Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Hymenaios, or the Marriage of the God of Marriage - 9. Part IX. The Best of Friends
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Part IX. The Best of Friends
Some friends, the night previous the wedding day,
Feasted Hymenaios in his own house
As was the custom before the new bride
Entered the home she’d eventually rule.
Following the First Table, came dessert.
The honey-laced confection were arrayed
Before the three couches on the table,
Well within relaxed reach of the diners.
Hymen, Myiscus and seven more friends
Lounged then and laughed freely to the wee hours.
Along with the sweet course, servants hauled in
The large krater of bronze – four boys alone
Needed to bring it into the dining room.
It was freshly stocked with cool spring water
From which ladlesful would be mixed with wine
And served to the uproarious bachelors.
As was the custom, the boys got tipsy,
Knowing they could spend the night where they were,
Free from the worry of finding their way home
Drunk in the midst of a night turned morning.
About the second hour after midnight,
The wine stewards too – handsome lads themselves –
Were invited onto the couches to nap,
Some foot play, both innocent and not so,
Going on between the waiters and patrons.
In another hour, all were asleep
Except best friends Hymen and Myiscus
On the cushioned central couch of honor.
Slowly with care, the young men rose to stand,
The banquet a warm glow in their stomachs,
And exited as quietly as mice.
They headed towards the refreshing sounds
Coming from the wide-open main garden
With its fountain in motion night and day.
Upon the grass both cool and inviting,
The boys once more came to a settled rest
Lying flat on their backs – heels kicked up on
The curbs of the gurgling water feature –
They gazed up at the stars, folding their hands
Over their chests, and chatting like only
The best of friends feel able to do.
While Myiscus watched stars, Hymenaios
Watched his best friend, remembering the scene
The two had reenacted earlier.
Before other guests began to arrive,
Twin garlands of roses had been unbound –
Red for Hymenaios to praise Kathros,
And yellow for Myiscus to honor
A certain poet enshrined in his heart.
In a repeat of the first ritual
On the day he initially saw her,
The young men blessed their roses with a kiss
And bent down before Hymen’s household shrine.
Its bright red Corinthian columns glowed
In the welcoming afternoon sunlight.
The pair of paneled doors opened once more
To the wafting tribute of burning myrrh
And bathed the bare-breasted statue within
With the pale virtue of her ivory skin
And the veneration worthy of Love.
Then the boys strung their respective garlands
Around the opposing columns to join
Together at the temple’s pediment,
The welkin skies and flying doves painted
Within the shrine’s interior once more
Surrounded Aphrodite’s nakedness.
To clothe her in earthy glory as she
Rose from the bath of her birth – the great sea.
In repetition, each boy then knelt down
To clasp hands and silently pray to her,
But this time, instead of Her assistance,
The lads thanked Her for the delivery
Of their heart’s desire into their arms.
“Why do you stare at me that way, Hymen?”
Snapped from his reverie, the brightest son
Of his holy father Helios, grinned.
“Oh, nothing, Myiscus. A wandering thought
And remembering the tribute today
Before our household shrine to Goddess Love.”
“Yes, I can scent the sweet-hued blossoms now.”
“What’s wrong, Myiscus—” Hymen nearly laughed.
His friend’s tone told him something troubled his mind.
“Nothing’s wrong. I’m just happy for you….”
As Myiscus’ volume trailed to naught,
The bright boy about to be married said,
“I never told you how the adventure
Of me being a Little Bear ended.”
“No, Hymenaios, I don’t think you did.”
The bright boy then let peal silvery laughter.
“You should have seen the sight when my Kathros
And her stern father trundled me back home.
Still pent in my feminine wig and garb.
My intended’s household was all a-gasp,”
The merry tone in his friend’s laughing voice
Made Myiscus turn his head and watch him:
“What happened when her mother first saw you?”
“Kathros’ nursemaid ran over to support
The woman she was sure would faint away,
And then Stratos – the girl’s father – announced
He’d given their daughter’s hand in marriage
To the likes of me. But before Mother
Had a chance to chastise any of us,
I suddenly remembered they thought me
A girl, so then revealed to them slowly
My true gender; status in life; parents –
All information of which amazed them,
Especially the nursemaid, who then cried.
Kathros calmed her down, but the older one
Had suddenly come to accept the fact
That a daughter she was about to lose
To the holy ties of matrimony.”
Hymen’s plan had worked well, for now his friend
Smiled and laughed in his best unguarded way.
Myiscus said, “I wish I had been there.”
“Me too, my friend, but”—Hymen’s tone now slipped
Into the shiningly bare and sincere—
“Tomorrow, Myiscus, I want you to
Stand there by my side as I pledge my vows.
Will you do that for me, dear companion?”
“I would be honored,” Myiscus confirmed.
There followed a silence with the two boys
Looking comfortably in each other’s eyes,
The fountain gurgling softly to the stars.
Hymen understood his friend very well
And recognized the glint he saw in him
Which defies explanation other than
The one, greatest reason of them all – love.
He thus told Myiscus very softly:
“You are looking rather solemn tonight.”
Blinking and catching a lump in this throat,
Myiscus asked his buddy plainly,
“Is it all right if I tell you something?”
“’Course it is; I’ll listen to you, always.”
“I’d been deceiving others and myself
To deny how I felt within my soul.
But the truth is, I love Meleager,
And that more than I love my own life, which
He pledges he loves in return for me.”
No great ‘told you so’ moment, Hymen
Reached and took his companion’s fingers.
“I’m so happy for you – for both of you!”
“But I feel so foolish to have wasted – “
“Tsk, tsk, my friend. What’s important is now
You have received love, and love in return
Will reward both of you with honor.”
“Thank you, Hymenaios.” He squeezed his hand.
“Don’t mention it, Myiscus, but I’m glad
You have taken the right and healthy course.”
“What is it you exactly mean, Hymen?”
“I mean that the denial of the self
Is a sore element of destruction
Upon a person’s true self-potential.
Blinkered then by such a mindset, if we
Toss off heaven-made matches, foolishly,
We destroy everything we’re meant to be
For mutable customs and laws of Man.
Such limitations must evolve – or if
They do not, cease to bind thinking minds or
Compassionate hearts seeking to live whole.”
Now letting a grin twist into a smile,
Myiscus told him, “I knew you’d get it,
And that I’d been one of those, foolishly,
Hind’ring myself from what really matters.”
Hymen let out a good-natured chuckle.
“I did get it and was waiting for you
To be willing to accept it too, but –
You have, and I couldn’t be happier –
And besides, just look at Meleager!
Anyone – male, female, or both – would melt
In the warm strength of such a man’s heartbeat.
You’ve made yourself and me proud by showing
You accept his love by returning it.”
“Speaking of that”—Myiscus flushed bright pink—
“The gods love all love but mostly sanctify
Those willing to testify commitment,
Regardless of conventions, equally.
That the union of loves, of minds, of hearts
Into one destiny is as old as the stars,
And millennia from now, it will be
Exactly the same as it is for us.”
“What is it you are saying, Myiscus?”
Both young men rose to sitting positions.
“Meleager and I have discussed it,
And know in our hearts of hearts we’re ready,
So if Kathros and you will grant it us,
I want you to be with me tomorrow
When my poet and I get married too.”
Hymen’s hand, open-palmed, went to his cheek,
Feeling moist heat from his friend’s happy tears
Slowly sinking into his whole being.
“As proudly then,” confirmed Hymenaios,
“As you stand next to my side tomorrow,
I’ll be by yours, and in fact any groom
Whose heart of hearts most truly loves, there I’ll descend
And be by one and all who beckons me attend.”
_
- 5
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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