‘Oleg,’ Reid said. ‘No more.’
‘Why not?’ the Russian mumbled. ‘Truth, isn’ it? Let’s go in business as prophets.’
‘No more,’ Reid repeated. ‘I’ve told you where I am from. Heed me.’
Oleg bit his lip. Reid turned to Diores. Above the unease that crawled inside him and made his skin prickle, the American donned an apologetic grin. ‘I should have warned you, Captain,’ he said. ‘My comrade’s given to tall tales. And of course what really happened would confuse anybody.’
‘I think we’d better hold off on this kind of talk,’ Diores suggested. ‘Till we’re in the palace in Athens. Right?’
CHAPTER EIGHT
The atmosphere did not turn unfriendly. The sailors obviously dismissed the incomprehensible remarks about time travel, setting that down to a misunderstanding quite natural when the speaker was from parts as remote as Oleg became careful to put his Russia and Byzantine Empire. It helped that, far from being accursed, this passage enjoyed unusually fair winds. Reid wasn’t sure how much was believed of what the Novgorodian related – and the Hun, after he came out of his shell; but everybody liked a good yarn. For their part, the crew were glad of fresh ears for their own stories: trading voyages where the Minoan navy kept watch, plundering and slave raiding elsewhere; hunting on the mainland, deer, bear, pig, the aurochs and lion that still roamed Europe; clashes with wild mountaineers or with other Achaean statelets; brawls, binges, lickerish recollections of harbortown hetaerae and temples in Asia where a maiden must take the first man who would have her before she could marry; tales, solemnly sworn to, of gods and ghosts and monsters….
Reid avoided saying much about his milieu and concentrated on learning about this. The Achaeans were a race of husbandmen, he was told. The very kings plowed their own fields and did their own carpentry. The poorest yeoman had his jealously guarded rights. Among the turbulent nobles (those men wealthy enough to own the full panoply of bronze war-gear that made a common soldier easy meat for them) the king (the sachem, Reid thought) was no more than primus inter pares. Women did not have the complete equality of their Keftiu sisters, which Diores scoffed at as hen-predominance; but neither did they suffer the purdah of Classical Greece; a matron was honored in her household.
Only for a few generations, and thus far only in a few of their countries, had the Achaeans taken to the sea in any numbers. Diores was one of the rare skippers among them who would boldly strike straight across a days-wide stretch of open water, which the Keftiu routinely did. But his folk were superb stockbreeders and charioteers; not a man of them but wasn’t a fanatical expert on horseflesh, and their note-comparing and arguing with Uldin rattled on for hours at a time.
They stood unshakable by their families, their chieftains, and their pledged word. A man was expected to be as hospitable and open-handed as his means allowed. He kept himself clean, well groomed, and in trim; he knew the lore and laws; he appreciated quality in an artisan, a dancer, a bard; he looked misfortune and death squarely in the eyes.
Against this, Reid could place a pride that might at any instant bring on a fit of the sulks or of murderousness; a bloodthirsty delight in battle; an absolute lack of feeling for anyone considered inferior – and if you were not a freeborn Achaean or a pretty damn powerful foreigner, you were inferior; a quarrelsomeness that kept the people divided into contending micro-kingdoms which often split further in civil war.
‘There’s a reason the Cretans lord it over us,’ Diores remarked, standing in the bows beside Reid while he observed the flight of a released dove. ‘Could be the top reason. We can’t pull together. Not that the Labyrinth ever gives us a chance to. The big mainland cities, Mycenae, Tiryns, that gaggle, they’ve sold out. Cretan wares. Cretan manners, Cretan rites. Cretan this and that till a man could puke. How I wish they’d go the whole road and put themselves straight under the Minos! But no, he’s too smart, that’n. He keeps their bootlicker kings, who can sit at council with ours, plot and bribe and turn true Achaean against Achaean. And when somebody plans a break for freedom, the way my King Aegeus did, be sure a spy from Mycenae or Tiryns will find out and squirm off to squeal it in Knossos.’
‘And then?’ Reid asked.
‘Why, then the Minos whistles up his navy and blockades every port and grabs the ships of every vassal and – argh! – ‘ally’ who won’t send men to help. So they help him. And that’s why next year seven more boys and seven more girls will fare from Athens to the Minotaur.’
