[Another nod, because he does recall that conversation. He knows it is less Ares than it is the concept fixed behind it, intrinsically tied to who and what Cy is. And he also anticipated this question, so he responds with thought and care.]
There wasn't much, but I read everything that was available in the library. It seemed as if the Greek people feared him, so he was not spoken of often outright, except in reverence and respect as the god of the underworld. "The Unseen One." The most prominent myth was that of his relationship with Persephone.
[He has other things to say about his opinion of Hades, but these are not strictly factual comments — so he withholds them for now. His head leans back against the hand at his nape.]
no subject
There wasn't much, but I read everything that was available in the library. It seemed as if the Greek people feared him, so he was not spoken of often outright, except in reverence and respect as the god of the underworld. "The Unseen One." The most prominent myth was that of his relationship with Persephone.
[He has other things to say about his opinion of Hades, but these are not strictly factual comments — so he withholds them for now. His head leans back against the hand at his nape.]
I didn't choose it lightly.