Death on Delos

Home > Other > Death on Delos > Page 29
Death on Delos Page 29

by Gary Corby


  The spritsail and its close relative, the lateen rig, were in definite and common use across the Mediterranean by the end of the classical world, and they are both natural evolutions of the square rig. Simply lower the spar of a square rigged ship, twist it round to point fore-and-aft, do a lot of annoying work to reshape the sail, and suddenly you have a primitive but workable rig for tacking. It’s because it’s such a natural evolution that I think it must have come earlier than we think.

  You might be wondering how Diotima managed to still be pregnant at ten months. It’s because Athenian months are lunar. Every month is twenty-nine days. Therefore every classical Greek woman gives birth at ten months.

  First sons were always named for the paternal grandfather. That rule was so universal that historians have used it to trace ancient families across centuries. Girl names were slightly more flexible, though you’d still expect a family name to be repeated over generations.

  Thus we leave our heroes as happy new parents.

  Nico and Diotima have come a long way since their early days as crime fighters, investigators, and secret agents for Athens. I thought for fun I might repeat the jacket copy of their very first adventure, The Pericles Commission. Here it is:

  Nicolaos, the ambitious son of a minor sculptor, walks the mean streets of classical Athens as an agent for the promising young politician Pericles. Murder and mayhem don’t faze Nico; what’s really on his mind is how to get closer (much closer) to Diotima, the intelligent and annoyingly virgin priestess of Artemis, and how to shake off his irritating twelve-year-old brother Socrates.

  How things have changed.

  Pericles is no longer a struggling young politician. He is the leader of the world’s newest empire, and overwhelmingly the most influential man alive. There’s a good reason why they call this the Age of Pericles. Little does anyone know that Pericles will one day hand over that mantle to a rather annoying young fellow named Socrates. Nico has finally achieved his lifelong ambition to shake off his little brother. Socrates is serving his time in the army. He won’t be out for another two years, but then he’ll be back to annoy Nico.

  Nico’s doing well, too. He not only got the girl, but he’s got a family.

  Now Nico and Diotima must face their greatest challenge yet. They’re going home to raise some babies.

  GLOSSARY

  Apollo

  God of the sun and of healing.

  A major god of the Greek

  pantheon.

  Artemis

  A major goddess of the Greek

  pantheon. She is the Huntress.

  Her weapon is the bow. When

  Zeus wants to send a message he

  often assigns the job to Artemis,

  in which role she is something

  like a divine hit girl.

  Delian League

  An early version of NATO,

  and that’s no exaggeration. The

  Delian League was a mutual

  defense alliance of most of the

  city-states of Greece, and by

  implication, the major European

  states. Corinth and Sparta had

  been members during the Persian

  Wars, but dropped out later. That

  left Athens as the most powerful

  member. The Delian League

  morphed into the Athenian

  Empire.

  Delos

  A small island not far from

  Mykonos. It was the birthplace of

  two gods: the twins Apollo and

  Artemis. For the Greeks, Delos

  was a place for worship and the

  greatest reverence. In some sense

  Delos was like the Switzerland

  of the ancient city-states. It was

  neutral turf where nation states

  could meet to do deals. Hence

  the Greek alliance was founded

  during a huge meeting at Delos,

  and thus became known as the

  Delian League.

  Drachma, Tetradrachma, Obol

  A drachma is the standard unit of

  currency, but too large an amount

  for everyday use. A tetradrachma

  is four drachmae, and way too

  large for anyone but merchants.

  Shoppers in the agora use obols.

  Six obols make a drachma.

  Eileithyia

  Goddess of childbirth and

  midwifery. Sorry about the weird

  spelling, but that’s the way it is.

  The ancients had a whole slew

  of extra deities, most of them

  specialists, who we don’t much

  hear about these days. But if you

  were a woman back in classical Greece,

  you would know all about Eileithyia,

  because she’s the one who’s going to keep

  you alive when you give birth.

  Nico’s mother is a midwife

  and therefore an expert on

  entreating Eileithyia. Legend

  has it, incidentally, that this

  goddess came to Greece from

  Hyperborea.

  Hyperborea

  A lond described not only by

  Herodotus, but also by other

  respected and credible men,

  including Hesiod, Europe’s first

  non-fiction author. Hyperborea

  is located beyond the cold north

  wind, often taken to mean

  Scandinavia. Every year the

  people of Hyperborea sent to

  Delos what became known as the

  Hyperborean Gift. The gift was

  encased in a sheaf of wheat. No

  modern person knows what the

  gift actually was. Many people

  assume both Hyperborea and the

  Gift were myths, but Herodotus

  states very clearly that the Gift

  was delivered right up to his own

  day.

