Long War 04 - The Great King
Page 7
I thought about Polymarchos, and I thought far too much about the young slave I’d killed with my first cut on the beach of Africa. He hadn’t deserved to die. He had mostly been in the wrong place at the wrong time.
He was the same age as my son by Briseis. I had seen the boy, carried by a nurse, in Thrace, when I killed the man I had assumed to be his father.
I had a son.
The bow ploughed the waves, and I thought about what Heraklitus the philosopher said about dipping our toes in the river. And we rushed on.
The next day was very long. We were already low on water, and all the salted pork was gone, most of the dates, all the bread.
My veterans had done all this before.
The new men, the former slaves – they were plainly terrified. I began to worry that they would mutiny again – not because they had any real chance of success, but because such behaviours can become a habit.
But an hour before dawn, I could smell land. I had the most exact scent of a charcoal fire, and the very first grey light of pre-dawn showed me the coast. I ran along it for an hour as the sun rose, and I became increasingly sure that it was Zacynthus. I’d run down that coast only three weeks before. I was almost sure, and the oarsmen were openly begging us to land, when I saw the temple of Poseidon at Hyrmine gleaming on the opposite headland. Brasidas confirmed it, and the newer oarsmen looked as if they’d been granted a new lease on life.
Sekla slapped my back. ‘A brilliant piece of navigation.’ He grinned.
I shrugged. ‘Vasileos would have put the bow into the mouth of the Alpheos,’ I said.
Megakles just smiled, as Laconic in his fisherman’s way as Brasidas. But his smile was good praise. I was pleased. And before the men were too hungry, we landed on an open beach, bought sheep, sacrificed Melitan wine to Poseidon and a good cup too, and sacrificed the animals. We had a feast on the beach, and the new oarsmen kissed the sand, and the older oarsmen teased them.
But the shepherds were men of Elis, and they confirmed that the games started in four days.
We were still full of mutton while we pulled around the point and into the very narrow estuary of the Alpheos. There were a dozen merchantmen and almost forty triremes pulled up on the narrow pebble beach. Olympia nestles amidst mighty mountains, and the mountains seem to reach right down to the sea, as does Kitharon at home, and the beaches are steep and narrow and difficult.
Despite which, my heart fairly leaped with joy to see Cimon’s Ajax and Paramanos’ Black Raven and Harpagos’s Storm Cutter and all the other ships we’d lost in the storm.
I waited for the men of Elis to choose me a landing place, and I enjoyed seeing the alterations they’d made to the beach. The hand of man can alter almost anything. That year was the seventy-fifth Olympiad, and the people of Elis had had three hundred years to make the landing area as comfortable as possible. Hellenes made the pilgrimage from Ionia and from Italia and Magna Greca and Sicily and as far as Massalia in the west and Ephesus and Sardis in the east, from Thrace and from Chacedon and from everywhere in Boeotia and Attica and the Peloponnesus. And for a moment, as I looked over the shipping and the tents and booths, I thought of my son – my son, running his stades and throwing his javelins in far-off Sardis.
And then my grand thoughts were ruined by the pair of Elisian factors demanding that I pay their outrageous landing fees. There may be an Olympic truce on war and strife, but there is none on greed, as I can attest. And it is fifty stades up-country into the mountains to Olympia, and I had thought to rent a horse, but I had to count my drachma – the prices were exorbitant, and I was feeding two hundred men.
My mother was sometimes a harridan, a harpy, an old drunkard. But she had the soul of an aristocrat, and she did teach me one valuable aristocratic lesson – there is a time to pinch pennies, and a time to let the gold flow through your fingers. A man is lucky if he attends the Olympics once in his life. I don’t mean Spartans, or men of Argos – with a little effort, they can make the trip every year. But for a Boeotian, it is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity – at any rate, I was on the beach, and I wasn’t going to be dissuaded.
On the other hand – I had two hundred men trained to a high pitch, and I saw no reason not to use that training, so we stripped the ship, made packs, and marched up-country carrying our own shelter and all of our amphorae of wine. I spent my Illyrian loot freely, but we camped rather than renting flea-ridden lodgings. When we arrived on the plain of Olympia below the temple complex, a pair of priests emerged from the town and led us to a site where we could camp. I asked after Cimon and the priest smiled – he was a pleasant fellow – and nodded.