Diores broke off, shaded his eyes, peered ahead for a while, until he said in a casual tone: ‘There she be. Now you can begin to see what the bird saw. Can you make out that little blur on the world-edge? A peak on Crete. Got to be, I swear by Aphrodite’s belly.’
They rounded the great island before sundown. Cliffs stood white. Behind, the country lifted steep and green. Vessels crossed the waters as thickly as gulls crossed the sky. Erissa stood by the rail, looking. She had made no show of unhappiness these past days. She had merely spoken no more than was needful, and otherwise sat alone with her thoughts. Reid sought her.
Her face did not turn toward him. He wondered what fears and longings dwelt behind that clear profile. As if reading his mind, she said low, ‘Don’t fret yourself about me, Duncan. The years have taught me how to wait.’
Next eventide the Peloponnesus rose rugged from violet waves. The open hills, speckled with villages, and the water traffic that Reid remembered were not here. Forest lay deeply green; loneliness filled sea and sky, a quiet in which the chunk and splash of oars sounded too noisy and the coxswain softened his chant. The air was cool. A pair of cranes, high aloft, caught the light golden on their wings.
Diores indicated the island of Kythera a few miles offshore. It resembled a piece of the mainland. ‘Two days left to the Piraeus, maybe less,’ he said. ‘But we’ll stop here the night, give a thank-offering for an easy voyage, stretch our legs and sleep where we’ve got room to turn around in.’
The beach in a little bay bore signs of use: fire-blackened circles of rock, bits of rope and other inoffensive refuse, a beehive-shaped stone tomb opposite a crude wooden god whose most conspicuous feature was the phallus, a trail winding inward under the trees toward what Diores said was a spring. But tonight his ship had the site to itself. The sailors grounded the hull, put a boulder anchor astern and took a hawser along when they waded ashore.
Uldin reeled on his feet. ‘This place is haunted!’ he roared, drew his saber and glared about him. ‘The land wobbles!’
‘It’ll stop,’ Oleg grinned. ‘Here’s a good medicine for that.’ He ran to join the men who were uncramping themselves by footraces, wrestling matches, leapfrogging, and war whoops. Diores let them go on for half an hour before he called them to make camp, gather wood and start a fire.
Erissa had sought the tomb. Leaving the cloak around her lower body, she pulled off her tunic; bare-breasted, she knelt, clutched her amulet and bent her loose-tressed head in prayer. Diores looked uneasy. ‘I wish I’d halted her,’ he muttered to Reid. ‘Would’ve, if I’d noticed in time.’
‘What’s she doing?’
‘Asking for an oracle dream, I suppose. I wanted to do that. He’s said to be uncommon powerful, the man buried here. Now I can’t; he might not like it twice in the same evening. And I’d have given him part of the sacrifice, too.’ Diores tugged his beard, scowling. ‘I wonder what vow she’s making in its place. That’s no ordinary she-Cretan, Duncan, mate; not even an ordinary sister of the bull dance. There’s something peculiar about her. I’d give her a wide berth if I was you.’
Erissa resumed her tunic and stood aside. She seemed to have gained a measure of inward calm. Reid didn’t venture to address her. He was finding out how alien her world was to him.
Night had fallen before the campfire coals were ready to roast the sheep which had been brought from Egypt for this landing. The sacrifice was brief but impressive: tall men standing ranked in leaping red light and wavering shado
w, weapons lifted in salute to Hermes the Wayfarer; Diores’ chanted invocation; his solemn slaughter of the animals, cutting out of the thighbones, wrapping them in fat, casting them in the fire; deep-voiced ‘Xareis! Xareis! Xareis!’ rising like the smoke toward the stars; clangor of swords beaten on helmets and brass-faced shields.
Oleg crossed himself. Uldin nicked his thumb and squeezed some blood into the flames. Reid couldn’t see Erissa in the dark.
She shared the meal that followed. It was a light-hearted gorge. The wineskins passed freely. Afterward a warrior stood, plucked a lyre and chanted a lay—
‘– Raging arose Hippothous, far-famed slayer of hillmen, He who had burned their camps and left their men for the vultures,
Bearing away the women and gold and head of Lord Skedyon.
Loud in his hand twanged the bow, and eager the arrow went leaping—’
– while his comrades stamped out a dance on the sand.
When they sat down, Uldin rose. ‘I will sing you a song,’ he offered.
