What's it finna play- WOOOOOAAAAAAH
happy holidays or whatever
(word count: 1,548)
From a lonesome, hidden balcony located somewhere on the outskirts of the palace, one could see a familiar sight: Seth, being heckled by his adoring wife into visiting the servants, trailed by their hesitant son. For many of Egyptâs regulars, this was a normal sight to beholdâthe fearsome desert god, He Who Has Caused Destruction, the murderer, transformed into something better. Greater.
It made the elder Horus scowl deeply.
If Seth felt his presenceâhe surely did, he must haveâhe did not react. Instead, his attention was solely focused on rebuking Nephthys, his tail swishing furiously. Horus knew all too well that it was nothing more than playful deceit, and he could only narrow his eyes as his gaze drifted over to the goddess. His sister had always been the simpler out of the two, but to see her laugh so casually with him wasâŠ
âUncle,â a quiet voice startles him, causing the older god to whip around. Horus bristled; not a single soul on this earth knew of this place, unless of course you wereâ
âNephew,â Horus the Elder nods simply, turning his back on the younger and adjusting his gaze. By now the trio had long since moved on, but he kept his eyes glued upon the spot where they once wereâwhere he once was.
The younger Horus moved silently to stand beside him, a mutual understanding blossoming between the two. If Elder Horus could, heâd laugh at the absurdity of the situation: Isis, giving birth to Osirisâ son, and naming the poor, weak babe after him. It was as though the universe had taken his Ba and stuffed it into the young god before him. He was practically a walking, living, breathing carbon copy of his uncleâa great offense, seeing as how he was very much alive and well.
Horus the Younger let his own eyes meet the spot the Elder was staring at, and although he had arrived at the scene of the crime far too late, he seemed to have grasped what had occurred. Leaning onto the railing, he kept the tense yet peaceful silence for a moment before speaking.
âHeâs beautiful, isnât he?â
Again, if Elder Horus could, heâd start cackling.
â... Yes,â the older god acknowledges slowly, his fingers flexing against his palm. If he had been much younger, much more arrogant, he wouldâve punched the younger square in his jaw for even mentioning him. Uttering Sethâs visage upon oneâs tongue was a heinous crime and deserving of a fate worse than death. Now though, he no longer had any right to think so. Thus, he kept his mouth rightfully shut. âHe had always been.â
This causes the younger Horus to tilt his head slightlyâinquisitively. Curiously. Hungrily.
He decides to indulge him.
âHe hasnât changed in thousands of years,â elder Horus mutters, searching for the sandy red hair amongst the crowd. âHe couldnât have changed in thousands of years. I know him like I know the back of my hand, little one. Sethâs a stubborn mule, youâve come to find out. Not many things worm his way into his heart.â
Horus thought for a moment. âDo you think thatâŠ?â
âGodâs no,â the older exclaims in disbelief, âNot a chance. Nephthysâgods bless herâsheâs not exactly⊠his type. Too boring, too plain. Words taken out of the horseâs mouth.â Horus frowns, clenching his hand into a tight fist. âThatâs why I donât understand. Heâs not⊠Heâs really notâŠâ He falls silent, turbulent memories swirling within his heart.
Itâs true, the younger had to admitâthe god before him knew his uncle far too well; even on a scope that not even he, himself, could ever achieve in his lifetime. The thought makes him feel uneasy; a pang of unwarranted jealousy flooding his body. Horus wishes he could take his uncleâs placeâperhaps then things mightâve been better, no matter how irrational he thinks otherwise. To hold him, to worship him⊠it shouldâve been him doing that. The feeling makes his guts squeeze and mash together in a hot mix of adoration and lust that he struggles to hold down. Horus the Elderâs chuckle is the only thing that snaps him out of his reverie, his face one that of understanding.
