This golden-haired personification of the sun who looked like Harry Styles was making fun of me and since I was holding a bow and arrow, I shot him with it. Instead of dying or bleeding out, he fell in love with a girl who turned herself into a tree. Then I woke up.
i adore calamity!mu qing aus but i always think about calamity!feng xin aus cus i have only seen a few (very amazing mind you) ones,, it's so fun to brainstorm how and why fx became a calamity yk? like it's pretty obvious with mq and his trauma because his backstory was explained a lil bit but feng xin was just like a small dot on a whiteboard. so it's fun to imagine what caused fx calamity arc. was it his anger over xl? was it him realizing that he had wronged mq and his anger for xl? was he forced by jw? was he k!lled, then wandered about and just became a calamity because mq's love and xl's grief for his best friend was holding him back from dying?
and how does tgcf play out with fx as a calamity? how does this change affect mq, does he have the full south for himself? how does the fxmq dynamic work? does fx work with hc to find his true love mu qing xl and mq?
if will solace is a star wars nerd and a son of apollo, the god of light, does this mean we might find this bitch equipped in tartarus with a LIGHTSABER of all things??????
Second painting of a series of four with a Greek mythology theme
In Ancient Greek culture, wolves were closely associated with Apollo. It's unsure where it comes from, maybe the similitude between the Ancient Greek word for "wolf", λύκος (lukos), and for light, λευκός (leukos), or maybe because of his aspect of Master of Animals that echoes his sister's, or something else. This association with a god of light, arts, and overall civilisation is pretty unusual, as in most other European mythologies wolves are associated with either war gods or psychopomps (like Mars in Roman mythology, Odin in Norse mythology, or the Gaulish god Lugus).
Whatever its origin is, that association was pretty strong, with several of Apollo's epithets referencing wolves, unusual wolf attacks on livestock (like in broad daylight, or targeting the one head of the herd and no other animal) being often seen as signs from the god, myths mentioning Apollo sending wolves as signs or punishment to mortals, and herders often praying Apollo to protect them and their livestock from wolves