
âCredit! You want credit for having slain it, when all you have done is cry over the hideous thing?â
The disdain in his voice stung me like arrows. âYou donât care at all for me or my feelings, do you?â
âIf you were to become my queen, I would expect better behavior from you.â He sounded like he was lecturing a child.
âWell⊠I donât want to be your queen! You are almost as bad as my father!â
âGood. I have already decided to take your sister Phaedra as my bride instead.â I didnât reply. âYou may still return with us to Athens, but we will have to make other arrangements for you.â
Forget Athens. I didnât want Theseus to do anything for me. âOh, forgive me for having been such a disappointment to you! Go ahead, go back to Athens and marry my sister! By Zeus! Iâve had enough of you!â
And I ran. I turned away from Theseus and ran down the beach until my legs gave out, falling in the sand to sulk and wonder where it all went wrong. I regretted having ever met Theseus, or helped him to kill my brother. If I could undo it all, I would. No. Then innocent people would have died. Oh, gods, why am I so wretched?
And then, as I was just beginning to calm down, I saw that the ship was sailing away over the waves. I was stranded on the island. Despair and panic crashed down upon me. Oh gods, gods, why? Had I somehow been forgotten about, or left behind on purpose? Had Theseus doomed me to die? âCURSE you, Theseus!â I screamed at the distant ship. I watched it go until it disappeared over the horizon. I could do nothing but hopelessly stare at the wine-dark sea as the sun set.
âExcuse me, why are you crying?â
I had been sitting with my head in my arms, weeping despondently, and I was startled by the sudden voice, soft though it was. I was certain the island was deserted, but now, a young man stood before me. He was silhouetted against the sky, the sun shining behind his head like a halo. Where had he come from? I hadnât heard him come. It was though heâd simply stepped out of the sea.
âIâm sorry,â I said, and my voice sounded cracked from crying. âI thought I was alone.â
âMay I sit with you?â the man asked. âYou look like you could use a drink, something to soothe you, hm?â
âYes⊠yes, thank you.â
He sat down in the sand next to me, languidly stretching his legs out in front of him like he was sitting on the plushest couch. With the sunlight on him, I could see him properly â he was the most beautiful man Iâd ever seen in my life. He easily put Theseus to shame. His eyes were leafy green, warm and kind. He was lithe, and his skin looked as pale and smooth as a girlâs, and his lips looked so soft. I couldnât place the color of his hair â it seemed to be dark brown, but it could have been as dark as the Styx, and when the sun caught it, it looked honey-gold. It fell over his shoulders in loose curls. He wore nothing but a fine purple cloak draped over one shoulder, a golden leopard skin around his waist, and a wreath of ivy on his head. His cheeks were flushed, and he had a bright, easy smile. He was so lovely, so breathtaking, it almost hurt to look at him. With delicate hands, he offered me a kylix brimming with wine. âPlease, tell me what has made you so upset.â
I blinked at the kylix, and the leopard skin, and the ivy in his hair. âAre you⊠a Bacchant?â Iâd heard of them. They worshipped a mad and savage god with drunken orgies in the woods, and were said to be able to rip animals or even people limb-from-limb in their frenzy. Not unlike Asterion, I suppose.
He flashed a devious smile. âMaaaaybe.â
I took the kylix and drank deeply. The wine was sweet, and somehow, I felt immediately calmer. Slowly, amid my lingering sobs, I told the story â about Asterion, and my father, and the tributes, how Iâd decided to help Theseus, how weâd found our way through the Labyrinth, how Theseus had killed Asterion, how Theseus had been so heartless, and how he had apparently left me to die on a deserted island. By the time I finished talking, the kylix was empty.
âHow do you feel now?â he asked me.
âBetter⊠I think. But Iâm still devastated, and⊠guilty. My brotherâs death⊠it was really my fault, and I donât know if I did the right thing or not. Do you think itâs wrong for me to grieve for my brother? I mean⊠he was a monsterâŠâ
âNo. I donât think itâs wrong. It is perfectly understandable that you would mourn your brother.â
âIf I had let the Athenians die, I would have mourned for them, too.â I sighed.
âYes. There must be blood; one sacrifice was traded for another, Asterion, the worthy bull. It is okay to grieve, for as long as you need to, but do not wallow in despair.â
âI tend to do that. I donât remember the last time I was completely happy. I thought Theseus would make me happy, but⊠then⊠I wish I had my Labyrinth back! It was at least soothing down there.â
âIt pains me to see people sad,â he said. He handed me the kylix again, and it was once again full of wine. I hadnât seen him fill it. âPleasure is a state of mind. The best way to rid yourself of sadness is to focus on things that make you happy. There is always something to take pleasure in! Like the beauty of the sunset, or the sound of the lapping waves. Or wine!â
âNot when you are abandoned to die, with no way off the island,â I said. âHow did you get here, anyway? I donât see a boat.â
âI have my ways,â he said cryptically, with that same mischievous smile. That smile and the teasing sparkle in his eyes were so adorable. His beauty is something to take pleasure in, I suddenly thought, and his company, and kindnessâŠ
I took another draught of the wine. âWhy are the gods so cruel to me?â I murmured, more to myself than to him.
âThe gods are not cruel to you.â He stated it with complete confidence, as though it were an undeniable fact, not as though he were trying to convince me.
âIt certainly seems that way,â I replied.
âLife can often seem that way, but then, it gets better, and you will find that the gods favor you,â he said.
âWell⊠I suppose that must be true, if handsome strangers pop out of nowhere to comfort women.â
He beamed. âExactly!â He took the kylix back from me, threw his head back, and drained about half of it in one gulp. âYou know, I was stranded on a desert island like this one once.â
âWait, what? You were?â
âYes! It was a long time ago now, but I was just as pretty back then, and just as fond of wearing purple. Purple is the best color, you know.â He winked. âAnyway, so I was lying asleep on a beach andââ he took another swig of the wine, âa pirate ship rows byâŠâ
âAre you drunk?â
âAlways, darling!â That roguish grin of his was really starting to win me over. âAnyway, the pirates saw me sleeping on the beach, saw how pretty I was and saw my fine purple robes, and thought I was a prince. Well. They werenât wrong⊠I technically am a prince of Thebes, on my motherâs side.â He laughed like he had just told the most hilarious joke and had another sip of the wine. The amount of wine in the kylix never seemed to get any lower.
âDoes that mean⊠youâre a bastard?â I asked hesitantly.
âYes, yes it does! Iâm such a bastard. I mean⊠I was born out of wedlock. And my fatherâs wife, oooh, she hates me.â Another sip of the wine. âNever get on her bad side if you can help it.â He pointed at me as if this was the most important information I could ever learn, and I laughed. âShe canât touch me now, but she drove me mad when I was younger. Literally. Anyway, so these pirates kidnapped me. Thought Iâd make a damn cute catamite, and I certainly would, but thatâs beside the point. You donât and kidnap boys no matter how pretty they are. I tried to tell my dad that, but it didnât go over well.â Another sip of the wine.
âYou are slender, but I bet you could take Theseus in a drinking contest.â
âOh, I could take aaaaaanyone in a drinking contest! Never lost one yet!â His face was glowing, not just with blush from the wine but also with infectious joy. I slowly forgot about my misfortunes as I listened to his story. âSo they tried to tie me to the shipâs mast, but found they couldnât do it. I only tolerate bondage on my own terms. And thenâŠâ There was suddenly a mad gleam in his green eyes. âI covered their ship in grapevines, and ivy, and flowers, and the delicious smell of wine. I canât imagine why such delightful things frightened them so. But I thought Iâd scare them more, see, because it was funny. So I turned into a lion! And they flung themselves overboard in fear!â He laughed, and his laugh sounded as musical as flutes on a clear morning, but it had a maddened edge to it. âBut I pitied them, yâknow?â he continued. âJust as you pity your brother. So I changed them into dolphins. So they wouldnât drown.â
âYou changed⊠you turned into⊠did⊠did your god give you those powers? Or⊠are you just⊠really⊠drunk?â But I knew. I think that intuitively, I knew the whole time.
