Zafron fidgeted in his seat, the wooden chair creaking beneath him. Eros draped himself against the wall, all golden-eyed smirks and deliberate nonchalance. Aphrodite's gaze swept across them both, heavy with mories that seed to weigh more than centuries.
"Sit," she said simply. No dramatics, just a quiet command that sohow demanded obedience.
Eros couldn't help himself. "Oh, storyti?" he sang, a mischievous glint dancing in his eyes. "Should I grab so nectar? Prepare myself for another epic tale of divine lodrama?"
'Sobody needs to gag him,' Zafron thought, rolling his eyes.
Aphrodite's lips curved—not quite a smile, more a gesture that suggested she'd heard far worse. "So stories aren't performances, Eros. So are simply... truth."
The air seed to settle, like a breath held just a mont too long.
"It happened long before your world knew ," she began, her voice soft but steady. "Before I was the goddess of love everyone thought they understood. When I was sothing wilder. Sothing free."
Her words weren't a proclamation. They were an invitation—a doorway into a world both ancient and achingly human.
The landscape she described was raw and unforgiving. A world where survival wasn't a choice but a daily battle. Where hunters didn't track prey for sport, but for the simple necessity of keeping their families alive.
'No rules,' she had thought as she prepared to leave Olympus. 'No constraints. Just pure experience.'
The magic she'd borrowed—stolen, really—from Hecate was more than a simple disguise. It was a transformation so complete that even the most powerful divine eyes would look right past her. Her immortal radiance lted away, replaced by sothing earthier. Golden locks beca the color of harvested wheat. Her supernatural beauty softened into sothing more approachable, more... human.
Zafron leaned forward, captivated. Even Eros had gone quiet, his usual theatrics replaced by genuine curiosity.
This was going to be no ordinary story...
The forest breathed around her. Not the quiet, manicured woodlands of modern tis, but a living, dangerous ecosystem where every rustle could an life or death. Pine sap stuck to her borrowed leather sandals, and wild thy crushed beneath her steps released its sharp, clean scent.
Alexios wasn't just another hunter. Where others saw prey, he saw life's delicate balance. His hands, calloused and strong, spoke of generations of survival. When the massive bear attacked, it wasn't just a fight—it was a dance of survival that would change everything.
'This is no ordinary man,' Aphrodite thought, watching him bleed.
His wound was savage. Claw marks ran from shoulder to chest, a brutal testant to the bear's power. Yet even wounded, Alexios's eyes burned with sothing beyond pain—determination, a spark that would later beco the foundation of their extraordinary life.
Water. A stream nearby sang its quiet lody. Aphrodite approached, her movents deliberate. She tore strips from her own clothing—rough linen that would serve as bandages. Her hands, once used to weaving divine magic, now worked with practical, urgent skill.
The first ti their eyes t, sothing shifted. Not a thunderbolt of passion, but a deeper connection. Alexios saw a woman—strong, compassionate. Aphrodite saw a human who carried within him the raw essence of survival.
'I could love this life,' she realized. Not a passing fancy, but a genuine hunger for sothing real.
Their courtship was no grand divine romance. It was built on shared monts. Hunting together. Learning each other's rhythms. Discovering a world far more complex than the sterile halls of Olympus.
When they married, it was simple. No grand temples. No divine witnesses. Just two souls, surrounded by the forest that had first brought them together. Alexios's village celebrated with firelight and wine, drums beating a primal rhythm that seed to echo the heartbeat of the earth itself.
Three children ca. Each unique. Each a universe unto themselves.
Nikolas, the eldest. Born with his father's hunting instincts and sothing... more. Damian, quiet and watchful. Helena, with eyes that seed to see beyond the visible world.
For years, Aphrodite lived her carefully constructed human life. Each day was a delicate dance of concealnt. A goddess, walking among mortals. Loving. Living. Breathing.
'They will never find here,' she would think, watching her children play. 'I am free.'
But divine blood doesn't remain hidden forever.
The first signs were subtle. Nikolas could calm wild animals with a re glance. Wounds he touched seed to heal faster than natural. Alexios, with his hunter's instincts, began to notice.
'Sothing is different about our son,' he would tell Aphrodite, his voice a mixture of pride and growing unease.
And then ca the mont that would change everything.
A harsh winter. Snow blanketing the forest. A wolf, desperate and hungry, cornering a young lamb. Nikolas, barely twelve, stepped between predator and prey.
