Fabula
S9E25 · The Time Monster Part 5

Hippias challenges Dalios to summon Kronos

Hippias seizes the public forum of Atlantis Plaza to accuse King Dalios of failing his people by ignoring the sacred duty to invoke divine intervention. His indictment blurs the line between religious petition and political rebellion, forcing Dalios to confront both the people's suffering and the perilous legacy of trusting in the god Kronos. The confrontation exposes the ideological rift between tradition-bound councilors and a ruler trying to balance skepticism with pragmatism amid gathering crises.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

The scene opens with a grand gathering in the Atlantis plaza, where King Dalios presides over a council. The atmosphere is set with trumpeters blowing horns, and the people are assembled to hear an important announcement.

['raised dais', 'open space', 'palace']

Hippias requests permission to speak plainly to the King, and Dalios encourages him to do so, setting up a confrontation about the use of divine power.

calm to tension

Hippias presses his point, suggesting that the people love Dalios but their love won't fill their bellies during winter, implying a need for divine intervention to solve their problems.

tension to urgency

Dalios expresses skepticism about Hippias's requests, and Hippias explicitly asks for the blessings of the divine power, Kronos, to be returned to the land.

urgency to defiance

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

6

Annoyed irritation simmering beneath forced joviality, tempered by the gravity of being publicly challenged

Dalios remains seated on his throne, his posture rigid and his tone measured yet dismissive, as he deflects Hippias’s accusations with performance-deflecting banter, revealing a ruler determined to suppress dissent through rhetorical control while aware of his vulnerable position.

Goals in this moment
  • To maintain the appearance of dignified authority despite growing public discontent
  • To avoid conceding to demands that would invite divine or foreign influence into Atlantean affairs
Active beliefs
  • That invoking Kronos would be a dangerous gamble with irreversible consequences
  • That personal popularity cannot substitute for competent governance
Character traits
poised deflective sarcastic cautiously authoritative
Follow Dalios's journey

Zealous urgency underpinned by the conviction of righteous purpose, masking tactical calculation

Hippias strides to the forefront of the assembled council, his voice rising above murmurs to directly challenge the seated King Dalios, positioning himself as the moral conscience of the people and advocate for divine intervention despite not occupying formal office.

Goals in this moment
  • To compel Dalios to acknowledge divine intervention as a political necessity
  • To rally the council and populace behind invoking Kronos and Poseidon
Active beliefs
  • That divine wrath explains the kingdom's suffering and only divine action can restore prosperity
  • That traditional religious governance supersedes secular skepticism in times of crisis
Character traits
eloquent dogmatic strategic passionate rhetoric
Follow Hippias (High …'s journey
Supporting 3

Solemn and authoritative, projecting calm that belies concern for maintaining order amid crisis

Critos attempts to calm the assembly and introduce the arriving priest, embodying the institutional procedure of governance under siege, where adherence to protocol masks the underlying turmoil and the erosion of the king’s authority.

Goals in this moment
  • To restore decorum and control the escalation of public dissent
  • To formally acknowledge the arriving priest of Poseidon and shift focus toward traditional religious channels
Active beliefs
  • That adherence to ritual and hierarchy prevents chaos in times of crisis
  • That neutral institutional procedure can preserve stability regardless of contentious political views
Character traits
solemn procedural calming institutional
Follow Crito's journey
Miseus
secondary

Fervent and unquestioning, reflecting absolute faith in divine solutions to temporal problems

Miseus enthusiastically voices support for Hippias’s call to invoke Kronos, his contributions amplifying the crescendo of religious fervor, reinforcing the ideological alignment with the traditionalist faction and the pressure on Dalios to conform.

Goals in this moment
  • To reinforce Hippias's position and amplify demands for divine intervention
  • To publicly align with the religious majority and undermine Dalios's skepticism
Active beliefs
  • That Poseidon and Kronos are active authorities capable of intervening in earthly affairs
  • That public endorsement of ritual piety can shift political consensus
Character traits
zealous supportive vocal ally publicly committed
Follow Miseus's journey
Nubian Slave
secondary

Passive compliance shaped by coercive structure, with no visible dissent under threat of punishment

Nubian slaves labor under the weight of the royal litter carrying its occupant toward the throne, their anonymity and subjugation highlighting the institutional erasure of laboring bodies whose toil is essential yet unrecognized in the theater of power.

Goals in this moment
  • To transport the litter according to command without incident
  • To remain unnoticed while fulfilling a necessary yet devalued role
Active beliefs
  • That obedience ensures personal survival within an oppressive social order
  • That their labor is divinely or ritually sanctioned as part of the natural hierarchy
Character traits
nondescript obedient invisible laborers ritually instrumental
Follow Nubian Slave's journey
Atlan

The unnamed Priest of Poseidon arrives and thumps his staff, signaling institutional authority as Critos formally acknowledges his presence, grounding …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
Ceremonial Brass Horns of Atlantis Plaza

The ceremonial brass horns are blown in unison by two trumpeters, their resonant tones piercing the plaza air and signaling the formal commencement of the assembly. Their ritual call punctuates the silence before debate begins, establishing a tone of gravitas and marking the transition from casual gathering to orchestrated political theater.