‘Then me,’ Oleg said. ‘A song of a wanderer far from his home, his dear ones, his Mother Novgorod.’ He dabbed at his eyes and hiccoughed.
‘Mine is of the steppe,’ Uldin said, ‘the grassland where poppies flare like blood in springtime and the foals stand on unsure new legs, their muzzles softer than a girl baby’s cheek, and dream of the day when they shall gallop untiring to the roots of the rainbow.’
He lifted his head. The words were in his own language, but the melody and his voice astonishingly sweet.
Reid had planted himself well back from the group around the fire, to observe. Abruptly he felt his sleeve plucked. Turning, he made out Erissa’s vague form. His heart skipped a beat. He rose, quietly as possible, and slipped after her, around the circle of light to the trail.
It was dark under the trees. They groped their way hand in hand. After some minutes’ uphill stumbling, they came out in the open.
Surrounded on three sides by forest, a meadow sloped down to the shore. The moon was aloft, waning toward the half. Reid had often admired it at sea before going to sleep; but this was sorcery. Full over an empty ocean, it had not cast the glade it did on these waters of Erissa’s Goddess, which lay so still that stars and a lamp-white planet were mirrored in their night. Grass and boulders were starred also, with dewdrops. The air here was warmer than at the strand, as if the woods breathed out the day they had hoarded. Their odor was of damp mould, leaves, pungencies. An owl hooted gently. The spring rilled between mossy stones.
Erissa sighed. ‘I hoped for this,’ she said low: ‘a place that must be holy with Her nearness, where we can talk.’
He had dreaded that. But now, the moment come, he knew her sense of fate, neither sad nor glad, a strong resignation he had never thought might be.
She spread her cloak. They sat down, facing the water. Her fingers stroked the beard growing on him. He saw by moonlight how tender was her smile. ‘You come daily closer to the Duncan I knew,’ she murmured.
‘Tell me what happened,’ he said as quietly.
She shook her head. ‘I am not sure. I recall very little from the end, shards, fading mists, here a hand that consoled me, there a word spoken – and the witch, the witch who made me sleep and forget….’ She sighed again. ‘A mercy, perhaps, to judge from what horrors remain to me. I’ve often wished the same veil drawn over what came afterward.’
She gripped his hand, painfully hard. ‘We in the boat – Dagonas and I – thought to make for the eastern islands, find refuge in one of the Keftiu colonies,’ she said. ‘But we could not see sun or sky through those lightning-riven clouds, through the ashen rain; and the waters were torn, crazed by the hurt that had come to them; and then a wind sprang up, driving us helpless before its howling. We could just keep afloat. When at last it grew calmer, we spied a ship. But they were Trojans aboard, bound home after the blackness terrified them from the voyage they had embarked on. They made us captive; and when we got there, we went for slaves.’
She drew breath. No matter what she had gained from the sight of Crete or from the oracular hero, these were deep wounds she was breaking open afresh. Reid’s calm was shaken too. Automatically, he drew forth pipe and tobacco.
The distraction might have been ordained by the Goddess’ infant Son in prankish kindliness, as Erissa suggested with an unsteady small laugh. By the time he had explained what he was about, she could speak almost detachedly. He comforted himself with the love-bite of smoke and listened, his fingers enfolding hers:
‘My purchaser was called Mydon. He was of Achaean blood – they’ve bought and bullied their way into the Troad too, did you know? – but not the worst of masters, really. And Dagonas was there. He’d showed himself off, courting Mydon, to be taken along with me, and got to be a clerk for him. Thus we ended in the same household. I do remember how you, Duncan, gave me into Dagonas’ care when we parted. And still you deny you’re a god?
‘When Deukalion was born – your son; I know with all my blood he must be yours – I named him thus because it sounded close to your name, and because I swore he likewise would become the father of nations – I couldn’t let him be raised a slave. I bided my time for a second year, watching, planning, preparing. Dagonas grew patient also, after I showed him how there must be a fate in this. When at last we slipped away, Deukalion in my arms, I meant to leave Mydon’s daughter out of me strangled, my farewell gift to him. But she was so tiny in her crib, I couldn’t. I hope he has let her have some happiness.
