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Now reading: Chapter 290: Achilles is back from I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me, a Action novel by JuanTenorio.

The battlefield, once alive with the cacophony of war, now lay silent, shrouded in a thick veil of loss. The death of Patroclus had struck a blow so devastating that even the air seed to carry the weight of despair. Odysseus, ever the pragmatic strategist, had imdiately ordered the retreat of the Greek forces for the day, disregarding Agamnon’s vehent protests. To continue fighting after such a catastrophic loss would be reckless, a folly driven by the hubris of one man’s unyielding desire to raze Troy to the ground.

Agamnon’s obsession with victory had beco a reckless fla, consuming logic and reason. His unrelenting push for battle had reached an absurd extre, but Odysseus was not one to be swayed by arrogance. He recognized the need to preserve what little morale the Greeks had left. Today had been disastrous—a day of unparalleled tragedy. Chiron, the wise and noble centaur; nelaus, King of Sparta; and Patroclus, beloved companion of Achilles—all had fallen. Their deaths, cruel and senseless, had occurred within re hours of each other.

The losses were too great to bear. To push forward now would be suicide, an act of madness born of desperation. Odysseus’s command to retreat was not just a tactical decision but a necessary one. The Greek army, battered and broken, withdrew from the field under the shadow of grief. Their spirits had been shattered; their courage drained to the dregs. Yet, for the first ti in the long years of this brutal war, Odysseus’s thoughts were not consud by the plight of the Greek forces.

No, his mind was elsewhere—on sothing far more urgent.

Patroclus was dead.

And Achilles didn’t know yet.

When Patroclus had announced his decision to take part in the battle, leading the Myrmidons into the fray, Odysseus had suspected that Achilles was unaware of the plan—or, at the very least, did not approve of it. Achilles, fiercely protective of Patroclus, would never have allowed his dearest companion to enter the battlefield alone. Yet Odysseus had not stopped him. He had welcod the help, eager for the strength and valor of the Myrmidons to bolster their dwindling ranks. Now, that decision weighed heavily on him.

Grief churned in his chest, a bitter storm of guilt and sorrow. He couldn’t shake the feeling that he had sent Patroclus to his death. The mory of the young warrior’s kindness, his unwavering sense of justice, lingered painfully in Odysseus’s mind. In many ways, Patroclus had reminded him of Heracles—a rare soul who carried both strength and compassion in equal asure. And now he was gone.

As if that wasn’t enough, Chiron—the wise and noble ntor who had guided so many of Greece’s greatest heroes—had also perished. It was almost too much to bear.

The Greek encampnt, once a hive of activity, now felt like a mausoleum. Inside Agamnon’s grand tent, the once-crowded war council sat nearly empty. The heavy air was suffused with silence, broken only by the faint crackling of torches. Agamnon slouched on his gilded throne, his face a mask of fury and denial, while Nestor stood somberly behind him, his age-worn face etched with sorrow. Odysseus was the only other figure present. The absence of the other leaders was a grim testant to the day’s bloodshed.

The Heroes of the Empire of Light, who had once stood as allies in this war, were no longer present either. Their leader, Liphiel, had been slain by Heiron, and with her death, their resolve had crumbled. They had slowly begun to distance themselves from the conflict, their loyalty to the cause waning with each passing hour. Odysseus had noticed their quiet retreat—the subtle packing of belongings, the whispered conversations by the harbor. They were waiting, it seed, for a ship to carry them back to their distant holand the LIGHT EMPIRE, far from the cursed plains of Troy.

In the end, they stood alone, their hopes for reinforcents dwindling into distant fantasies. The weight of their isolation pressed down like a leaden sky, but despite this grim reality, Agamnon exuded an unshakable confidence. Odysseus could see it in the king’s narrowed gaze and the faint smirk tugging at his lips. And Odysseus knew why.

Patroclus was dead.

That fact carried more weight than any battalion of warriors. It was not just a loss but a summons, a harbinger of sothing fierce and unstoppable.

"Lord Odysseus!"

The cry interrupted his thoughts. A soldier burst into the tent, his face alight with a grin so wide it seed to banish the tension in the air.

"Achilles has returned!"

Odysseus froze, his eyes widening as the words sank in. Without hesitation, he pushed past the soldier and rushed out of the tent, his heart pounding in his chest. The dry, dust-filled air outside hit his face, but he barely noticed it. His mind raced faster than his legs as he made his way toward the Myrmidon encampnt.

But beneath his hurried stride, Odysseus’s face was grave. His thoughts churned, grappling for the right words. What could he possibly say? How could he explain what had happened in Achilles’s absence? Every sentence he constructed crumbled under the weight of what it had to carry.

The walk to the Myrmidons’ camp felt both too long and too short. Before he knew it, he stood before them. The sight was somber—an air of mourning hung over the gathered warriors. The Myrmidons, proud and fierce as they were, avoided eting his gaze. Their heads were bowed, their bodies tense with unspoken grief.

And there she stood.

Khillea clad in a simple armor, her arms cradling a small bundle. Odysseus’s heart clenched at the sight. Khillea, who had always been larger than life, seed almost... human now.

"Odysseus," she greeted, a small smile breaking the tension. "It’s good to see you." She shifted the bundle in her arms, revealing the face of a tiny infant wrapped in soft linens. "Look at her. Now I finally understand what you must’ve felt the first ti you beca a parent." She laughed, a light, carefree sound that felt painfully out of place.

