For those who don't know i am a fan of mythology and also thank You to floaty flowers for giving the idea of genderbend greek myths, You can always check their account, please enjoy this story
Tw : yandere themes, obsession, talk of pain, influcting pain, grafic explinations, devotion
Read at Your own risk
If You liked this ideas please let me know i was thinking of writing for a Male circe and Male Penelope too!
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Medus had long forgotten the warmth of touch.
His island was carved from curses—salt-bitten cliffs and jagged ruins, wrapped in a silence so deep it seemed to stretch into the bones of the earth. Nothing living set foot here without turning to stone. Nothing dared.
The gods had made sure of that.
He hated them for it—hated their cruelty, their false mercy, their endless games played from gilded thrones. He hated the messengers they sent even more—spineless little creatures who flinched beneath his gaze, dropping letters at the edge of the ruins before fleeing back to the skies.
They always ran.
Until you.
—
The first time you arrived, Medus tried to kill you.
You had landed lightly on the sun-bleached stones, wings flickering at your temples—half-folded in a way that shielded your eyes without him needing to warn you.
Clever little thing.
He had risen from the shadows, serpents writhing around his head, venom pooling on his tongue—already whispering the curse that would crack your fragile body into marble.
Then you laughed.
It was a low, lilting sound—like water trickling through ancient cracks.
“You always try to kill the ones who bring you good news?”
His breath caught, the curse stalling on his lips.
No one ever laughed at him.
No one ever dared.
—
He let you leave that day, half-convinced you would never come back.
But you did—again and again, always bringing small scrolls wrapped in fine thread. Letters from gods who still deigned to remember him. News of the world he had been cast out from.
You never looked him in the eye—always tilting your head just so, letting your wings flick down to hide the sharp glint of your gaze.
He hated that.
Hated the way you always kept that delicate barrier between you—just enough to protect yourself, never quite enough to be considered fear.
He wanted to see your eyes.
He wanted to see if they would widen in terror when they met his.
—
At first, he left offerings out of spite.
Small things—a bowl of honey, a few olives placed at the edge of the ruins. It was meant as mockery, a bitter echo of the old rites he no longer believed in.
But when you found them, you only smirked—running a feather-light finger along the rim of the bowl, tilting your head in that lazy, knowing way.
“You’re not as heartless as they say,” you murmured.
He crushed the next offering beneath his heel.
—
Medus hated the way you moved—always circling just beyond reach, light-footed and flickering.
You played with him.
Teasing, grinning, always one step ahead—like a little golden snake winding between his ribs.
He should have turned you to stone the moment you set foot on his island.
Instead, he began to wait for you.
He would watch the sky for the glint of wings, breath catching in his throat when he saw you flitting low over the cliffs—always arriving at dusk, when the light bled gold over the rocks.
He hated how the silence of the island felt heavier when you left.
He hated the way his fingers would itch to touch you—to feel the soft brush of feathers against his cursed skin.
—
The first time he prayed, he didn’t even realize what he was doing.
He caught himself whispering your name into the dark—soft, trembling, a plea buried beneath layers of venom and spite.
He offered figs the next day.
Then wine.
Then amber beads strung onto a thin chain.
You found them without fail—always tracing your fingers over the little offerings, never quite smiling.
“Careful,” you had murmured once, wings flicking in the dim light. “A god might mistake this for devotion.”
He clenched his fists so tightly his nails bit into his palms.
—
The worst part was how quickly you softened him.
You filled the silence without ever really speaking—sprawling on sun-warmed stones, humming half-forgotten hymns beneath your breath. You told him stories of the outside world, of gods bickering on Olympus and mortals spinning their little lives beneath the stars.
He pretended not to listen.
But he always did.
—
One evening, he found you napping beneath the crumbling pillars of the temple.
Your wings had folded low over your face—shrouding your eyes even in sleep. The soft rise and fall of your breath stirred the dust around you, casting faint golden motes into the air.
Medus crouched beside you without thinking—drawn to the warmth of your body, the faint scent of rain and sunlight clinging to your skin.
He reached out—fingers hovering inches from the curve of your temple, the fine feathers brushing against his knuckles.
He could have killed you then.
He should have.
Instead, he curled one feather between his fingers—tucking it carefully into the folds of his robe like a sacred relic.
He sat beside you until the sun dipped below the cliffs, letting the ache beneath his ribs hollow him out.
—
After that, he began to crave your presence.
He left offerings without thinking—pomegranates split open on flat stones, delicate chains strung with amber, bowls of honey tucked into shaded crevices.
He stopped praying.
He started pleading.
He dreamed of curling his fingers around your delicate throat—of pressing his lips to the curve of your wing where it met your brow.
He dreamed of breaking you.
He dreamed of keeping you.
—
“You’re a cruel little thing,” he rasped one evening, watching you toy with a handful of amber beads he had left for you.
Your wings flicked, eyes hidden behind soft feathers.
“And you’re lonely.”
His breath caught, venom burning on the back of his tongue.
He hated how easily you unraveled him—how you cut through centuries of bitterness like they were nothing at all.
He wondered what your eyes looked like.
He wondered if you would smile like that if you knew how badly he wanted to see them—if you knew how often he imagined pinning you beneath him, forcing your wings apart to drink in the sight of them as the curse carved you into stone.
He wondered if you would fight.
He hoped you would.
—
One day, he would break you.
He would strip the wings from your temples and press them into amber—his little golden creature, preserved forever.
Until then, he would wait.
He would leave offerings at dusk, whispering your name into the dark.
And the gods themselves would tremble if you ever flew too far from his reach.