The wolf stopped.
Not out of fear. Not out of choice.
But as if compelled by a force beyond understanding.
Alexios stared. Aphrodite felt her immortal heart race.
'The first demigod,' she thought. 'And he is mine.'
Years passed like gentle waves, each season revealing more of Nikolas's unique nature. His difference wasn't loud or dramatic—it was a subtle vibration, like the quiet humming of a string pulled too tight.
When he was fourteen, the shepherds began to whisper. Lambs that would have died found strength beneath his touch. Injured dogs recovered with impossible speed when Nikolas sat near them. His hands seed to carry a warmth that defied explanation, a healing energy that made the village elders exchange knowing glances.
Alexios watched his son with a complex mixture of pride and growing apprehension. So nights, he would sit by the fire, his weathered hands turning his hunting knife, watching Nikolas tend to their animals with an almost unnatural gentleness.
"He is special," Aphrodite would murmur, her immortal eyes holding centuries of understanding. "More than they can comprehend."
The turning point ca on a crisp autumn morning. Detrios, a young farmhand from a neighboring settlent, had always been rough—quick to anger, harder still with animals. That day, he was beating a young mule that had stumbled during plowing, his rage consuming him like a wild fire.
Nikolas was gathering herbs when he heard the animal's terrified whimpers.
Sothing inside him shifted. Not anger. Not hatred. But a profound, overwhelming sense of protection that ca from sowhere deeper than human emotion.
When Detrios raised his thick wooden stick again, Nikolas simply looked at him.
The farmhand froze.
Not by choice. Not by fear. But as if every muscle in his body had been instantaneously locked by an invisible force.
"Stop," Nikolas said. A simple word. But it carried a resonance that was neither a request nor a command—sothing in between, sothing ancient.
Detrios couldn't move. Sweat beaded on his forehead. His eyes, wide with terror, darted around helplessly.
The mule trembled, then slowly, carefully rose to its feet.
By the ti Nikolas blinked, releasing whatever strange power had gripped Detrios, the farmhand collapsed. Not dead. But sothing had broken inside him.
Word traveled fast in small communities. Whispers beca murmurs. Murmurs beca accusations.
"Witchcraft," so said.
"Demon's work," others claid.
Aphrodite knew. This was divine blood awakening. Unpredictable. Powerful. Dangerous.
Alexios understood too. A hunter knows when prey becos predator.
When Detrios's family ca demanding justice, claiming Nikolas had cursed their son—who now sat vacant-eyed, unable to speak or move—Aphrodite knew their peaceful life was ending.
"We must leave," she told Alexios that night, her voice carrying the weight of immortal wisdom.
The forest would be their first sanctuary. But not their last.
Years passed. Damian married a local weaver, their life simple and predictable. Helena found love with a rchant who traveled distant trade routes, bringing stories from lands beyond their small world. But Nikolas remained different—always slightly apart, always searching.
On a night when the moon hung heavy and silver, Nikolas confronted his mother. The firelight cast long shadows across their small dwelling, creating a landscape of light and darkness that seed to mirror the conversation about to unfold.
"I am not like others," he began, his voice a mixture of pain and accusation. "The things I can do... the way people look at ..."
Aphrodite's immortal eyes flickered—ancient and knowing. She had waited for this mont. Feared it. Anticipated it.
"Sit," she said quietly.
"You are not entirely human," Aphrodite said. The words hung in the air between them, heavy with aning. "Your father is mortal. But I am not."
The revelation landed like a stone dropped into still water. Ripples of comprehension. Of shock.
"What am I?" Nikolas whispered.
"A demigod," she responded. "The first of your kind. Divine blood mixed with human essence."
Anger bubbled first. Then confusion. Then a deep, visceral rejection.
"I do not want this," Nikolas spat. "I want to be human. To be normal."
Aphrodite's hand reached out, but he pulled away. The rejection was more than physical—it was spiritual, fundantal.
"Your abilities are a burden," he said. "Not a gift."
His constitution was indeed different. Where other humans might produce children easily, Nikolas would find reproduction challenging—his divine blood creating barriers, complexities that mortal flesh was not designed to navigate.
Anger festered. Transford. Beca sothing darker.
Not just anger. But a consuming, primal emotion that would remake him entirely.
Lust began to stir. Not for connection. Not for love.
But for sothing far more dangerous.
And this emotion was for none other than his very own mother, the goddess of desire, Aphrodite..
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