‘Lord Cimon is present. The Athenians are on the other side of the treasuries. And your fellow Boeotians are just there, by the stream.’ He pointed at the nearly dry course of the river.
‘Thebans?’ I asked.
He nodded. ‘Yes.’
I didn’t quite spit. ‘Respected sir, I am a man of Plataea, and I would walk a dozen stades to avoid a man of Thebes.’
He laughed. ‘It is a wonder that the Greeks have any common ground at all,’ he said. ‘Come – any man who brings two hundred followers to the games gets my attention. Are you the man who was at Marathon?’
I nodded.
He smiled. ‘I thought so. I’ll send a slave to tell Lord Cimon you are here.’
We’d come to the edge of the valley.
I had seldom seen so many people gathered in one place in all my life. I saw Cyrenes and Italiotes and Athenians and Messenians and Corinthians – and Spartans. More Spartans than you could shake a spear at. And with them, their women – tall, mostly blond, and all with the muscled arms and legs that mark Spartan women everywhere you meet them.
Women were not allowed to compete at Olympia during the main festival. They had their own festival later in the season, but in the Olympic year, this was the men’s event. Nowadays, there is talk of forbidding women from watching, but in those days, women came right into the sanctuaries and cheered – not just maidens and whores, either, but married women. I think this is because in Sparta, men and women were more used to each other’s nudity in games, and girls thought it no great matter to see a naked man. Athens is altogether more prudish. The men of Elis are of old allies of the Spartans and members of the Peloponnesian League, and they have many of their ways. At any rate, in that year, there were almost as many women as men in the tents, under shelters, or in the town.
Every house in the town had a porch built for ten or twelve beds. And sometimes rooms inside as well, and they would charge three or four drachma a day – for two wooden boards and some old straw, they charged a day’s pay for an Athenian hoplite or an elite rower. And the more enterprising men of Elis and the surrounding region would put up big tents and offer space in them at similar rates, or they would build temporary buildings, with each peg and each beam marked with a number so that they could be taken down and rebuilt, like the wooden theatre of Dionysus in Athens. There was one great inn where a room cost twenty drachmas a night and only great men like Aristides were welcome.
All of my recent ex-slaves were earning their keep by hauling the great amphora of Chian wine, and when we had our campsite, my two hundred ran up our mainsail and two boat sails and four more military tents, and the smallest tent was quickly fitted with stumps and larger stones for men to sit on, and we began serving wine before we had our own quarters up, with a pair of marines on guard – not in armour, as that would have been impious – and with Alexandros and Giannis, who had a flair for such things, managing the pouring.
I oversaw the tents myself – and had to pay two hard silver coins for wood to make pegs, as we’d left all of ours on the ship, like fools. It was hot work, despite the altitude, and I was pleased to see that Polymarchos and his young athlete pitched in, working themselves hard, pounding pegs, and holding poles until the work was done.
I took the trainer by the shoulder. ‘Come and have a cup of good wine with me,’ I said
.
He smiled. ‘Later, Arimnestos of Plataea. For now I must take this young man to the temple of Zeus, so that he is officially entered for his races and events, or he will burst.’ He shrugged. ‘If they ask us about the storm – would you testify to the judges?’
I nodded.
I took the young man’s hand. ‘You have done very well with us,’ I said. ‘We measure a man by work, and not by good looks.’ In truth, he was a beautiful young man, and not all my oarsmen – or marines – were immune to his looks. I grinned at him. ‘You’ve hauled ropes, raised tents – you have been a pleasure to have aboard. So please consider camping with us, and you’ll have two hundred fans to cheer you when you run.’
Polymarchos nodded. ‘That’s no small offer – men from Italy never have anyone to cheer them.’
The young man bowed. ‘I am honoured.’
And they were off to the temple. I held it in his favour that he helped us with the camp before he went to face the wrath of the judges.
I went with Brasidas to get a cup of wine, and we were shocked to find that our canvas taverna had a line threading out of the door and all the way to the edge of the camp, with men pushing and shoving.
