Literature
NeOlympus - Chapter 28
There was a gentle rhythm to the shuffle at which the passengers moved through the aerodrome terminal as they boarded the airship. Children with their mothers or fathers, well-dressed business brokers, pilgrims, and various dignitaries were among the crowd. The advent of air travel in the last half-century had brought all walks of life together and compressed them into a metal hull, and that day, it would carry a hero of the old world to this new world's frontier. Most would know him as Theseus, the uniting king of Athens and slayer of the ferocious Minotaur. As a young hero, his pledge at a temple to Poseidon where he vowed to slay the Minotaur saw him blessed by the god, making him a hero. Then, after a successful stint as an Argonaut, he came home as a champion of Hera. Upon his return, Theseus brought the concept of synoikismos—bringing the various communities in a region and giving them a central identity with an administrative center—to Athens. Bringing Attica together under