Odysseus tried to smile back but could only manage a strained, awkward expression. Khillea didn’t seem to notice—yet.

"I ca back as soon as I could," Khillea continued, her voice brimming with excitent. "I wanted to show Patroclus his niece. I haven’t seen him yet—where is he? He must be sulking because I was gone too long, isn’t he?" She laughed again, but this ti, her voice faltered when no one responded.

The Myrmidons remained silent. Their heads dipped even lower, their shoulders trembling.

Khillea’s smile faded. Her brows furrowed as she turned her sharp gaze toward them. "What’s going on?" she asked, her tone losing its warmth. Her grip on the baby tightened protectively.

She turned back to Odysseus, her eyes narrowing. "Odysseus," she said, her voice like a blade. "Where is Patroclus?"

Odysseus opened his mouth, but the words caught in his throat. He felt his tongue falter, searching for a way to soften the blow. "Achilles…" he began, his voice low. "After you left, much has happened. It’s not easy to—"

"Where is Patroclus, Odysseys?" Achilles cut him off, her words slow and deliberate, her tone sharper this ti.

Her voice carried a weight that stilled the air around them.

Odysseus hesitated, his gaze dropping to the ground. "Achilles... Patroclus fought with the Myrmidons while you were gone. He stood with us, side by side…"

Her eyes narrowed further, a flicker of anger flashing through them. "I told him not to fight," she hissed. "I ordered him not to fight. And he agreed! Is he hurt?"

Her voice cracked slightly, betraying her growing unease. Anger and worry warred within her, each threatening to spill over.

Odysseus’s lips parted, but no sound ca out. He couldn’t bring himself to say it, to crush the fragile hope in her voice. He glanced toward the Myrmidons, searching for soone to take this burden from him, but they all remained silent.

Achilles’s grip on the baby tightened, her knuckles turning white. Her voice dropped to a deadly whisper. "Odysseus. Tell where he is."

Odysseus swallowed hard, his throat dry. "Achilles… Patroclus is…" His voice faltered, the words refusing to co.

"Is he gravely hurt? Tell where he is!" Khillea demanded, her voice tight with urgency as she strode past Odysseus, her steps quick and determined. "My mother will heal him. She’ll make it right."

"You can’t," Odysseus murmured, his voice barely audible, each word carrying the weight of despair. "It’s too late…"

Before he could explain further, another voice cut through the tension like a blade.

"No, she can’t."

Khillea turned sharply, her golden eyes narrowing as she spotted Agamnon approaching, his imposing figure frad against the camp’s dim torches. The air seed to grow heavier as his words hung between them.

"What did you just say?" Khillea’s tone was sharp, her gaze piercing as it locked onto Agamnon.

But Agamnon did not flinch. Behind him, a group of soldiers erged, carrying sothing on a makeshift wooden bier. A heavy cloth covered the shape beneath, its outline unmistakably human. The soldiers moved with quiet solemnity, their faces grim and pale.

Khillea’s brows furrowed. Her heart quickened, though she refused to acknowledge the dark thought that whispered in the back of her mind.

Agamnon strode forward and gestured toward the bier. "See for yourself," he said, his voice steady but cold. Reaching down, he grasped the edge of the cloth and pulled it back in one swift motion.

Khillea froze.

Beneath the cloth lay Patroclus, his face pale and still. His chest no longer rose and fell with breath. The golden armor he wore—her armor—was tarnished and mangled, blackened by what could only be burns from a cursed weapon. The once-pristine tal was shattered at the chest, where Paris’s cowardly arrow had struck.

Silence descended like a shroud over the camp.

Khillea’s gold eyes widened, ever so slightly, before narrowing again. She did not speak, nor did she move. Her gaze remained locked on Patroclus’s lifeless face. Her expression was unreadable, frozen in an icy calm that defied the storm building within her.

"He’s dead," Agamnon said bluntly, as if the finality of the words could pierce the surreal haze that gripped the scene. "The Trojans killed him. Cowardly, from behind. Hector and Paris were the culprits."

The words reverberated in the air, but Khillea did not react. She did not even blink. Her focus remained fixed on the body of her closest companion, the man who had shared her tent, her victories, and her dreams.

Odysseus stood nearby, his throat tightening as he observed Khillea’s expression—or rather, the absence of one. He had seen her in countless battles, her face twisted in rage, defiance, or triumph. But this… this silence, this stillness, was more unnerving than anything he had witnessed before.

"Achill—" Odysseus began, stepping closer. He wanted to say sothing, anything to comfort her. But before the words could escape his lips, Khillea turned abruptly.

Without a word, she walked away, her steps asured, her posture rigid.

The Myrmidons parted to let her pass, their heads bowed, their gazes averted. The silence deepened, save for the faint crackle of the campfires.

Odysseus started to follow her, but he stopped when he caught a glimpse of her face.

Khillea’s expression—though fleeting, hidden beneath the dim light—was like a crack in the façade of a mighty temple. Her lips were pressed into a thin line, her jaw clenched so tightly it trembled. And her eyes…

Her golden eyes blazed with a fury so cold it could freeze the world. It was an expression that promised retribution, one that made even the most battle-hardened Myrmidons shudder.

Odysseus swallowed hard, his heart heavy with dread. He did not need to follow her to know what was coming next.

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