andantezen:

I had a couple of hours today to start building Knossos Palace for my Minoan story.

It only looks close to the reconstitution pictures because of two amazing creators who have helped me, and I want to thank them with all my heart:

mammut from simszoo (and @nornities for having suggested me this wonderful and friendly forum) for the decorative horns, the horns fence and the wallpaper.

@murfeelee for having converted the Minoan column, key to this building, and for kindly and carefully having taught me how to convert other things too.

I still can’t quite believe I’m seeing Knosssos in Sims 3! This is only one  – and the best known and most imposing – of the 4 facades giving to the palace’s central courtyard. On to build the other 3. Again, thank you so much!!!

bulllordem:

“Hell. Is it, Minos?” She doesn’t see, but instead pictures it. Therefore, a little less blind than him. “The underworld?”

He is predestined to preside over the underworld. He knows, she knows. But when shall he depart lies with the gods.

“The future, my Queen.” He has arrived to this conclusion several visions ago. “A distant one.”

“Not ours, then.”

“Not yours. Not mine. Not our children’s. Not even their children’s. But still mankind’s.”

The Queen sighs, letting go. She must learn, like he has learned, to live on the verge of terror. His visions can strike any time. 

Descendant is the motion forward. A decadence that cannot be avoided. So slow that it might only hurt on others, the King hopes. 

“Come, Minos. Come unburden. Come unload.” Her invitation whispered. The Queen’s thoughts on a closer future, dependent of the immediate present. “It is our moon. Come, my King.” And she leaves the curtains.

bulllordem:

He is blind, too. He sees but doesn’t apprehend. Maybe that’s why vision after vision remains out of focus? 

How can he describe such chaos? He’s seen it before, never before put it into words. He shall try, though. For his Queen. To the guards around them, it will simply sound like an unsung song.

“Tallest, the thinnest of mountains. Stony fingers sprung from the underworld. Bathed by a cold fire.

A landscape of  fallen stars. Caves, stacked up to the sky. On the highest, the lowest, people trapped inside them. The same sourceless, cold fire bathes them, too.” 

And what puzzles him the most, that he can’t even name. The caves seem to be shut from outside by… a tear? It should be the finest of crystals, but can there be a time when crystals abound like that? It’s easier for tears to suffice.

bulllordem:

When was the last moon they lay together? The birth of Princess Ariadne
– in fact, all the pregnancy – has strained the Queen. At least two seasons
have slipped by for her recovery.

His sober visions shouldn’t override the High Priestess’ predictions. The fumes of the cracked earth inspire her words. Hers, a tongue moistened by the nectar of the gods. Lips must remain unkissed, to utter the purest riddles. 

He is not drunk, though he has drank. He only has to blink to be haunted. 

How can the High Priestess not see what he sees? Not see that he sees? It amazes and puzzles the King that she can prophesy – and still be so blind.

bulllordem:

“We ought.” He responds. To the arousal chord that his Queen’s husky tone strikes on him, the King adds, “We must, Pasiphae!”, with a voice that is coarser than normal.  

“But what is it?” Her words like a bird briskly fleeing.

The Queen is the only person in court with whom the King has ever shared his gruesome visions. Just now, wishing he hadn’t. For the sake of preserving their sacred night. From which she might flinch. 

As if his vision could cloud the favorable moon designated by the High Priestess. Could it?

bulllordem:

The serpents as they slither and hiss, and the long cloak the Queen draws over the furs, are noisier than her own barefoot steps.

She knows the serpent has warned him. Still, ceremonial rules that no King be caught by surprise. The least her consort, definitely. So she taps lightly on the curtains that separate his bedchambers from the terrace. 

Under the light of the full moon, the Cretan mountains shine mighty, and in the foreground a King would stand diminished – if all there is to see didn’t belong to him.

Without turning to face his Queen, for terror still clouds his eyes, he nods slightly, acknowledging her presence. Only then does she speak.

“Something you see, Minos?” There is concern in her voice. “That we oughtn’t, tonight?”

bulllordem:

He shifts position not to try to trick his Queen, because she won’t ever be fooled. Not by him.

He shifts position in hoping that, with the sudden movement, there is a chance the terrorizing vision that haunts his eyes will vanish. It has happened before.

He could simply turn his back on the vision. And face the Queen? With terror in his eyes? He can’t do that, knowing the impact it will have on her. Not tonight, with all the important consequences in the next many moons of her life.

So the King simply shifts position, his back still turned to the Queen, and endures the horrific scene laid before his eyes.