âEasy,â he said, once again raising the bottomless kylix to his lips with that knowing smile. âIâm really drunk.â
At this, I burst out laughing, and my laugh sounded almost unfamiliar to my own ears. I felt light, carefree, replenished. And then it sank in, that I was speaking to a god. I hastily knelt, and dropped my head before him, although he was still sitting next to me. âLord Dionysus! Son of Zeus! Lord, lord, thank you for coming to me, for talking to me, for relieving me of my pain, for freeing me from my sufferingâŠâ
âYouâre welcome, Ariadne.â He lifted my face, so that I was staring up into his eyes, which were now vivid reddish-purple, the color of ripe grapes. A richly purple aura surrounded him, proclaiming his divinity. In his hand was his staff, a fennel stalk topped with a pinecone that dripped with honey, twined with ivy and purple ribbons. And he had horns, bullâs horns just like my brotherâs, magnificent and deadly sharp. They curved up above his brow, as much his crown as the wreath of ivy in his hair. The imposing horns created a striking contrast with his delicate features, but they looked right, somehow. Like this was how he was supposed to look.
I didnât know what to say. My mind had gone suddenly blank. âIâve never known great Dionysus to have horns,â I blurted.
âNot many get to see them,â he said, his voice suddenly slow and solemn. âAriadne, will you dance with me?â
Whatever I had expected him to say, it was not that. âWhâwhat?â
âDance with me!â He stood up and twirled off across the beach. His hair floated around his shoulders, the ribbons on his thyrsus arced through the air like the rainbow, and his expression was one of elation. He screamed in ecstasy, and it was an inhuman sound, like the crowing of some unearthly bird. At that, the air filled with cacophonous music â flutes, drums, cymbals, rattles, castanets.
A command echoed inside my head. No, not a command â a compulsion: DANCE! DANCE!
So I danced with the bull-horned god. âDancingâ barely even begins to describe what I was doing. I was filled with an overwhelming, indescribable feeling, like I didnât fit in my own skin. Like I was about to be lifted out of my own shoulders! I moved like my body was doing everything it could to express this ineffable thing inside me that was so much bigger than me. I spun, I leapt, I ran, I stamped my feet in the sand, I moved wherever the feeling took me. It burned like fire. And Dionysus was all I could perceive. I screamed with both intense rapture and pure, genuine worship: âEUOI! EUOI! EUOI!â
I met his eyes, and there I saw all the raw ferocity of a bull or a great cat, as well as chaos and lust and debauchery and pure mania. All the forces strong enough to tear a person apart! I desperately thirsted for something I could not name. It was more than wine, more than flesh, more than blood. Dionysus took me in his arms, and kissed me on the lips. Passion overtook me.
Maybe I fainted in exhilaration, or maybe I was simply too drunk to remember. All I know was that I was eventually awakened by the sunrise and the sound of lapping waves. And Dionysus⊠was still there. He hadnât disappeared into the night, he was still sleeping there in the sand, looking blissful and alluring in his sleep. His tousled curls tumbled over the sand, his soft hand was upturned beside his head, and his lips were parted invitingly. He lay on his purple cloak, and was using the leopard pelt like a blanket, though it was only carelessly draped over his waist.
âLord⊠thank you for not leaving me,â I whispered.
His long eyelashes fluttered, and then his eyes opened, once again appearing vine-green. âMmmm⊠sleep well?â
âYes.â I desperately wanted to kiss him, and the seductive look in his eyes tempted me. âMay I⊠touch you?â
âDarling, you may touch me anywhere you like,â he purred. Ravenously, I wrapped my arms around his waist, pressed my chest to his, and our lips met. He still tasted like wine, and I drank him in the way I would wine. We lay there for a moment, entangled in each otherâs arms like grape and ivy vines, idly caressing each otherâs skin and hair.
âMâlordâŠâ I whispered, âperhaps it might be impertinent to ask, but⊠what am I going to do now? I canât go home. I donât really want to go to Athens. And I still have no way off this island.â
âWhy, Ariadne,â he gave me a teasing smile. âIf I may be so bold, I hoped you would join me! In fact⊠I hope you might marry me.â
I was so taken aback by this that I immediately sat up. âYou⊠youâre serious? Marry you?â I knew that gods frequently took mortal lovers, but this was unimaginable. âActually marry you?â
âYes, Ariadne. I love you.â He said it with the same sweetness and sincerity that he initially approached me with. Theseus had said no such thing. âYou are not destined to become queen of Athens, but perhaps you might be my queen, if you are willing.â
I burst into tears, but they werenât tears of sadness this time. They were tears of overwhelm, the same kind of overflowing sensation that Iâd felt while dancing. âYou love me?â
âI am absolutely besotted, my darling! I have had many lovers, but I had not fallen so madly in love since Ampelos, my first love, my darling vine.â A grapevine appeared between his fingers and twined up his arm. âPerhaps something in me is inclined towards mortals over gods, which is understandable, given my parentage. But, that should be no problem. I will bring you to Olympus, and love you for all of time.â
âHow⊠why me?â I sputtered. âWhat have I done to deserve this?â
âAriadne, you are letting your human mind interfere, and convince you that you are not worthy to be in my presence. Did you feel unworthy last night, while we were dancing?â
âNo⊠I felt⊠there was no such thing.â
âAriadne, do you love me?â
I struggled to find any word that could properly describe how I felt about him. âYou are⊠utterly intoxicating.â
He giggled like a shy maiden. âI get that a lot. And, if you could be worthy of having me as a husband, would you have me?â
Yes. My body and soul ached and burned with wanting. And he made me extraordinarily happy! Iâd never dared to believe a god would love me enough to marry me, but that disbelief was only getting in my way.
He looked me dead in the eyes. I nearly flinched away from the intensity of his gaze, and the shimmering madness behind it. âYou are more than you realize, Ariadne, guide in the dark, guardian of the gates of initiation. You are intelligent and witty and brave, and you fear no darkness or madness or savagery, do you? You faced them all in the Labyrinth. You would make an excellent addition to my thiasus, even if you decide not to marry me. Ariadne, the most holy and pure, Lady of the Labyrinth.â His words reverberated deep in the labyrinthine pathways of my own mind and soul, like he had revealed an ancient truth that I had known once, but forgotten.
âThe Labyrinth is a holy place, of contemplation and transformation. Isnât it? Not of death.â
He smiled that gorgeous, winning smile again. âYes! You understand! And even where there is death, it is not absolute.â His eyes shone with feverish excitement. âOh, I have so much to teach you!â
âLord Dionysus, I would be honored beyond imagining if I were to become your wife.â
âSo is that a yes? You will marry me?â
Something about him felt right in a way that I could not put words to, like the Fates had done all they could to bring me to this moment. This god loved me, more than the other gods love their conquests, more than I could comprehend. âYes! I will marry you!â
At that, a cool wind blew across the island, swirling his dark hair around his face and making all the vegetation appear to shimmer. It was like the island itself was affirming my decision. âThen, Ariadne, we shall rule the revel together! In honor of our engagementâŠâ A magnificent diadem appeared in his hands, sparkling with seven gemstones like stars. He placed it on my head, and gave me a warm kiss on my lips. âAriadne, my bride, may you never thirst. May your lusts never go unsatisfied. May your heart always be light and joyful.â
âThank you. Thank you, mâlord!â
âYou can stop calling me that. If we are to be married, you can simply call me by my name. Or, call me what pleases you. Now, come with me!â He stood, offering me his hand. âUnless you would rather spend some more alone time together, I should finally take you off this island! I will take you home to Nysa, or perhaps to Arcadia, and we will have to throw the most spectacular bacchanal in celebration of our marriage!â
âHow will we travel?â
He led me down the beach like a child eager to show something to their parent, and gestured toward a golden chariot drawn by two gigantic panthers. The chariot itself was decorated in images of swirling grapevines and serpents and satyrs making love, and the catsâ pelts gleamed. âOh, gods⊠I mean⊠wow. Does it move over water?â
âIt flies, silly!â He stood inside it and beckoned to me. âThese cats can run on the wind. Hermes gave them to me.â
I climbed into the chariot and held on for dear life as the panthers bounded into the air with great strides. Soon the chariot was blazing through the bright air, and Naxos was far behind us. Dionysus laughed into the wind, which blew his long hair back from his face. As radiant as he was, I was more than a little terrified of speeding through the air high above the sea in a chariot, and felt like I would fall off at any second, although not even my diadem was dislodged from my head.
