Thus
it was, that in the senescence of the year Hades began to plot anew against the
Son of Zeus. As the shadows stretched
across the Earth, the mane of Bobbyseus grew longer still, flow now stronger
than the current of the great Aliakmonas.
With his hair grew too his power, for Bobbyseus was quickly approaching
the divine though still bound by his earthly form. The Lord of the Dead’s previous failure to
destroy Bobbyseus rankled in both the mind and halls of Hades, empty echoes
amplifying the rage of the dread lord. At last the burka draped across his mind
was cast off, and Hades knew now what must be done. Hades drew from a pomegranate twelve seeds
and dropped them into an amphora of the finest Athenian Gentleman. While
ingesting the seeds would doom the average partaker to an unending sleep
amongst the dead, Hades knew it would only send Bobbyseus into the clutches of
Morpheus for a few hours. His plan laid out,
Hades took the form or an elderly beggar and went to Thebes. Once there he worked his way towards the
palace and waited. God among men,
Bobbyseus soon passed by, the carcass of a boar hefted across his corded
shoulders. Hades said unto the demigod, “
Hail son of Zeus, whose drinking ability is as boundless as the heavens!” Bobbyseus was pleased by the old man’s
deference and said jovially, “I do drink the most, yea”. Hades then made his
move, saying that even a demigod would have troubled stomaching the pomegranate
infused Gentleman. To this challenge
Bobbyseus’s ire rose. He grabbed the
bottle and said unto the crowd gathered, “Yea, and though I drink the most,
this pauper has challenged your king.
Should I accept this shitty offering?”
The crowd slowly began to chant “Bobbyseus drinks the most! Bobbyseus drinks the most!”. His ego thus sated, Bobbyseus chugged the
bottle, belched loudly, threatened those near him with cries of, “Fuck you, bro”
and then fell into a slumber. The crowd
beat their breasts and gnashed their teeth in agony as their dear leader fell
before the beggar, who now revealed himself not as a man at all, but Hades,
Lord of the Underworld. Taking the pair
of scissors once used by the fates to cut life strands, Hades then cut the
flowing locks of Bobbyseus, till the demigods head was as barren as they crags
of Mount Olympus. Laughing maniacally, Hades
transformed yet again into 4 horses and their hooded riders. Upon a white steed the power of Conquest,
upon a red mare rode War. Famine
galloped away atop a black stallion, while Death incarnate sat upon a pale
horse. Thus did Hades unleash the full
power of the underworld upon the above world, and all that was once good and green
and whole among humanity was rent apart.
Hours later Bobbyseus awoke, liver and head pounding. Insatiably thirsty, he bent to drink from the
Well of Thebes, only to find it red with the blood of his people. In it he saw a ruined shell of the demigod he
once was. His mane had gone and with it,
his powers. He was doomed now to walk
the Earth a mortal man, while the wrath of Hades spread ever further. In the midst of despair, he fell upon the
ground and began to weep, which served only as sustenance for his terrible
thirst. In the eleventh hour, Zeus took
pity upon his son and descended from Olympus to speak with him. Appearing as an old beggar (The ancient Gods
lacked imagination) Zeus helped his
forsaken son to his feet. “ Bobbyseus,
my son, why dost thou weep as a woman?” “My
father, I am doomed now to watch Hades run roughshod upon this Earth without
the means to stop him. My hair, its…its
gone! And with it my power!” As
Bobbyseus began to weep anew, Zeus began to laugh. “My son, just because your flow hath been
taken from you by the Lord of Death does not mean your power must follow
suit. Tell me, though your locks have been
shorn, do your abs no longer glisten in the rays of the Sun? Are your arms no longer rippling with the
power of the gods? Do your traps no
longer reach up to tickle your ears? Does…?”
Bobbyseus interrupted the Thunder God, saying, “ Enough father, I know
now what must be done, and just how I will do it. Though I am a broken man, my divine nature
remains unbent. Sick flow or not, I will
not fall to Hades, for though my hair needs me, the world needs me more!” With that he marched to the four corners of
the flat Earth and cast down the horseman of Hades. Defeated yet again, Hades retreated to the
underworld to plot yet again. Bobbyseus
was then hailed King not just of Argos, but of Greece itself.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
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