‘We took the boat we’d hidden and provisioned, and set off. Our aim was to creep south to the Dodecanese Keftiu. Again the wind was foul, though, driving us north till we stranded on the shores of Thrace. There we found refuge among the wild hillfolk and abode for several years. At first we were welcome because we made gifts of things we’d stolen from Troy. Later Dagonas became an important man because he’s clever and knows many Keftiu arts. For my part, though I was only a lay sister on Atlantis, not a priestess, I taught them things about the worship of the Goddess and Asterion that pleased them. In return, they took me into their guild of witches. There, besides magic, I gained healing craft unknown in Greece or the islands – herbs, treatments, the casting of the Sleep – and these have since given me stature where I live. So it was no ill-willing god who blew us to Thrace. It must have been the destiny you laid on me.
‘In the end, having gained some wealth, we could buy passage from a Rhodian trader. At his home port we found distant kinfolk of mine, who helped us start anew. At last we were well off.
‘But I am no longer the girl you loved, Duncan.’
A silence lingered. The water sang, the owl crossed beneath the moon on phantom wings. Reid cradled his warm pipe and Erissa’s clasping hand.
‘Nor am I the god you remember,’ he said at length. ‘I never was.’
‘Maybe a god used you and has since gone away. You’re not less dear for that.’
He put the pipe down, twisted about to confront her – how luminous those eyes! – and said gravely, ‘You must try to understand. We’ve all come back into the past. You too. At this moment, I feel sure, the girl who was you is alive on an Atlantis that has not foundered.’
‘That will not.’ Her voice rang. ‘This is why we were sent here, Duncan: that we, forewarned, may save our people.’
He couldn’t reply.
The tone softened: ‘But how I have longed for you, how I have dreamed. Am I grown too old, my darling?’
It was as if someone else answered. ‘No. You never will.’
He himself thought: ‘Yes, O Christ, an act of kindness if nothing else. No, now come off that. You’ve had a couple of romps Pam hasn’t needed to be told about, and Christ, Pam won’t be born for three or four thousand years, and Erissa is here and beautiful…. But it was not himself thinking after all; it was the stranger, the outcast from an unreal tomorrow. Himself was the one who had spoken aloud.
Weeping and laughing, Erissa took him to her.
>
CHAPTER NINE
Aegeus, King of the Athenians, had been a strong man. Age whitened his hair and beard, shrank the muscles around the big bones, dimmed his eyes, knotted his fingers with arthritis. But still he sat his throne in dignity; and when he handled the twin hemispheres of the mentatór, he showed no fear.
The slave who had learned Keftiu from it groveled on the rush-strewn clay floor. He could not speak his new language clearly, his mouth being torn and puffed from the blow of a spearbutt that overcame his first struggling, screaming terror. The warriors – Aegeus’ guards and chance visitors, about fifty altogether – stood firm; but many a tongue was moistening lips, many an eyeball rolled beneath a sweaty brow. Servants and women cowered back against the walls. The dogs, giant mastiffs and wolfhounds, sensed fear and growled.
‘This is a mighty gift,’ the king said.
‘We hope it will be of service, my lord,’ Reid answered.
‘It will. But the power in it is more: a guardian, an omen. Let these helmets be kept in the Python shrine. Ten days hence, let there be a sacrifice of dedication, and three days of feasting and games. As for these four who have brought the gift, know every man that they are royal guests. Let them be given suitable quarters, raiment, comely women, and whatever else they may lack. Let all pay them honor.’
Aegeus leaned forward on the lionskin that covered his marble throne. Peering to see the newcomers better, he finished less solemnly, ‘You must be wearied. Would you not like to be shown your rooms, be washed, take refreshment and rest? This evening we shall dine with you and hear your stories in fullness.’
His son Theseus, who occupied a lower seat on his right, nodded. ‘So be it,’ he ordered. Otherwise the prince’s countenance remained unmoving, his gaze wary.
A slave chamberlain took over. As his party was led from the hall, Reid had a chance to look around more closely than hitherto. Athens, smaller, poorer, further from civilization, did not boast the stone architecture of a Mycenae or Tiryns. The royal palace on the heights of the Acropolis was wood. But those were enormous timbers, in this age before the deforestation of Greece. Massive columns upheld beams and rafters down a length of easily a hundred feet. Windows, their shutters now open, admitted some daylight from a clerestory, as did the smokehole in the shake roof. But it was gloomy in here; shields and weapons hung behind the benches already threw back the glimmer of stone lamps. Yet furs, tapestries, gold and silver vessels made a rude magnificence.
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