When first she heard Ophellios was lost, she wept, and did not need to fake it. Insofar as she had dared hope for a future beyond the next day, she had hoped she might be allowed to return to Pylos and - fade into the background, hopefully, hopefully, be one of the king's many toys.
And then he died, and she knew she would be given to another warrior if she was lucky - not another king, the used-up girl, and not even a man she understood as she now understands Ophellios better than he himself does.
Then she heard what he had ordered for her, and she cried again.
She had just begun to believe she might be - well, the closest possible thing to free. Aetos had just ignored her, and she appreciated him for it.
Now he's back, they say.
...She's not so sure.
She first noticed it the very first night, in the healer's tent, when she traced his skin as he murmured and shifted - and didn't find the scar that she massaged oil into for weeks, didn't find the mark from his first boar-hunt as a boy, didn't recognise the matted mess of his hair.
Her task is the same.
She doesn't really think of those terrifying and grief-stricken and wonderful few weeks, when she was bereft and free.
Without a second's hesitation she holds him, soothes him, strokes his hair and whispers to him.