âI loved him,â he continues. âNo, I still do. Even after all these years, I wish I could go back in time and not have thought so rationally.â Elder Horus shakes his head sorrowfully. âMany around me praised it; told me it was a necessary sacrifice. Without your father as king, they said, Seth wouldâve ran Egypt into the ground, bathing Egypt in a sea of innocent red. But no, I donât believe that, not even for a second.â
He turns to the younger, placing a hand gently upon his shoulder. âDo you know how long the events of that period in time keep replaying in my head? For eons now, it feels like. Once upon a time, it used to be a nightmare Iâd struggle to wake up from. Now, though, it is nothing more than the comfortable blanket of grief I wrap willingly around my body. Iâve always dreamt of a time where I let him ruleâsometimes we co-rule, other times he does so alone. But all in all, I am still there, still pacifying him.â
âIn the end, he wouldâve made for a fantastic ruler, believe me. It is because I wouldâve been there, guiding him; coaching him. As impulsive as he is, he wouldâve still come to me, even if I had ascended into the heavens; asking me questions well into the night, even if the candle had long since burned out.â
Closing his eyes, the elder shakily inhales. âI always picture what happens next: Seth, curled up into my arms. Itâs the only haven heâs known for so long. He had always looked up at me so softly, so sweetly, you see. So lovingly; so unlike him to most. Did you know he could smile, that brute? His lips always curled upwards in a subtle way when he did, and his nose would crinkle slightly, along with his eyes. That smile had always been reserved for me.â
The air is deathly silent.
He hadnât realized until the tears had begun to wet his cheeks that he had been crying, out of all things. It shocks even the younger Horus to see, who recoils slightly. To see the older war god, the pillar of Ennead after Ra, crying so easily⊠A weak-hearted man wouldâve fallen to his very knees at the sight. Horus the Elder cherishes these tears, though; a weak, strangled laugh twisting out of his tight throat. Heâs no stranger to cryingâhe doesnât believe such things dictate masculinityâbut to be so vulnerable in front of his descendant is⊠humbling, in a sense. For both of them.
It takes him a while to wipe those tears, his heart bleeding out and oozing for Horus to see. The younger acknowledges it, although hesitantly, reaching up and placing his hand on the opposite shoulder. His palm is warm, lacking the calluses of a true war god. The Horus before him is youthful; vibrantânothing like the broken older god he had now become. It makes him feel even more bitter, but that bitterness quickly ebbs away into nothingness. He doesnât let himself succumb to such things anymoreâhe cannot afford to.
âLittle one,â he manages to rasp, lowering his head in defeat. âLet me warn you of the path you will inexorably take. It will not be easyâno, far from it. Too much time has passed for him to open up his heart again. Whatever vestiges of love he feels for Nephthys are nothing more than the little lies he tells himself. You are my shadow; my half. He will be haunted by meâby youâfor as long as you both live. Itâll be hard for either one of you to become close; it is the lesson he has learned: never again.â
Horus the Younger nods solemnly, sincerely. âUncle, I understand,â he replies, squeezing his shoulder. âI would be stupid to think I ever had a chance with him. But still, in my heart⊠you know it well, too: heâs the only one for me. I might not have had the same opportunities as you, but itâs still thereâthat fire, that passion. Even so, I want to understand. I want to be there for himâI know I can be.â
This time, his laugh is louder; a deep, boisterous sound that echoes throughout the air. It matches that of a powerful being who had once ruled the land with an iron fist and a strong heart; one whose Ba is full of timeless sorrow and a sense of inescapable acceptance. Horus feels the chills run down his spine, momentarily awed by the power the elder had once wieldedâpower that is now his.
âAh, gods bless you, Horus,â Horus the Elder muses as he wipes away the remaining tears. He turns away from the balcony, giving the younger a firm pat on the shoulder. âYou have my blessings, little one.â
Before he can even utter a question, the elder god is gone within a blink of an eye; the only evidence of his visit being the light wind that causes the linen curtains to sway gently in the breeze.
Making shrinky dinks:)
Have you ever tried this one?
(Divider by @bernardsbendystraws)
noaprilfools just ENA coral slop
I'm in the bin chicken cult. Love them.
Found this little guy on Pinterest
What the fuck is wrong with him (âŹïž)
Qhat the fucl.......
People are editing pjo cabins so that technically mean gods (at least at some level) so TECHNICALLY...
Also
Have I seen Fiona and Cake? No. Did I want Simon Petrikov to be there? Yes.
Mask off - Future ft. Kendrick Lamar âŹă
While reading the book, for some reason I found this moment funny and wanted to illustrate it :3
«The Lord ordered Horus and Seth to tell in turn why each of them believes that he is worthy of the royal title. The gods treated Seth with due respect, but Thoth and Onuris drew attention to the fact that uncle should not inherit the throne. The Lord said something so terrible that his words were not even recorded; all that is known is that they threw the other gods into deep despair.»
Ohhh I like Ra and Seth more and moređ