âYou look terror-stricken, Ariadne. Would you like me to tell you another amusing story? That seems to have cheered you up the last time!â
âThat depends on whether you can drive a chariot and get incredibly drunk at the same time.â
He laughed uproariously. âOh, I love you so much! I can do anything and get incredibly drunk, if you were wondering. So, anyway, the story⊠Mortals have mixed opinions of me. Most love my parties and stories and love my wine, but they seem a bit put off by the madness and violence and lust it brings out in them⊠Not sure why, itâs not as though all of that wasnât there to begin with⊠Mortal kings do not like this, and some of them can be quite unkind to my worshippers, testing the limits of my mercy⊠but one of them allowed my mentor, Silenus, to sleep in his garden. So kind of him! So of course I offered him any reward he might wish for, and⊠he wished that everything he touched would turn to gold.â
âOoh. Let me guess, it backfired?â
âOh, did it backfire! His food turned to gold and he nearly starved, and even his daughter turned to gold! Hardly my fault, of course. I promised to give him what he asked for, and I did, he just happened to be an idiot. He had the chance to wish for anything in the world, and he chose something as shallow and pointless as gold. Not to mention, he clearly had never heard of inflation, which makes me worry about his kingdomâs economy. Oh, well. He learned, and I changed everything back. I always let humans indulge themselves, but I am not a god of excess. Either they are satisfied by their pleasures, or they learn their lesson fast. The moral of the story: Know your tolerance. Also, if you want to turn things to gold, you have to do it the hard way. Hermes and I were just discussing how to turn lead to gold, in factâŠâ
His soothing voice and hilarious tales put me at ease, until we were traveling over beautiful mountains and verdant valleys. I had never seen mainland Greece, but the view of it from the flying chariot was incredible. I was no longer afraid of falling. As we flew, I felt as if the wind stripped me of the cares and sorrows of my former life. Dionysus had set me free. I smiled at him, and he smiled at me as the chariot descended into the lush, hidden valley where a throng of Maenads and satyrs waited to welcome home their lord and his queen.
Dionysus helped me out of the chariot, and I stood before the thiasus, their maddened eyes all turned upon me. âI am the bride of Dionysus,â I proclaimed. âI am Ariadne of the Labyrinth.â
#greek mythology#greek myths#greek myth retellings#greek mythology retellings#creative writing#dionysus#city dionysia#dionysus greek god#dionysus greek mythology#dionysos#dionysus devotion#dionysus devotee#dionysus deity#ariadne#ariadne and dionysus#lady of the labyrinth#labyrinth#labyrinth of crete#the minotaur#theseus and the minotaur#theseus#asterion#minotaur#dionysus x ariadne#gothic aesthetic
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The Lady of the Labyrinth
For Dionysus.
Everything was lost. My brother was dead. My love was gone.
I was also stranded on a deserted island. I stared out at the vast, empty expanse of the sea. The sunlight on the waves winked at me with a thousand eyes, as though diamonds had been scattered across the surface of the water. Anyone would find this beach tranquil, I suppose, if they were here under different circumstances than mine.
My brotherâs name was Asterion.
Most people didnât know his name, or even that he had one. To most people, he was the Minotaur, a horrible monster with the body of a man and the head of a bull that eats people. Asterion was a monster, and he did eat people.
Beneath my fatherâs shining palace, he prowled the twists and turns of the Labyrinth that my fatherâs genius architect built. The Labyrinth was mine, once. Daedalus made it for me as a dancing path, when I was a little girl. But now it is a dark, disorienting maze of seemingly endless passageways, and I was still the only person who knew how to navigate it. When I could have time alone, I would go to the Labyrinth. I felt my way through its pitch-black corridors, memorizing the nicks and cracks in the rough stone, trying to calm my thoughts. I spoke to Asterion through the walls: âYou have never seen the sun,â I said to him. âDo you ever wonder what itâs like in the outside world? Or do you like it down here?â I received no answer from the surrounding darkness. If I did hear something â a snort, or hooves on stone, I would have to run as fast as I could away from the sound. Even I couldnât go too near Asterion â I wouldnât want to run the risk that he might attack me.
 âWhy do you go down there?â My sister, Phaedra, asked me. âWhat could possibly be appealing about that dark, dismal place?â
âI like it down there,â I said, trying to sound as matter-of-fact as I could. âIt is peaceful. And I donât mind the dark.â
She looked at me like I had suddenly sprouted bullâs horns myself. âYou know you risk your life every time you enter the Labyrinth, right?â
âHeâs our brother,â I said. I donât know what I intended to explain by saying that. I felt like I had a responsibility to him that extended beyond simply being his sister. I tried to see a man in him, although he sniffed and bellowed and charged like a bull. He could gore me to death like a bull, but I did not fear him. âI canât say I love him, but I feel something.â
âYou shouldnât feel any sympathy for him. Heâs a freak of nature. The gods cursed us with him for our fatherâs arrogance. He is a shame upon our kingdom.â
She was right, of course. The gods gifted us a beautiful white bull that we were meant to sacrifice to Poseidon, but my father decided to keep it instead. And Poseidon cursed us⊠Asterion is the unholy offspring of my mother and the bull. And it gets worse. Every seven years, seven young men and seven young women from the city of Athens were brought to the Labyrinth to be fed to my brother. This was because my other brother, whom I was too young to remember, died while in Athens. Athens pays for this slight with the lives of other young people.
I suppose itâs no different than war, or at least, thatâs what my father says. All cities send their youths to die for the polis. How was this any different? I could hardly bear the prisonersâ wails of desperation or their pleas for me to help them. When I heard they were coming, I begged my father to set them free, asserting that it was wrong to sacrifice humans to anything. If the gods had cast Tantalus into Tartarus for feeding them his son, then why should we knowingly feed humans to a monster? He laughed at me and asked why I had no pride in my family. Â
I hated the thought of the fourteen young people being fed to him, but I also couldnât imagine killing my own brother, even if he was a monster.
I was too young to remember the last time the prisoners came to the Labyrinth. They had come, and my brother had gorged himself on their flesh, and I was none the wiser. This time, I knew, and the horror of it struck me silent as the tributes were paraded through the city like animal sacrifices to the gods, so that we could all see those who were doomed to die. I could hardly bear to look at them. Some of those girls were barely older than me. It felt wrong to sit by and watch as they were brought to the Labyrinth. But what could I do to save their lives? Supplicating my father would not work, and the only other option was helping them to escape, somehow. How could I do that?
In spite of myself, I caught sight of one of the young men. He was handsome, and he had a defiant, blazing look in his eye. He looked straight at my father on his throne. âI am Theseus of Athens!â he declared. âI have come to slay your monstrous son!â
My father had laughed at him, but he consumed my thoughts. That may be because he was absolutely gorgeous, but it was also because if he succeeded at killing Asterion, he would solve all my problems. I wouldnât have to take my own brotherâs life, but he would devour no more innocent lives. And, if this youth survived, he might take me away with him. I knew the Labyrinth better than anyone. Even if he did survive, he could never make it in and out without my help.
Forgive me, Asterion.
The prisoners were held in two dank cells near the entrance to the Labyrinth. Â The women were kept in one, and the men were kept in the other. Many of the prisoners were crying â not just the women, but the men, too. In my familiarity with the Labyrinth and its inhabitant, I had forgotten just how terrifying both would be to anyone else. The Labyrinthâs darkness and maddening complexity would intimidate anyone, and the prospect of being eaten by a monster within its depths was horrific.
Only Theseus seemed calm. His boldness in front of my father hadnât been an act. His jaw was set, and he still had raw determination in his steely eyes. He was really going to do it, wasnât he? He actually meant to kill Asterion. He shone like gold in the gloom of the dungeon â he could have been Apollo. If our circumstances were different, I might have wanted to stroke his chest. âWho are you?â he demanded when I approached the cell, as though I were the one behind bars, and had requested an audience with him.
âI am Ariadne,â I said, âdaughter of Minos, princess of Crete.â
âI am Theseus, son of Aegeus, prince of Athens,â he returned.
