"I'm ruining my own marriage! I'm going to your mother, why are you getting upset?"
"Until yesterday, you wanted Jenny, my mother, now is Lily convenient?"
The strong slap was Philip's answer... and Jason sails with the Argo and the real Sympligades become and open and close to crush him. And while he struggles with the truths of his parents, Philip gets lost with them. He becomes Odysseus and catches up with Circe and they forget on their own journeys. And while Jenny waits for him, she weaves a web of lies to withstand the truth. Circe's talk will not last, one day Odysseus will return! And Jenny weaves a web of lies, which over the years becomes a net of truth to trap her...
But it's not just Jason who goes by the name Sympligades. In another Argo, Elpida also passes them. But there, love and the same blood collide. Elpida loved another and had to marry another. Paul trembled the loves infected with the same blood. At the end of such a fairy tale, nobody lives well and nobody, better. Their own mistake was made by right "must", but that's what their father believed then too! I had to then and I had to now! The right marriage, a brake on the wrong love to stop the evil.
And fate writes and the circles open. And as long as people are afraid of the truth, the lie reaches out to grab them and escape. It becomes a cloud for them to climb, to see from above that the truth does not exist. They move away and the truth grows. After all, what is a myth and what is a fairy tale? How is the red that connects souls in love cut, if instead of a thread, it is blood? How is responsibility measured, and who bears it, if the love between cousins changes form? Does "sins of the parents" discipline only the children or the parents themselves? Who decides what is right is what has righted the wrong?
And what happens to the lie, when it reaches the end of nowhere? Truth;
reviews
There is no review yet.