Before: Resting on the shoulders of two standing trumpeters …
After: Silent again after brief use, returned to holders, …
Before: Resting on the shoulders of two standing trumpeters near the center of the dais, mute and poised
After: Silent again after brief use, returned to holders, but their sound lingers as residual authority in the air
Royal Peladon Throne

The Royal Peladon Throne stands empty before Dalios arrives, then is occupied by him during the event as the central symbol of temporal authority. Its obsidian and gold presence looms over the assembly, anchoring the king’s legitimacy visually even as Hippias’s words erode its moral authority.

Before: Unoccupied, set upon the raised dais, awaiting the …
After: Occupied but contested, with King Dalios seated rigidly, …
Before: Unoccupied, set upon the raised dais, awaiting the king’s formal appearance
After: Occupied but contested, with King Dalios seated rigidly, its cushioned surface intact but its symbolic weight challenged
Royal Procession Litter

The royal litter is used to transport a high-status figure into the plaza before the event, gliding between palace and dais borne by slaves. It serves as a mobile throne and visual symbol of the monarchy’s presence and dignity, though Hippias later seizes upon it symbolically to challenge Dalios’s authority and accessibility.

Before: Gilded and draped, resting at the palace entrance, …
After: Returned to bearers’ custody after deposition, physically intact …
Before: Gilded and draped, resting at the palace entrance, ready for ceremonial conveyance into the plaza
After: Returned to bearers’ custody after deposition, physically intact but momentarily politically weaponized

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Atlantis Plaza

The Royal Dais of Atlantis Plaza is the elevated platform at the plaza’s heart, where Dalios sits enthroned during the unfolding accusation. Its coralstone and tiers of benches create a visual hierarchy of power, while the surrounding concentric rings of ironwood force listeners into submission to the king’s gaze and voice.

Atmosphere Oppressively formal and still, crackling with unspoken rebellion beneath the surface of tradition
Function Throne and judgment seat, embodying the king’s authority and the site where ritual and power …
Symbolism Symbolizes both divine-right imagery and fragile human authority—elevated, but vulnerable to ideological wind
Access Restricted to the monarch and those invited to stand near the throne; most councilors sit …
Coralstone steps ascend in three broad tiers to a woven throne of gold and pearl Storm lanterns flicker along concentric bench edges, their light rippling as murmurs rise

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

2
King’s Council of Atlantis

The King’s Council appears in proxy through its vocal members like Hippias and Critos, who embody institutional procedure while publicly fracturing under crisis. Though not formally convened, the presence of its ethos—advice, legitimacy, debate—engulfs the plaza as Hippias leverages 'council norms' to justify moral indictment.

Representation Through individual councilors exercising selective ideological representation of the body's norms and expectations
Power Dynamics Fragmented between loyalists, reformers, and opportunists, with influence tilting toward those who can frame appeals …
Impact The event exposes growing factionalism within the council, where traditional symbols and procedures are weaponized …
Internal Dynamics Visible disagreement between Hippias’s theocratic push and Critos’s procedural caution reveals a council internally divided …
To maintain the perception of institutional coherence even amid internal fracture To preserve Atlantis’s cultural and religious identity as a unifying force Control of speech and symbolic acts within formal settings (e.g., council speech acts) Leveraging popular sentiment and religious authority as proxies for institutional legitimacy
Priesthood of Poseidon

The Priesthood of Poseidon manifests directly through the arriving priest, whose staff and presence transform the debate from political critique to religious obligation. The priest’s arrival and anticipated rites reassert spiritual primacy, demanding that temporal rulers answer to cosmic authority.

Representation Through the physical presence and symbolic authority of the priest of Poseidon, invoked without direct …
Power Dynamics Asserting religious precedence over secular leadership, with potential to subordinate Dalios’s authority to ritual demands
Impact By inserting themselves into the public forum, the priesthood shifts the crisis from political failure …
Internal Dynamics While united in demanding divine acknowledgment, internal factions likely exist between those favoring Kronos invocation …
To assert the primacy of Poseidon’s will in Atlantean governance and resource allocation To re-establish temple-mediated access to divine power as the only viable path to prosperity Public ritual acts (staff thumping, formal acknowledgment) that encode religious authority into governance Linking material crises (famine, drought) to spiritual flaws, thereby conditioning solutions on religious conformity

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2

"Hippias's demand for invoking Kronos as divine power in the council room (Act 1) directly parallels Dalios's later warning about Kronos being a curse, not a blessing (Act 1). Both moments frame Kronos as a contested symbol of salvation vs. destruction, reflecting Atlantis's ideological divide."

Dalios concedes after witnessing Master’s claim
S9E25 · The Time Monster Part 5

"Hippias's demand for invoking Kronos as divine power in the council room (Act 1) directly parallels Dalios's later warning about Kronos being a curse, not a blessing (Act 1). Both moments frame Kronos as a contested symbol of salvation vs. destruction, reflecting Atlantis's ideological divide."

Master declares divine authority in Atlantis
S9E25 · The Time Monster Part 5

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"HIPPIAS: Aye, Dalios, I would!"
"DALIOS: Order the rain to fall?"