Mithraditism May 2026

So he began. The first week brought chills and cramps. The second week, only a mild headache. By the end of the first moon, he felt nothing at all. Each month, the healer increased the dose—always just shy of deadly.

One evening, an assassin’s dagger, laced with scorpion venom, barely missed Kael’s heart. The healer who saved him whispered, “You cannot avoid every threat. But you can outgrow them.”

Years passed. Kael grew strong and feared no cup of wine, no offered bread. One night, a rival lord finally slipped a lethal dose of scorpion venom into Kael’s goblet. Kael drank it dry, smiled, and asked for more. mithraditism

Kael lifted his sleeve to reveal the small scars on his arm—marks of a hundred tiny stings from the healer’s practice scorpions. “I let the poison teach me,” he said. “What destroys you in haste, you can befriend in patience.”

“I want you to teach your blood not to fear what would kill another.” So he began

The rival fell to his knees. “How?”

Kael hesitated. “You want me to poison myself?” By the end of the first moon, he felt nothing at all

The healer brought out a tiny glass vial. Inside was a single drop of scorpion venom, diluted in goat’s milk. “Drink this each morning,” she said. “At first, you will feel ill. But over many moons, your body will learn to turn the venom into nothing more than a bitter spice.”