That was great character development, great suspense, and great pay-off. Wonderful entry, and kudos to you for both historical accuracy and wonderful literary craft.
You introduce us to Agenor immediately, and you waste no time fleshing out his and his families characters. He is a humble warrior that wants to protect his family at all costs, his wife is beside him as strong as ever, and Kiril is both of his parents' driving force: much like in any actual nuclear family. All of the main characters are likeable, strong, and really give the reader the want to care for them. You introduce and describe yours characters in such a way that the reader can clearly see emotions and ambitions behind them, and they cling to those human characteristics throughout the story. Might I also add that most of this connection is done through dialogue, which is always a plus in my book.
Furthermore, the suspense of knowing what is most definitely about to happen is just right. The Trojan horse is going to breach the city, the troys are going to be defeated, and it will be a disaster: but knowing these characters you've just connected with will have to go through it gives the tale a whole new layer. I will also like to add that the decisions that Agenor and the others make are completely human, something rarely seen in very fantastical tales such as these. They want to evacuate the city instead of fight in glorious vain, they want the best for their families instead of themselves: It's a thought pattern that compliments the realism of your characters very nicely. You can also clearly see the resolution the Troys had for protecting their kin, a theme that rings throughout the writing. Last but not least, the ending is a bitter-sweet masterpiece and what was always subconsciously expected by the reader throughout the short story, but is a turn of events that pays-off wonderfully nonetheless. Amazing job.
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU, both for your praise and for knowing exactly the types of feelings and emotions I was trying to evoke with each portion of the story. You have a trained eye for reading, it would seem.
I'm very glad you saw "Ashes of Ilium" the way that you did. You made me feel a lot better about several things that I was worried wouldn't come across. First, I tried very hard to characterize Calandra as strong and fierce to avoid the pitfall of stereotyping (offensively, might I add) the wife as a weak individual in need of protection. Instead I passed that on to Kiril, but hey. He's eleven. It's permissible.
Additionally, I was worried that the knowledge of Troy's famous defeat would take the edge off my own story since people would know then ending and perhaps deign not to read further. I'm glad you thought otherwise; once again, you captured perfectly what I was intending.
Finally, I was concerned that Agenor's decision to fight the Greeks at the end would frustrate some readers, who perhaps would think he would have better served his promise to his wife by staying with his family, but I think he had no choice. Generally speaking, the Trojan refugees were not fighters. Most of them, anyway. They would not have survived an attack from Pyrrhus and his men.
Thank you so much.