Prince of Athens. That explained his noble bearing and proud mien, not to mention his handsome features⊠and yet⊠âThere is no way the King of Athens would have sent his own son to be fed to the Minotaur,â I said. âWhy are you really here?â
âI said, didnât I? Iâm here to slay the Minotaur. I volunteered as tribute.â He smirked. âI promised my father that I would return alive. No more of our people will be sacrificed to the monster!â
âYou speak with a lot of confidence for someone who is currently in a prison cell,â I said. âWhat are you going to do, Theseus? Do you have a plan?â
âOf course I have a plan!â he said, a little defensively. âI am going to break out of this cell. And then I will conquer the Labyrinthââ
âHow? Youâll be dead of starvation before you even reach the Minotaur, assuming he doesnât find you first.â
His eyes narrowed. âAre you taunting me?â
I leaned forward, looking directly into his eyes. âNo. I was actually going to offer to help you. I know the Labyrinth. I go into it all the time.â
âNo, you donât. Youâre trying to get me to sleep with you. Or trying to deceive me on behalf of Minos.â
I opened my mouth to speak, but couldnât find anything to say in response to that. For a moment I just stared at him. Was he always this self-assured, even in the worst of circumstances? If he wanted to sleep with me, I certainly wouldnât complain, but why would he assume that I would deceive him? Well, perhaps it was his right to be suspicious, in a strange land where he was kept as a prisoner. âI⊠no,â I finally replied. âIâm being serious. Iâm here to help you.â
âWhy, then?â
âI think it is very noble of you to want to save the other Athenians, and I agree that no more innocent lives should be lost.â
He smiled slightly, but still looked suspicious. âYou have no loyalty to your father?â
âMy father is cruel and selfish. Why else do you think my mother gave birth to a monster, anyway?â
âThe monster is your brother? What was his father, a bull?â
âYes.â
That seemed to have stunned him into silence. I felt some satisfaction at that. âListen to me. Without my help, you will not get through the Labyrinth. If you want to kill the Minotaur, you need me.â
âWhatâs the catch?â he asked. âYouâre going to want something in return, arenât you? What?â
âTake me off this accursed rock,â I said. âI am sick of Crete, Iâm sick of my father, and I donât want to have to put up with whatever punishment he might give me for helping you.â
âWell, you are a princess, and I suppose you would make a fine bride for me.â
My heart leapt at those words, and I felt myself blushing. Perhaps I should have known better. âReally? You would marry me?â
âIf you help me to slay the Minotaur, then yes, I will marry you.â
âDeal.â
Theseus remained in my thoughts from that point onward. When I closed my eyes, I saw his face, and I imagined the feel of his skin. Iâd never seen a man like him before, and oh, if I married him⊠would I be happy? Happier than I was here, at least? He seemed like the kind of man that Phaedra and I dreamed we would marry as young girls â strong, brave, handsome, and willing to put himself on the line for the sake of his people. All such admirable qualities.
I returned to Theseus when the prisoners were locked into the Labyrinthâs abyssal maw. âEveryone else, stay back!â he ordered, as though he were directing troops. âI will go into the Labyrinth and kill the Minotaur. Stay here, and you will be safe.â He suddenly turned to me. âWhat have you brought to help me?â
I held out a humble ball of yarn. âThis.â
He took it from my hand and raised an eyebrow at it, looking as though he might throw it into the dark. âWhat am I supposed to do with this?â
âDaedalus gave it to me when I first started exploring the Labyrinth.â
âDaedalus? Iâve heard of Daedalus. He is supposed to be the most brilliant architect in the world, right?â
âHe built this Labyrinth, and he gave me the yarn. All you have to do is tie the end here and carry it through the maze. Then you can follow it back out.â
Theseus looked impressed. âHe must be a genius to have thought of something like that!â
He may have been a genius, but I was still intelligent enough to figure it out on my own. All Daedalus had done was hand me the ball of yarn, and I immediately understood what I was meant to do with it. But I didnât bother correcting Theseus. âDo you have a weapon?â
âNo,â said Theseus. âIâm not worried. Iâll kill the beast with my bare hands.â
I blinked at him, dumbfounded. I suppose if anyone could do it, he could; he was almost as musclebound as the bull-man. But still. Only an extremely impressive hero with divine lineage could hope to kill a monster bare-handed, that or a total idiot. âYou are going to die.â
âNonsense!â He smiled. âHavenât died yet! And I have faced many deadly trials before.â
I smiled back. âIâm sure you have, but, well, itâs your funeral.â
âDo you want this monster dead, or not?â he demanded.
âWoah, I wasnât being serious, IâŠâ To be asked that question point-blank was unsettling. It threw my whole dilemma into focus. But seeing the terrified faces of the other tributes huddled naked in the entrance to the Labyrinth gave me my answer. âYes.â
âI shall go then.â He tied the yarn to the gate and strode with it into the dark. I admired his confidence, even if the odds were against him. He turned the first corner, and was gone. I stared into the darkness for a moment.
One of the girls gripped the hem of my dress. âPlease,â she whispered. âPlease help us, my lady. We did nothing to be here. If he dies, will you help us escape?â
 I didnât look at her. I kept staring into the Labyrinthâs depths. âI will do what I can,â I said slowly. Then I followed Theseus. I heard her gasp behind me, as if her last hope had just walked away.
I overtook Theseus quickly. He was moving slowly, blindly hitting walls and getting disoriented by the serpentine turns. He jumped when he heard me behind him, turned on his heel and braced for attack, staring me down with the intensity of a bull about to charge. Then he softened. âOh. Itâs you. What are you doing here? I donât need your help.â
âI know this place better than you do,â I said matter-of-factly.
He huffed in response. âGet back to the entrance. The Minotaur could arrive at any moment.â
I walked ahead of him. âI know. Every time I explore the Labyrinth, I risk death.â
âWhy would you explore this place?â he asked, following me. âWhat could it possibly offer a girl like you?â
âPeace. Solitude. Time away from my father.â
âThis Labyrinth is maddening!â His growing frustration echoed off the walls. âHow are you not mad? Perhaps you are mad, with the things you say.â
âIâve never considered that I might be mad.â
âOnly if you were mad would you willingly choose to be in this dark prison.â
âYou willingly chose to be here.â
He had no response. We walked in silence for a while, dragging the thread behind us. It was almost impossible to see the thread in the dark. I could tell that Theseus was starting to get agitated. The twining paths of the Labyrinth must be making him feel like we were making no progress. The grim silence and high stone walls made us feel completely cut off from the outside world, like there was no world at all beyond the Labyrinth. âDo you think this is what Hades is like?â he asked. âA deep cavern, under the earth, where there is nothing to do but walk endlessly?â
I couldnât tell whether that was a sincere philosophical question, or whether he was asking indignantly. âI donât know. The Fields of Asphodel are supposed to be open, and full of the white flowers⊠Not quite like this.â
âIt makes no difference to me anyway. I will assuredly go to Elysium when I die, and it is the most agreeable part of Hades.â
If Hades is exactly like this, I thought, then perhaps it wouldnât be so bad. There are worse things than this.
Eventually, we passed the point where I usually turned back. I had never gotten this close to the center before. And then we heard it â the unmistakable sound of hooves. Cold terror gripped me. I did not expect to feel this afraid, especially not of my own brother, but the reality of the situation sank in. We were  in a Labyrinth with a flesh-eating monster, and the exit was too far away for any chance of escape.  Why did I follow him? Why did I think that was a good idea?
âOur quarry is upon us! You should leave,â said Theseus sternly. âThe monster eats the maidens first, so I hear.â
The instinct to run left me. âIâm not going anywhere.â
âSuit yourself, but you will not be able to fight against the Minotaur.â
âYou will protect me, will you?â Being with him felt safe, like he was a bodyguard.
âI will.â As soon as he said that, my fear was banished, and my confidence restored.
A few more turns, and we reached the center of the Labyrinth, a place I figured Iâd never enter. In the gloom, I couldnât actually see much, but I was able to see the hulking shape of my brother with his huge bullâs head and wicked-looking horns.
âThere is the beast!â A light suddenly blazed to life beside me, and I cringed away from its brightness. It was a torch.
âDid you have that the whole time?â
âI was saving it!â He handed me the torch and the end of the yarn, and I took them, nonplussed. I saw the floor of the Labyrinthâs center, full of human bones. âWait there, I will make swift work of this!â Theseus took a fighting stance, muscles tensed.
Asterion looked at me. I felt blind panic grip me, but he did not attack me. Perhaps he recognized me. He must have been familiar with my presence and voice by now, enough to know I wasnât a threat. I stared into his black bull eyes. They were soft, not fiery and enraged. This was my brother. âAsterion⊠Iâm so sorry, Asterion.â
âWhat are you doing? Get back!â
Theseusâ yell attracted Asterionâs attention. He roared and rushed forward with his powerful legs, horns lowered and ready to gore him to death. Theseus grabbed Asterionâs horns and hurled himself up onto the Minotaurâs back, holding him in a chokehold with both arms. âI shall send you to the pit of Tartarus, fiend!â Â Asterion thrashed and bucked and slammed Theseus against the wall, but soon enough, it was over. Theseus had strangled the Minotaur. Asterion lay dead.
