"The other supernatural races also help," he says. "The two families of gods went to war with each other, in my world, and there were the giants and everyone else also."
"Yes, we had the Titans. They got overthrown. Everyone's always trying to kill everyone else, which is rather pointless. I mean... we can't die, you know? So... we all have to pretend to be civil, even when we're plotting to kill each other."
He is silent for a while, using a complicated bit of navigation back onto the highway as a cover.
"The sword belonged to a man who had once been one of my dearest friends. But we'd had a falling-out, before my exile, and the sword was not made for him. It came into his possession, and then he gave it away for the sake of love, which meant that at the final battle he would have no sword. It would instead be carried by the giant who was to lead the armies against the gods."
"We cannot escape our fate, once it has been predicted," he says. "Of course, it says nothing about my fate. I'm not sure if that should be a comfort."
"But if I knew my fate," he says, "I would be able to be prepared for it. I would know where I stood, in the course of my life. I would know where it would end."
"...well, you have rubbed off on me in some ways," he says softly, giving her a brief glance. "I may not be quite spontaneous, but I am looking forward to the future, in more ways than just what my next strategy for finding my wife might be."
"That hasn't happened in a very long time, if ever," he says. "I may have been distracted for a little while, but there has always been the need to keep looking, and after so much time has gone by, the need to go back. But I'm only going through the motions of it now."
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She smiles. "Of course, but we, I mean they."
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She searches for the right word.
"... terrifying. And appealing, somehow, at the same time. To have your life so carefully defined, to be unable to move from that path."
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"I was never mentioned in the prophecies. But that sword I made... it was. Imagine the pressure of that."
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But she's thinking. "So, what do the prophecies say?"
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"The sword belonged to a man who had once been one of my dearest friends. But we'd had a falling-out, before my exile, and the sword was not made for him. It came into his possession, and then he gave it away for the sake of love, which meant that at the final battle he would have no sword. It would instead be carried by the giant who was to lead the armies against the gods."
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"So," she says, finally. "There's no way to change these things, then?"
It's more of a rhetorical question than anything. Melpomene knows all about prophecies.
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"I guess none of my spontaneity has rubbed off on you. I'll have to work on that."
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