attaboyutu
It was terrifying. It was exhilarating. It was nothing compared to the frenzied, urgent, intense din and effort that it took to guide the sun across the sky on a blazing chariot of gold, roaring lions, his sister or Bunene by his side. Did Utu sometimes let Bunene handle the responsibility of daylight? Yes, maybe. Maybe often in the later centuries. Maybe Utu only day-raced the sun-chariot around the horizon out for the occasional thrill, as the elder god became more entranced with the justice and fairness surrounding his beloved humans. His Gilgamesh.
This here - riding a modded bike at intense but still earthly speeds, feeling Alekto’s biomech hand curling into his jacket - this was as close as it came to the old heady thrill of a sungod.
And then, they were swerved. “Hey!!” Utu protested, suddenly aggravated at the blatant attempt to sabotage from that Mathias fellow. Was this normal? Was cheating and sabotage of each other allowed? It didn’t count as cowardice or an unfair race?
Alekto’s knuckled rap on Utu’s helmet answered the question. “Alekto, what - what are you -” Utu tried to engage the Fury, but the helmet muffled his words, and Utu had to focus on the race, noting Mathias edging closer again. Alekto had already nimbly shifted, braced and ready. There was no going back now. “Be careful!” Utu tried to impart, and then pulled the bike closer to Mathias’ car before the crazy human had a chance to take an advantage.
It was all Alekto needed, and Utu watched in intermittent glances as Alekto didn’t just land on the car, but attacked it fully. “Dammit!” What mortal name did Alekto go by? Something ironic. Something Utu couldn’t remember. They swerved the bike just intime to see the car’s hood burst open in flames, as Alekto dragged Matthias out and onto the ground.
An old disappointment flooded Utu that there was no more chance of fairly finishing this race. The race was aborted abruptly, a far more serious problem took its place.
“No, no no no,” Utu banked the bike and hopped off, tearing the helmet off as he loped towards Alekto. “Don’t do this - hey. Hey! Dude,” Utu called to Alekto, feeling a pulsing parallel to Kanaloa’s party. “Enough, it’s over. You broke Matthias’ foot, dude. It’s over…” Utu carefully pressed warm, steady fingers on Alekto’s shoulder. “Stand down, please.”
Utu sighed, surveying the car wreck, the other people calling and hollering and approaching the site. All that human confusion, all the questions to follow. All of Alekto’s trauma out for display. Utu had to get the Fury out of here. “He’s not worth it, Virgil.” That was it. Some popular poet. Virgil.
Matthias’ cries were wet, sad and pathetic. Alekto hissed as their arm pushed up against his throat revelling in that bleak desperation that fluttered like a limping moth. In the absence of working blades Alekto wanted to sink their teeth down into him. They wanted to tear at the flesh of his throat and lap at the taste of his wretched lifeblood. But there was a steady weight against their shoulder and it couldn’t have been Matthias because he was half fucking dead. Alekto snapped up to see a halo of light above them. It’s over. Nothing was ever over, but Alekto unwillingly eased up enough that Matthias’ airways could reopen. The little shit didn’t deserve it but once again they were transfixed by Utu’s calm.
Alekto twisted, crawling off of Matthias to shirk free of Utu’s grasp and stand. They licked their lips as if hoping to taste blood but got a hint of last night’s bees knees. “He’ll live.” Alekto exhaled, their gaze heavy and translucent as they bore into Utu’s light. Outbursts, as Tez liked to call them, were not permitted. They were costly. This wasn’t Tez’s mess to clean up, not even Bryn’s either. If Alekto wasn’t in the midst of riding the high of human cortisol they’d have idly wondered what had compelled Utu to intervene – again. Unlike Tez they had no stake in this.
They weren’t Utu’s dog.
Alekto snarled, and spat to the side. Half tempted to deck Utu but there was no fun in striking someone who wouldn’t fight back. Matthias was the exception. The cunt deserved it. Alekto eyed up Utu but the contempt had gone, they wouldn’t fight him, not unless Utu struck first. Alekto held themself to absurd and deeply unique laws and standards. There was a flock of humans circling Matthias like vultures, or Alekto blissfully assumed, but the reality was they’d dropped to their knees and were working air into his lungs. Someone had called an ambulance.
“Death to bastards like him.” Alekto snapped, but the fight had seeped out of them as they rounded up to face him. “Don’t worry sunshine, I won’t kill him.” Or you. Though it didn’t matter if Alekto held Utu’s throat taut, he’d pop right back up on the other side. Alekto seethed, Alekto burned, they glowered at Utu and then brushed past him to slide onto their bike.