Theseus picked himself up, looking exhausted but triumphant. âVictory! No Athenians will die today, or ever! This monster will never claim another human life!â He grinned at me. âSee, I told you I could do it with my bare hands!â
I stared at the mass of Asterionâs body. âI killed my brotherâŠâ
âNonsense!â Theseus took the torch back from me. The bones crunched under his feet as he walked. âIt is hardly your fault that you are the sister of a beast. We have done a good and heroic thing today. Look, look at the bones! Why are you crying, Ariadne?â
I suddenly looked at him instead of the Minotaurâs corpse. I donât think heâd said my name before. Even in the dim torchlight, he still looked bright, with clear eyes and golden hair and bronze skin slick with sweat. âI couldnât have done this without you, Ariadne.â He smiled at me. âThank you. Together we have saved many lives.â
He kissed me, and the torch went out.
The following events were a blur. After we had successfully followed the thread out of the Labyrinth, Theseus triumphantly announced to my father that the Minotaur was dead, and demanded me and my sister as prizes. My father was furious â of course he was. He had essentially just lost all of his children, and all because one had died in Athens before I was old enough to remember. I, however, was elated, and so was Phaedra. Phaedra was as eager to leave Crete as I was, and she seemed just as taken with Theseusâ handsomeness. She didnât seem distressed that Asterion was dead, and why would she? The grateful Athenians went back to their ship, many of them sobbing with relief. I didnât look at my father as I followed Theseus to the ship. I never wanted to look at him again. We passed by Talos, and I left Knossos and the Labyrinth behind me.
Crete faded into the horizon, and before me was sunshine and new possibilities. Theseus glowed with triumph and pride, smiling at me and kissing me when he announced to the other Athenians that he would marry me, and that I would become their queen. They fell to their knees and showered me and Theseus with gratitude for having saved their lives. I felt almost as if I were a goddess. Wine flowed freely in celebration, and I took more joy in it than I had in a long time.
It did not last long. Soon after the first few hours I was, if possible, even more miserable on Theseusâ ship than I had been in Knossos. I quickly became tired of his boasts about how he had strangled the beast, without crediting me at all, or so much as mentioning the ball of yarn, even though the other Athenians had seen me give it to him and seen me follow him into the Labyrinth. Every time he told the story, it got further from the truth, and emphasized his own heroism over mine. Is this how it would be when I was queen? No matter what I did, Iâd be shunted to the side? Then, Theseus seemed to be doting on Phaedra. She usually attracted more attention. She was prettier than me. She had blond hair that shined in the sunlight and the bright eyes of our mother Pasiphae, the daughter of Helios. My hair and eyes were dark, like the Labyrinth.
I left the celebration, finding a quiet spot on deck. I sat by the edge of the ship, staring out into the open waves and trying not to think about Asterion, but the image of him lying dead in the torchlight haunted me. âAre you okay, Ariadne?â Phaedra asked me. âWhat is wrong? We are finally out of there, all thanks to you! No more Minotaur, no more tributes having to die, no more Father⊠We will have a new life in Athens.â I stayed silent. âYou look despondent. Somethingâs wrong.â
I looked up into her eyes. âItâs like you said, Phaedra. Asterion is dead.â
âDo you⊠mourn him?â
âHe was our brother, and I killed him!â
âTheseus killed him! You did nothing!â I knew that she meant to reassure me, but it touched a raw nerve.
âHe would not have if I hadnât led him straight to the center of the Labyrinth!â
âAriadneâŠâ Phaedra put her hand on my shoulder. âYou⊠youâre⊠youâll be okay. You are just a little bit disoriented.â She left me alone.
I looked at the Athenians, who laughed and danced and celebrated their lives. I didnât feel like dancing. I already missed the Labyrinth. My guilt drew my thoughts back to Knossos. I wanted to hide in the Labyrinth forever, like Asterion had, or else throw myself into the sea for my guilt. The brightness of the waves was glaring compared to the soothing darkness of the Labyrinth.
Theseus approached me from behind. He had been ignoring me until now, maybe because I was so sorrowful. I could feel that he was angry at me, and my skin crawled, but I didnât turn. âWhat cause do you have to weep, Ariadne? You should be happy!â he said.
âI am sorry, Theseus. Part of me still mourns for my brother.â
âWhat is the matter with you? All you have done is sit and stare at the water! If you loved that Labyrinth so much, perhaps you should have stayed there! Now please, put this sorrow behind you. You have no cause for it.â He sighed, softening. âWhen we arrive in Athens, we shall marry, and there will be much rejoicing.â
âLeave me alone.â The bitterness in my voice rang louder than Iâd intended.
He scowled at me.âYou are joyless, passionless, and thankless,â he spat, and stalked off. The word useless went unsaid; I could tell he was reconsidering making me his wife.
âTheseus, wait!â I yelled, suddenly sounding desperate.
I stood up, and he turned back to look at me, and I felt as if I were naked under his gaze and that of the others on the ship, which had all quieted and turned in my direction. His eyes were cold, and his nostrils flared just as Asterionâs had. âWhat, Ariadne? You have shown me neither gratitude nor pleasure, you have not acted like a princess. What do you have to say for yourself?â
Shamed, I said nothing. I sat back down. Then, as he was about to turn away again, I suddenly found my voice. âWhy are you being cruel?â
âI am not being cruel. You are being difficult.â
By the time we reached Naxos, I was feeling heartbroken as well as grief-stricken. Theseus was giving me the silent treatment. I think he expected me to come running to him begging for forgiveness. We stopped on the island to rest, primarily because Theseus had dreamt that he would stop here during his homecoming.
 I took off my sandals and walked along the edge of the surf to clear my thoughts. The beach was bright and wide and open, the exact opposite of the Labyrinth. Even in the sand, I felt his heavy footsteps approaching behind me. âAriadne, we need to talk.â
I continued to face away from him. âWhat?â
âAriadne, I find your attitude disagreeable.âÂ
I turned on my heel to face him, planting myself in the sand. âIâve found your attitude disagreeable! All you have done since we left Crete is boast about your heroics, and youâve barely given me any creditââ
âCredit! You want credit for having slain it, when all you have done is cry over the hideous thing?â
The disdain in his voice stung me like arrows. âYou donât care at all for me or my feelings, do you?â
âIf you were to become my queen, I would expect better behavior from you.â He sounded like he was lecturing a child.
âWell⊠I donât want to be your queen! You are almost as bad as my father!â
âGood. I have already decided to take your sister Phaedra as my bride instead.â I didnât reply. âYou may still return with us to Athens, but we will have to make other arrangements for you.â
Forget Athens. I didnât want Theseus to do anything for me. âOh, forgive me for having been such a disappointment to you! Go ahead, go back to Athens and marry my sister! By Zeus! Iâve had enough of you!â
And I ran. I turned away from Theseus and ran down the beach until my legs gave out, falling in the sand to sulk and wonder where it all went wrong. I regretted having ever met Theseus, or helped him to kill my brother. If I could undo it all, I would. No. Then innocent people would have died. Oh, gods, why am I so wretched?
And then, as I was just beginning to calm down, I saw that the ship was sailing away over the waves. I was stranded on the island. Despair and panic crashed down upon me. Oh gods, gods, why? Had I somehow been forgotten about, or left behind on purpose? Had Theseus doomed me to die? âCURSE you, Theseus!â I screamed at the distant ship. I watched it go until it disappeared over the horizon. I could do nothing but hopelessly stare at the wine-dark sea as the sun set.
âExcuse me, why are you crying?â
I had been sitting with my head in my arms, weeping despondently, and I was startled by the sudden voice, soft though it was. I was certain the island was deserted, but now, a young man stood before me. He was silhouetted against the sky, the sun shining behind his head like a halo. Where had he come from? I hadnât heard him come. It was though heâd simply stepped out of the sea.