  Leto

  A Titan goddess, one of Zeus’s

  many girlfriends. Why Hera

  didn’t divorce Zeus remains a

  mystery. Instead Hera hunted

  Leto, who hid out on Delos,

  where she subsequently gave

  birth to Apollo and Artemis.

  Month / Pregnancy

  Diotima is ten months into her

  pregnancy. There’s a good reason

  for that: the Greeks used lunar

  months! In the classical world

  every month is twenty-nine days.

  That played havoc with the yearly

  calendar, because 29 into 365

  doesn’t go, but more to the point

  for this story a ten-month term

  was the norm.

  Nemesis

  A mere word in modern English,

  in classical Greece she is a

  deity. Nemesis gives to mortals

  whatever they deserve. In the

  original version that could be

  good or bad. In later versions

  it became all bad (presumably

  due to a lack of well-deserving

  people).

  Oikos of the Naxions

  An administration building.

  The foundations of the Oikos

  can be seen today. Oikos is a

  strange word in classical Greek.

  Technically it means household—

  the family home is an oikos—but

  it could also be used in parallel

  meanings. Like many ancient

  Greek words, i
t has found its way

  into modern English. The variant

  spelling eco has given itself to

  the modern word economics.

  Some people have used the word

  oikophobia to mean an irrational

  fear of household appliances (I’m

  not making this up, but I wish I

  were).

  Phoenicia

  A famous ancient land now

  Lebanon. They invented the

  alphabet that the Greeks adopted

  and which became our own.

  They were unbelievably good

  sailors. At the time of this story,

  Phoenicia is a client state of the

  Persian Empire.

  Porinos Naos

  The oldest temple to Apollo

  on Delos. It is built of a type of

  limestone called poros, hence

  the temple name. By the time of

  this story the Porinos Naos has

  become the treasury house of the

  Delian League.

  Stoa of the Naxions

  A stoa is a covered portico. It’s

  a nice, shady place to hang out.

  The Sanctuary at Delos has the

  Stoa of the Naxians. In Nico’s day

  Athens was the main protector

  and supplier to Delos, but a

  hundred years before, the main

  benefactor had been Naxos. The

  Naxians did an outstanding job

  of donating fine buildings to the

  temple area. They also donated

  the lion statues that face the lake.

  Temple of Artemis

  It’s incredibly old. The ruins you

  see today are of the third (maybe)

  Temple of Artemis on this site.

  It was built long after Nico’s

  time. The temple in Nico’s day

  really does have a tomb to the

  Hyperborean women on the left

  as you enter.

  Treasury Houses

  Most temples had a treasury,

  not unlike the treasuries that

  accumulated in medieval

  cathedrals. Delos had so much

  wealth that there were five

  separate treasuries. There are

  surviving inventory lists for some

  of the temples, so we have a

  fair idea of the sort of offerings

  they kept. It mostly amounted

  to finely wrought items of

  precious metals. The treasuries

  were accounted for individually.

  It’s wrong to think of the entire

  temple complex on Delos as

  being one big financial account.

  In addition Delos stored the

  treasury of the Delian League,

  which was a fighting fund with no

  theological implications.

  Trireme

  The warships of the classical

  world. Long, low, sleek,

  incredibly fast, with a battering

  ram built into the prow. In

  modern terminology they would

  be classed as Destroyers.

  Acknowledgments

  Thanks as always to my wife, Helen. Every time I say there wouldn’t be a book without her, and every time it’s true.

  Catriona’s friends like to photograph my dedications to her and post them for maximum embarrassment factor. I’m afraid I’ve added fuel to that fire with this book.

  Megan likewise has put up very well with a father who writes, as she approaches her senior school years. She was six when I started The Pericles Commission. If I am lucky I will talk her into drawing the map for this book.

  Janet Reid is a literary agent who took a chance on a classical Greek crime novel back in 2008, and here we are with book number seven. That success is largely due to her. As super agents go, it’s a tough choice between Janet and Nico.

  My superb editor at Soho Press announced her impending nuptials to Soho’s Director of Marketing while I was writing this book. By the time you read this they will be thoroughly married.

  Congratulations to Juliet and Paul!

 

 

 


‹ Prev