For complex reasons – reasons that this story will touch on, if you stay – it was one of the most crowded Olympiads in anyone’s memory, and wine was already in short supply, three days before the first event was due to be run, and a day before the priests would burn the preliminary offerings. We had sixty big-bellied amphorae, and another six of oil, and we were charging what I considered a fair price that would gain us a large profit, and here were a thousand men, give or take, waiting in line for a cup of wine, with men joining the line so fast that in the time I take to tell this, another fifteen had joined the line behind Brasidas.
Several places behind me was a handsome young boy with dark skin and slightly slanted eyes. Those eyes were not common on the Inner Sea, and I knew him immediately. I smiled. ‘Ganymede come to life,’ I called out. Other men turned and looked, and the boy flushed. He was Cimon’s hypaspist – a freeman, now, but originally purchased as a slave somewhere in the Chersonnese.
He bowed. ‘Lord Arimnestos,’ he said.
I shrugged. ‘You are not a pais any more, and you needn’t call any man lord,’ I said. ‘How is your master? Is all well?’
‘He will be the better for knowing that you rode the storm and lived,’ he said. ‘I should go and tell him, but he was most insistent on a cup of wine. There is none to be had except a very bad local wine.’ He looked almost tragically concerned, as young men are when they have been sent on errands.
I laughed. ‘Please tell Cimon that I will make sure he has wine, if only he’ll come and drink with me. Go – I’ll wait.’
The boy bowed and ran off.
I turned to Brasidas. ‘You don’t think power has gone to Alexandros’ head and he’ll refuse us more than one cup?’
Brasidas smiled. But his smile was the only answer I got.
We waited as long as it takes a man to deliver the whole of his accusation in a law court – the sun sank appreciably behind the shoulder of the mountain – before we made it to the front of the line.
One of Ka’s archers – the wounded man, Ata – was sitting cross-legged at a low table. He nodded without looking at us. ‘A drachma a cup – lordy. It’s the trierarch!’ He shot to his feet as he looked up and realised he was addressing me.
Brasidas smiled.
I leaned over the low table. ‘We’re charging a drachma a cup?’
Alexandros grinned. ‘Yes, sir!’ His smile faltered. ‘We’re making a fortune, sir.’
I shook my head. ‘We’re not so greedy, gentlemen. Cut the price in half. Save six amphorae for our own use.’
Men behind me in the line cheered.
‘Or double the price, and help fund the war against the Medes,’ said a voice by my right ear, and there was Cimon. ‘I’m a rich man and a eupatrid, and despite that, I considered leaving the temple precincts to run down the coast and buy any wine I could. Even if such behaviour is undignified.’ He smiled at my pais, Hector. ‘Handsome boy. Slave? I remember seeing him on the beach with you.’
I shook my head. ‘Free. The son of a friend. A citizen of Syracusa.’
Cimon inclined his head. ‘Forgive my use of the term pais, young man.’
My hypaspist, Hector, had been silent since the death of his father, and life on board ship – where he was mostly seasick and miserable – had left him literally unable to speak, but Olympus was recalling the boy to life and he flushed and bowed. ‘My lord,’ he said.
I put a cup of wine in Cimon’s hand – he’d jumped the line with the natural greed of a great lord – and handed another to Brasidas and another to Cimon’s hypaspist and yet another to my own, serving them all myself, like a good host. My mother had forced a few good manners on me.
‘If Alexandros was selling wine at a drachma a cup, he has discovered a way of life more remunerative than piracy,’ I admitted as we walked back into the magnificent red-gold light of the setting sun.
Cimon laughed – very much his father’s, Miltiades’, laugh. ‘As honest pirates, we know that there is no better life,’ he said. ‘My visit to the Olympic games is being paid for by your Illyrian kinglet.’
‘Is Paramanos here? Moire?’ I looked at the line. Paramanos was a Cyrene – now an Athenian citizen – and Moire was my own captain and probably needed to be made a citizen of Plataea.
Cimon nodded. ‘They’re camped with me. The prices are exorbitant! And your friend Harpagos has a young cousin competing in pankration. And Aeschylus’s young sprig . . .’