âIâm sorry,â I said, and my voice sounded cracked from crying. âI thought I was alone.â
âMay I sit with you?â the man asked. âYou look like you could use a drink, something to soothe you, hm?â
âYes⊠yes, thank you.â
He sat down in the sand next to me, languidly stretching his legs out in front of him like he was sitting on the plushest couch. With the sunlight on him, I could see him properly â he was the most beautiful man Iâd ever seen in my life. He easily put Theseus to shame. His eyes were leafy green, warm and kind. He was lithe, and his skin looked as pale and smooth as a girlâs, and his lips looked so soft. I couldnât place the color of his hair â it seemed to be dark brown, but it could have been as dark as the Styx, and when the sun caught it, it looked honey-gold. It fell over his shoulders in loose curls. He wore nothing but a fine purple cloak draped over one shoulder, a golden leopard skin around his waist, and a wreath of ivy on his head. His cheeks were flushed, and he had a bright, easy smile. He was so lovely, so breathtaking, it almost hurt to look at him. With delicate hands, he offered me a kylix brimming with wine. âPlease, tell me what has made you so upset.â
I blinked at the kylix, and the leopard skin, and the ivy in his hair. âAre you⊠a Bacchant?â Iâd heard of them. They worshipped a mad and savage god with drunken orgies in the woods, and were said to be able to rip animals or even people limb-from-limb in their frenzy. Not unlike Asterion, I suppose.
He flashed a devious smile. âMaaaaybe.â
I took the kylix and drank deeply. The wine was sweet, and somehow, I felt immediately calmer. Slowly, amid my lingering sobs, I told the story â about Asterion, and my father, and the tributes, how Iâd decided to help Theseus, how weâd found our way through the Labyrinth, how Theseus had killed Asterion, how Theseus had been so heartless, and how he had apparently left me to die on a deserted island. By the time I finished talking, the kylix was empty.
âHow do you feel now?â he asked me.
âBetter⊠I think. But Iâm still devastated, and⊠guilty. My brotherâs death⊠it was really my fault, and I donât know if I did the right thing or not. Do you think itâs wrong for me to grieve for my brother? I mean⊠he was a monsterâŠâ
âNo. I donât think itâs wrong. It is perfectly understandable that you would mourn your brother.â
âIf I had let the Athenians die, I would have mourned for them, too.â I sighed.
âYes. There must be blood; one sacrifice was traded for another, Asterion, the worthy bull. It is okay to grieve, for as long as you need to, but do not wallow in despair.â
âI tend to do that. I donât remember the last time I was completely happy. I thought Theseus would make me happy, but⊠then⊠I wish I had my Labyrinth back! It was at least soothing down there.â
âIt pains me to see people sad,â he said. He handed me the kylix again, and it was once again full of wine. I hadnât seen him fill it. âPleasure is a state of mind. The best way to rid yourself of sadness is to focus on things that make you happy. There is always something to take pleasure in! Like the beauty of the sunset, or the sound of the lapping waves. Or wine!â
âNot when you are abandoned to die, with no way off the island,â I said. âHow did you get here, anyway? I donât see a boat.â
âI have my ways,â he said cryptically, with that same mischievous smile. That smile and the teasing sparkle in his eyes were so adorable. His beauty is something to take pleasure in, I suddenly thought, and his company, and kindnessâŠ
I took another draught of the wine. âWhy are the gods so cruel to me?â I murmured, more to myself than to him.
âThe gods are not cruel to you.â He stated it with complete confidence, as though it were an undeniable fact, not as though he were trying to convince me.
âIt certainly seems that way,â I replied.
âLife can often seem that way, but then, it gets better, and you will find that the gods favor you,â he said.
âWell⊠I suppose that must be true, if handsome strangers pop out of nowhere to comfort women.â
He beamed. âExactly!â He took the kylix back from me, threw his head back, and drained about half of it in one gulp. âYou know, I was stranded on a desert island like this one once.â
âWait, what? You were?â
âYes! It was a long time ago now, but I was just as pretty back then, and just as fond of wearing purple. Purple is the best color, you know.â He winked. âAnyway, so I was lying asleep on a beach andââ he took another swig of the wine, âa pirate ship rows byâŠâ
âAre you drunk?â
âAlways, darling!â That roguish grin of his was really starting to win me over. âAnyway, the pirates saw me sleeping on the beach, saw how pretty I was and saw my fine purple robes, and thought I was a prince. Well. They werenât wrong⊠I technically am a prince of Thebes, on my motherâs side.â He laughed like he had just told the most hilarious joke and had another sip of the wine. The amount of wine in the kylix never seemed to get any lower.
âDoes that mean⊠youâre a bastard?â I asked hesitantly.
âYes, yes it does! Iâm such a bastard. I mean⊠I was born out of wedlock. And my fatherâs wife, oooh, she hates me.â Another sip of the wine. âNever get on her bad side if you can help it.â He pointed at me as if this was the most important information I could ever learn, and I laughed. âShe canât touch me now, but she drove me mad when I was younger. Literally. Anyway, so these pirates kidnapped me. Thought Iâd make a damn cute catamite, and I certainly would, but thatâs beside the point. You donât and kidnap boys no matter how pretty they are. I tried to tell my dad that, but it didnât go over well.â Another sip of the wine.
âYou are slender, but I bet you could take Theseus in a drinking contest.â
âOh, I could take aaaaaanyone in a drinking contest! Never lost one yet!â His face was glowing, not just with blush from the wine but also with infectious joy. I slowly forgot about my misfortunes as I listened to his story. âSo they tried to tie me to the shipâs mast, but found they couldnât do it. I only tolerate bondage on my own terms. And thenâŠâ There was suddenly a mad gleam in his green eyes. âI covered their ship in grapevines, and ivy, and flowers, and the delicious smell of wine. I canât imagine why such delightful things frightened them so. But I thought Iâd scare them more, see, because it was funny. So I turned into a lion! And they flung themselves overboard in fear!â He laughed, and his laugh sounded as musical as flutes on a clear morning, but it had a maddened edge to it. âBut I pitied them, yâknow?â he continued. âJust as you pity your brother. So I changed them into dolphins. So they wouldnât drown.â
âYou changed⊠you turned into⊠did⊠did your god give you those powers? Or⊠are you just⊠really⊠drunk?â But I knew. I think that intuitively, I knew the whole time.
âEasy,â he said, once again raising the bottomless kylix to his lips with that knowing smile. âIâm really drunk.â
At this, I burst out laughing, and my laugh sounded almost unfamiliar to my own ears. I felt light, carefree, replenished. And then it sank in, that I was speaking to a god. I hastily knelt, and dropped my head before him, although he was still sitting next to me. âLord Dionysus! Son of Zeus! Lord, lord, thank you for coming to me, for talking to me, for relieving me of my pain, for freeing me from my sufferingâŠâ
âYouâre welcome, Ariadne.â He lifted my face, so that I was staring up into his eyes, which were now vivid reddish-purple, the color of ripe grapes. A richly purple aura surrounded him, proclaiming his divinity. In his hand was his staff, a fennel stalk topped with a pinecone that dripped with honey, twined with ivy and purple ribbons. And he had horns, bullâs horns just like my brotherâs, magnificent and deadly sharp. They curved up above his brow, as much his crown as the wreath of ivy in his hair. The imposing horns created a striking contrast with his delicate features, but they looked right, somehow. Like this was how he was supposed to look.
I didnât know what to say. My mind had gone suddenly blank. âIâve never known great Dionysus to have horns,â I blurted.
âNot many get to see them,â he said, his voice suddenly slow and solemn. âAriadne, will you dance with me?â
Whatever I had expected him to say, it was not that. âWhâwhat?â
âDance with me!â He stood up and twirled off across the beach. His hair floated around his shoulders, the ribbons on his thyrsus arced through the air like the rainbow, and his expression was one of elation. He screamed in ecstasy, and it was an inhuman sound, like the crowing of some unearthly bird. At that, the air filled with cacophonous music â flutes, drums, cymbals, rattles, castanets.
A command echoed inside my head. No, not a command â a compulsion: DANCE! DANCE!
So I danced with the bull-horned god. âDancingâ barely even begins to describe what I was doing. I was filled with an overwhelming, indescribable feeling, like I didnât fit in my own skin. Like I was about to be lifted out of my own shoulders! I moved like my body was doing everything it could to express this ineffable thing inside me that was so much bigger than me. I spun, I leapt, I ran, I stamped my feet in the sand, I moved wherever the feeling took me. It burned like fire. And Dionysus was all I could perceive. I screamed with both intense rapture and pure, genuine worship: âEUOI! EUOI! EUOI!â
I met his eyes, and there I saw all the raw ferocity of a bull or a great cat, as well as chaos and lust and debauchery and pure mania. All the forces strong enough to tear a person apart! I desperately thirsted for something I could not name. It was more than wine, more than flesh, more than blood. Dionysus took me in his arms, and kissed me on the lips. Passion overtook me.
