★★★★★ “Myth turned to rot and iron—relentless, suffocating, and deeply human.” — Editorial Review
★★★★★ “A descent into corruption where victory costs more than blood.” — Editorial Review
HERACLES OF BLOOD & BRONZE
Book II – The Hydra of Lerna
Before the Labours became legend…
there was what followed.
The lion is dead.
The hills have gone quiet.
But the quiet does not last.
Heracles walks south with the weight of it still on him—the kill, the memory, the ache that does not fade. For a brief time, the world leaves him alone.
Then a man comes stumbling out of the road from Lerna—rotting from within, his flesh turning, his breath failing.
“The sickness came out of the water.”
“The heads… they grow back.”
Beyond the hills lies a marsh where nothing is clean.
Water stands black and still.
Animals rot where they fall, untouched.
Men die in their sleep—or worse, they do not die quickly at all.
A village built on reeds and walkways is already breaking apart. Those who remain do not speak of hope. They speak of something beneath the mud. Something that moves without breath… and does not stay in one place.
Heracles does not turn away.
He enters the marsh alone.
What he finds is not a beast to be slain cleanly.
It is rot given form.
A thing that multiplies when wounded.
A creature whose blood poisons the land around it—and whose death does not end what it has begun.
Steel cannot solve it.
Strength alone will fail.
To face it, Heracles must learn something worse than the fight:
Some things do not stop when you cut them.
Some things grow.
And when it is done—when the fire burns and the flesh finally stills—the marsh does not heal.
The water remains.
The rot remains.
And Heracles walks on.