I shook my head. We had had young Aristides with us in our brief foray into Illyria, and there wasn’t a man among us who hadn’t found him tiresome. But it was like belonging to a city or being part of a village – I felt at home, even on the plain beneath the shadow of mighty Olympus.
Giannis, my young friend from Massalia, was transported. In addition to helping Alexandros make a fortune, he was seeing all the great men of Greece, and he looked as if he was atop Mount Olympus, with the gods, not at the base, drinking wine.
Cimon drank his wine. I could tell he wanted to say something and all this small talk was merely his way – the Greek way – of working around to the main topic. Brasidas shot me a look, which I interpreted as his willingness to walk off and leave us to ourselves, but I just shrugged at him.
‘What are your plans from here?’ Cimon asked with that elaborate casualness that marks a man who has a favour to ask.
‘I’m for Plataea,’ I said. ‘But whether I go via Corinth or by way of Athens is dependent on many things.’
He nodded and looked away. His eyes followed a pair of eagles soaring high above us, well up the shoulder of the mountain. There is no better omen.
‘Those eagles say that you should ask your question,’ I said, in as light a voice as I could manage.
He bit his lip. ‘Themistocles is here,’ he said.
I nodded, the way men nod when they have no idea what other men are on about. ‘I remember him well,’ I said.
‘You have been gone a long time. Themistocles has summoned – has requested – that all the great men of Greece attend these games – to talk about the Great King.’
I laughed. ‘And I’m not invited? You could have told me straight out – I’ve outgrown the need to be the great man, Cimon. Your father always did it better than I ever will.’
But his face didn’t change. ‘No – I’m sure Themistocles will want you.’ His eyes were evasive. ‘Arimnestos – you are not an Athenian. And yet you are one of us – you led the way at Marathon.’
‘Spit it out!’ I said.
‘Themistocles is working on a sentence of exile for Aristides,’ he said. ‘Aristides was ever your friend.’
I made the gesture that Boeotian peasants – and bronzesmiths – use to avert witchcraft. ‘Aristides was ever my friend – but not yours or your father�
�s by any means.’ I tried to make my tone light. ‘Cimon – we’re at the Olympics. Could we suspend Athenian politics a while?’
Cimon turned and met my eyes. ‘I held my peace all the way up the Adriatic and on a dozen beaches,’ he said. ‘I hadn’t expected to find myself in the same camp as Themistocles while he bayed for Aristides’ blood.’
I remember that I shook my head in disgust. Athenians are fine men – brave, noble, inclined to high ethics and beautiful rhetoric. But most of them would sell their mothers into the degradation of slavery in order to achieve political power.
‘Cimon – Aristides hounded your father in the courts. The only thing the two of them did together was to win Marathon. That, and to fight the Alcmaeonidae. Eh?’ I spread my hands.
He didn’t laugh. ‘Aristides is one of us,’ he said. ‘A gentleman. Themistocles is dead set to overturn the democracy and give power to the lowest orders. We will end with nothing – mark my words.’
I bit my lip. Really – viewed from outside, from Plataea – they’d be comic, these Athenian politicians, with their self-centred political greed dressed up as righteous political ethics – they’d be comic, I say, except that little Plataea needs its alliance with Athens, and when Athens catches cold, Plataea coughs.
And they were all my friends – Themistocles a little less than Cimon or Aristides, but he and I shared Marathon. And the defeat of the Alcmaeonidae.
Thinking of those events – six long years ago – put a niggling suspicion in my head. ‘Aristides is the head of your party?’ I asked.
Cimon nodded silently.
‘Is your party the aristocratic party?’ I asked.
Cimon paused. ‘Yes,’ he said.
‘Does your party include Cleitus? And the Alcmaeonidae?’ I asked.
Cimon shrugged again. ‘Yes,’ he admitted. ‘Listen! Everything has changed!’
I surprised him, because I stepped forward through his protests and gave him a hug. ‘Cimon – I have always seen you as the brother of my youth. I will always be at your side in any adventure – and the same goes for Aristides. My sword and my purse are at your command.’ I grinned, and he grinned back.