Maybe I fainted in exhilaration, or maybe I was simply too drunk to remember. All I know was that I was eventually awakened by the sunrise and the sound of lapping waves. And Dionysus⊠was still there. He hadnât disappeared into the night, he was still sleeping there in the sand, looking blissful and alluring in his sleep. His tousled curls tumbled over the sand, his soft hand was upturned beside his head, and his lips were parted invitingly. He lay on his purple cloak, and was using the leopard pelt like a blanket, though it was only carelessly draped over his waist.
âLord⊠thank you for not leaving me,â I whispered.
His long eyelashes fluttered, and then his eyes opened, once again appearing vine-green. âMmmm⊠sleep well?â
âYes.â I desperately wanted to kiss him, and the seductive look in his eyes tempted me. âMay I⊠touch you?â
âDarling, you may touch me anywhere you like,â he purred. Ravenously, I wrapped my arms around his waist, pressed my chest to his, and our lips met. He still tasted like wine, and I drank him in the way I would wine. We lay there for a moment, entangled in each otherâs arms like grape and ivy vines, idly caressing each otherâs skin and hair.
âMâlordâŠâ I whispered, âperhaps it might be impertinent to ask, but⊠what am I going to do now? I canât go home. I donât really want to go to Athens. And I still have no way off this island.â
âWhy, Ariadne,â he gave me a teasing smile. âIf I may be so bold, I hoped you would join me! In fact⊠I hope you might marry me.â
I was so taken aback by this that I immediately sat up. âYou⊠youâre serious? Marry you?â I knew that gods frequently took mortal lovers, but this was unimaginable. âActually marry you?â
âYes, Ariadne. I love you.â He said it with the same sweetness and sincerity that he initially approached me with. Theseus had said no such thing. âYou are not destined to become queen of Athens, but perhaps you might be my queen, if you are willing.â
I burst into tears, but they werenât tears of sadness this time. They were tears of overwhelm, the same kind of overflowing sensation that Iâd felt while dancing. âYou love me?â
âI am absolutely besotted, my darling! I have had many lovers, but I had not fallen so madly in love since Ampelos, my first love, my darling vine.â A grapevine appeared between his fingers and twined up his arm. âPerhaps something in me is inclined towards mortals over gods, which is understandable, given my parentage. But, that should be no problem. I will bring you to Olympus, and love you for all of time.â
âHow⊠why me?â I sputtered. âWhat have I done to deserve this?â
âAriadne, you are letting your human mind interfere, and convince you that you are not worthy to be in my presence. Did you feel unworthy last night, while we were dancing?â
âNo⊠I felt⊠there was no such thing.â
âAriadne, do you love me?â
I struggled to find any word that could properly describe how I felt about him. âYou are⊠utterly intoxicating.â
He giggled like a shy maiden. âI get that a lot. And, if you could be worthy of having me as a husband, would you have me?â
Yes. My body and soul ached and burned with wanting. And he made me extraordinarily happy! Iâd never dared to believe a god would love me enough to marry me, but that disbelief was only getting in my way.
He looked me dead in the eyes. I nearly flinched away from the intensity of his gaze, and the shimmering madness behind it. âYou are more than you realize, Ariadne, guide in the dark, guardian of the gates of initiation. You are intelligent and witty and brave, and you fear no darkness or madness or savagery, do you? You faced them all in the Labyrinth. You would make an excellent addition to my thiasus, even if you decide not to marry me. Ariadne, the most holy and pure, Lady of the Labyrinth.â His words reverberated deep in the labyrinthine pathways of my own mind and soul, like he had revealed an ancient truth that I had known once, but forgotten.
âThe Labyrinth is a holy place, of contemplation and transformation. Isnât it? Not of death.â
He smiled that gorgeous, winning smile again. âYes! You understand! And even where there is death, it is not absolute.â His eyes shone with feverish excitement. âOh, I have so much to teach you!â
âLord Dionysus, I would be honored beyond imagining if I were to become your wife.â
âSo is that a yes? You will marry me?â
Something about him felt right in a way that I could not put words to, like the Fates had done all they could to bring me to this moment. This god loved me, more than the other gods love their conquests, more than I could comprehend. âYes! I will marry you!â
At that, a cool wind blew across the island, swirling his dark hair around his face and making all the vegetation appear to shimmer. It was like the island itself was affirming my decision. âThen, Ariadne, we shall rule the revel together! In honor of our engagementâŠâ A magnificent diadem appeared in his hands, sparkling with seven gemstones like stars. He placed it on my head, and gave me a warm kiss on my lips. âAriadne, my bride, may you never thirst. May your lusts never go unsatisfied. May your heart always be light and joyful.â
âThank you. Thank you, mâlord!â
âYou can stop calling me that. If we are to be married, you can simply call me by my name. Or, call me what pleases you. Now, come with me!â He stood, offering me his hand. âUnless you would rather spend some more alone time together, I should finally take you off this island! I will take you home to Nysa, or perhaps to Arcadia, and we will have to throw the most spectacular bacchanal in celebration of our marriage!â
âHow will we travel?â
He led me down the beach like a child eager to show something to their parent, and gestured toward a golden chariot drawn by two gigantic panthers. The chariot itself was decorated in images of swirling grapevines and serpents and satyrs making love, and the catsâ pelts gleamed. âOh, gods⊠I mean⊠wow. Does it move over water?â
âIt flies, silly!â He stood inside it and beckoned to me. âThese cats can run on the wind. Hermes gave them to me.â
I climbed into the chariot and held on for dear life as the panthers bounded into the air with great strides. Soon the chariot was blazing through the bright air, and Naxos was far behind us. Dionysus laughed into the wind, which blew his long hair back from his face. As radiant as he was, I was more than a little terrified of speeding through the air high above the sea in a chariot, and felt like I would fall off at any second, although not even my diadem was dislodged from my head.
âYou look terror-stricken, Ariadne. Would you like me to tell you another amusing story? That seems to have cheered you up the last time!â
âThat depends on whether you can drive a chariot and get incredibly drunk at the same time.â
He laughed uproariously. âOh, I love you so much! I can do anything and get incredibly drunk, if you were wondering. So, anyway, the story⊠Mortals have mixed opinions of me. Most love my parties and stories and love my wine, but they seem a bit put off by the madness and violence and lust it brings out in them⊠Not sure why, itâs not as though all of that wasnât there to begin with⊠Mortal kings do not like this, and some of them can be quite unkind to my worshippers, testing the limits of my mercy⊠but one of them allowed my mentor, Silenus, to sleep in his garden. So kind of him! So of course I offered him any reward he might wish for, and⊠he wished that everything he touched would turn to gold.â
âOoh. Let me guess, it backfired?â
âOh, did it backfire! His food turned to gold and he nearly starved, and even his daughter turned to gold! Hardly my fault, of course. I promised to give him what he asked for, and I did, he just happened to be an idiot. He had the chance to wish for anything in the world, and he chose something as shallow and pointless as gold. Not to mention, he clearly had never heard of inflation, which makes me worry about his kingdomâs economy. Oh, well. He learned, and I changed everything back. I always let humans indulge themselves, but I am not a god of excess. Either they are satisfied by their pleasures, or they learn their lesson fast. The moral of the story: Know your tolerance. Also, if you want to turn things to gold, you have to do it the hard way. Hermes and I were just discussing how to turn lead to gold, in factâŠâ
His soothing voice and hilarious tales put me at ease, until we were traveling over beautiful mountains and verdant valleys. I had never seen mainland Greece, but the view of it from the flying chariot was incredible. I was no longer afraid of falling. As we flew, I felt as if the wind stripped me of the cares and sorrows of my former life. Dionysus had set me free. I smiled at him, and he smiled at me as the chariot descended into the lush, hidden valley where a throng of Maenads and satyrs waited to welcome home their lord and his queen.
Dionysus helped me out of the chariot, and I stood before the thiasus, their maddened eyes all turned upon me. âI am the bride of Dionysus,â I proclaimed. âI am Ariadne of the Labyrinth.â
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Destcember 10 - What is Worth Fighting For
 What is Worth Fighting For The children of the Last City knew precious little about the Guardians that lived in the Tower above them. They always seemed to be like birds; aloft, unattainable, creatures that could be marveled upon from a distance but rarely understood close up. Children clung to their parents' heels as Guardians passed by, openly staring at people who were machines or substances other than simple flesh and blood. There was, however, a few small, token things known about Guardians. They all harboured a deep love for dancing and music, and you could often find one or two flitting about the outskirts of a festival when it took place, and more interestingly; if one drew a circle on the ground, chances were, Guardians would come and stand in it. What this arose from...well, that wasn't really known. But when children reenacted epic scenes of history, there would surely be circles left chalked on the ground afterwards. Miri had spent less time in normal space-time than she had outside of it that morning, simply because she was blinking everywhere in her excitement. Guardians in the plaza raised a bemused eyebrow but said little else, somewhat used to her antics and the Titan who chased her down the stairs and to the lift which led to the City. "Don't run off when we're down there, okay- Miri. Are you listening?" She'd pressed her face up to the glass window, grinning in delight as the normally distant buildings grew closer and closer, roofs reflecting the morning sunlight. Jackson withstood the urge to roll his eyes. "Miri." She glanced back at him before returning her attention outside. "Yeah, yeah, I got it, no running off. I'll be fine, Jackie." She turned back to him to grin, and he crossed his arms before leading her out of the lift and into a square. Even with the few people there, they were getting stares. Miri's gaze darted from place to place, absorbing all the new colours and sights in utter rapture, even as Ariadne and Jackson's arm pushed her forwards, down a narrow alley. "We're here to pick up the tech they brought in, nothing else, okay?" She nodded, barely listening. Jackson could probably tell, as evidenced by the quiet sigh he let out. Her gaze roamed across the many faces, curious about the variety of clothes, and colours, and lights, and languages, and by the Light, there were so many people. When did it get so crowded? She giggled to herself, spinning around, and froze as she suddenly caught the gaze of a few children staring openly at herself, and more importantly, Ariadne. She stared back for a moment. They couldn't have been older than 10, and they each held a piece of chalk in their hands. She followed them down, and nearly leapt in delight when she realised what they'd drawn. Circles. Healing rifts, technically, but chances were that they didn't know that. Miri glanced behind her; Jackson was occupied, and he surely wouldn't miss her for five minutes, right? And she couldn't just leave these children waiting. It was easy enough for her to just quietly reach across space, blinking through the crowd and right into the circle. The children surrounding it jumped back, one falling backwards in their shock, each letting out cries of surprise. Miri couldn't help but burst into happy laughter, crouching down and holding a hand out to the little girl who had fallen over. "Sorry about that, are you okay? I saw your circles and just couldn't help myself." She giggled again at this. The girl blinked up at her in awe before slowly, hesitantly taking her hand. Miri pulled her to her feet easily, nearly lifting her off the ground, astonished by how light she was. "There, no harm done. So-" "Are you a guardian?" A boy behind her asked, and she turned to see his eyes wide, incredulous, but arms crossed in doubt. She laughed, inclining her head, and coaxed Ariadne out of the aether and into the air above her palm. "I am, yep. This is my ghost, Ariadne. You can call her Ari, if you want." All three children gravitated towards her hand, staring at her ghost, before one reached out hesitantly. "Oh, Uh...can I touch her?" Miri shrugged. "Ask her yourself, hm?"  "Um...can I touch you?" The voice was quiet, somewhat confused, and the yelp somewhere between surprise and delight when Ariadne responded with a chirrup of "Of course," suggested that they hadn't realised Aria could speak for herself. "So, are you a warlock? You have a bond, I think." She smiled, nodding at the little girl from earlier who now tapped her bond. "A Sunsinger. Wanna see?" Miri sat down cross-legged in the circle, the smile on her face growing as the children followed suit, giggling happily. She held her hands out and reached out, feeling the warmth of Solar Light, and pulled it into wraiths and knots around her fingers to loud squeals of delight. "That's so cool!" "It looks like the sun..." "What does it do?" Miri grinned cheekily, ideas coming to mind, and flicked a spark in the girl's direction, where it exploded into dust on her face. "Whatever I want it to, I think." "Miri, hey," Ariadne floated up to her eye level, blinking at her. "Jackson's trying to call you." She cringed, right, she wasn't supposed to run off. "Is Miri your name?" "Who's Jackson?" "Is he another guardian?" "Yes, a friend, and yes," she pointed at each child in turn while answering. "I should probably go back." Said children pouted in response, all babbling about why she should stay, and Miri cringed again as she floated up to her feet. "Well, I'll need your help getting back, so you can come with me until then?" Tiny hands grasped hers and tugged her back into the flowing crowd before she could protest. "So, who are we looking for, guardian?" "He's tall, a Titan, and an Exo. Silver, I guess?" One of the boys looked up at her. "He's one of those robot guys?" She nodded. "They're kinda scary..." Miri couldn't help but laugh at that. "Jackson's occasionally scary, but really, he just thinks a lot-" "Miri!" She whipped around just as a familiar figure grasped her by the shoulders. "What did I ask you? The one, single thing I told you not to do?" She felt a slight grin appear on her face, sheepish, almost. "....Not run off-" Miri's voice cut out as she felt soft tugs on her robes, and looked down to see the three children hiding behind her legs, looking up at Jackson with...it seemed like fear. She knelt down in front of them. "Hey, this is my friend, the one I told you about. He's good. If you're ever in trouble, always look for him, because he'll never let you down and never leave you alone, even if you're miles away from the City. That's just how he is." A smile crept on her face again as the little girl let go of her sleeve to toddle over to Jackson, inspecting him with all the suspicion in her face she could muster. "Are you a Guardian?" "...Yeah, I am." He answered after a moment, staring. Miri watched him, quietly, for once; he seemed totally out of his element, uneasy with the child watching him with such a piercing look. "Is what she said true?" "I like to think so." The girl looked at him sternly. "Good." Miri blinked in surprise as she ran off, waving, and raised a hand in a half wave back. "So... You had fun then?" She cringed. "They drew a circle and I wanted to get in it, and then they asked about Ariadne and my Light, so I showed them, and they thought it was really pretty, and-" "I got it-" "Jackie, we've gotta protect them, right?" He blinked at her wide eyed earnestness in what seemed like surprise, contemplating her for a moment. "I..." "They're the last hope of the City, they're what Zavala's talking about all the time, right? I didn't really get it until now, but seeing them..." She grinned. "It's what we fight for." Jackson couldn't do anything but nod. If that was what she fought for, then he'd follow. Not like he had anything to defend.
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"You blink once, then it's gone. Don't let it take the skin from your bones. It's darkest before the dawn, but you don't need to do this alone, no you don't! 'Cause when you get this close, you can feel the heat. Now you're so afraid of what's underneath. Oh, don't even if it hurts. Even if it makes me bleed. I'm gonna carry you, pushing through with the dirt on my sleeves. Even if it hurts, even if it's razor deep, I'm not giving up, not gonna run. I'll be there when you need me, even if it hurts!" - Sam Tinnesz
I think these lines fit us perfectly! Just as you accompany me through difficult times, strengthen me and are by my side, I will stay by your side. I will carry you and strengthen you. I will guide you even through the darkness and search for the light with you. Not giving up on you. I'm there if you need me!
Aria, you are the strongest woman I know. You are the most beautiful woman I know and you are the bravest, most self-sacrificing and loving woman I have ever met. And last but not least, you are simply amazing. - You are more than you think and stronger than you think. You are a wonderful woman, a wonderful mother and a wonderful friend. I admire you. Your courage. Your strength. Your smile. Keep your smile because it's the most beautiful one I've ever seen.
@xtoariadnesdarklightx đ€
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There are moments in life that shine brighter than the stars in the night sky, and for me, one of those moments is always when I think of our friendship. You're like a living poem in my life, full of beauty, depth, and meaning. From the fun adventures we embark on together to the moments when we simply sit down and ponder about life, all these moments with you are precious and unforgettable. Your strength and courage inspire me time and time again. You're a source of support, a rock in tumultuous times, and a shoulder to lean on. Thank you for always being by my side, through thick and thin. I cherish your friendship more than words could ever express. May our bond remain as strong as ever, and may we experience many more adventures together. I love you @xtoariadnesdarklightx
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