Destroyer of Cities t-5 Read online

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  7

  Days under sail and oar — nights under canvas on beaches from the neck of the Bosporus to the coast of Asia. The second night they camped below the ruins of Troy, and Satyrus went and sacrificed to the shades of Achilles and Patroclus and Hektor. The fourth night they camped under the walls of Mythymna, on Lesvos, and Satyrus drank wine with the garrison commander, Phillip Xiphos, an old friend of Draco’s.

  ‘Catamite bastard is waiting for you off Chios,’ Phillip said with no preamble.

  Satyrus nodded. ‘Thanks for that,’ he said.

  Phillip laughed. ‘Draco says you’re a good man, for all you’re an effeminate Greek and a barbarian, too,’ he said. Phillip had lost an eye, like his namesake, and had a pair of scars that looked like fingers reaching across his face. His couch-mate at dinner was a beautiful boy with the body of an Olympic athlete, one of Sappho’s descendants.

  ‘I’m descended from Sappho and Alcaeus,’ he proclaimed proudly.

  After he had sung some of his ancestor’s poetry, and played very well on the lyre, the boy came and joined Satyrus on his couch. ‘Would you take me to be a marine?’ he asked. ‘I want to go to war. All I do here is train.’

  ‘What’s your name?’ Satyrus asked.

  ‘Charmides,’ said the boy.

  ‘How old are you, lad?’ Satyrus asked, feeling a thousand years old.

  ‘Eighteen — in a few weeks.’

  ‘Months,’ Phillip said. ‘He won’t be an ephebe until the Feast of Herakles. That’s my feast of Herakles — in Pella.’

  ‘I knew which one you meant,’ Satyrus said tolerantly. ‘What do you think of this, sir? Do you want him to go to sea as a marine?’

  The old Macedonian smiled tenderly at the boy. ‘I hope he never sees a spear flash in a foe’s red hand,’ he said. ‘But for all that, he’s eager for it, as we all are, eh?’ Phillip made a face. ‘You’ve seen a fair amount of action — for a Greek.’

  Satyrus shrugged.

  ‘I could send him to Antigonus, but he has the reputation of eating men,’ Phillip said. ‘Cassander may be regent of Macedon, but I can’t love him. Ptolemy — he was always my favourite. But Aegypt is a long way away.’

  ‘Are you asking me to take this boy?’ Satyrus asked.

  ‘Let me think on it,’ Phillip allowed.

  In the morning, the handsome lad was on the black sand beach of Mythymna with a heavy wool sea bag and wearing a fine suit of armour. Phillip stood by him in a cloak, half purple, half tan. It made Satyrus smile — the mark of the Companions of King Alexander. A magnificent brag. And a true one.

  ‘I guess that he must go sometime, eh?’ Phillip asked. ‘I had hoped to send him with Draco-’

  ‘He’s holding Timaea for me,’ Satyrus said. ‘What’s your name again, boy?’

  The young man looked shyly at the ground — really, too well bred to be believed. ‘I’m called Charmides,’ he said.

  The boy reminded Satyrus of someone, but he couldn’t put his finger on just who that was.

  Satyrus turned to Apollodorus. ‘We have a new marine,’ he said.

  Apollodorus smiled. ‘Likely lad, I must say. Can you throw a javelin, lad?’

  Charmides dimpled when he smiled. ‘Well enough,’ he said, cautiously.

  ‘Well enough to throw in the boys’ events at the Olympics!’ Phillip said. ‘You take good care of my boy. I’ve been his father, in everything but blood.’

  Satyrus clasped hands with the old man. ‘I’ll do my best,’ he said. ‘The sea is not always kind.’

  ‘Let’s see if I can make it kinder,’ Phillip said. ‘Walk with me on the beach.’

  In a few minutes of walking, Phillip laid out the naval dispositions of Antigonus, Demetrios and the pirate Dekas. ‘Dekas has sixty ships,’ Phillip added, ‘including four of mine.’

  Satyrus made a face. ‘I can’t face sixty ships. I’d like to. I think I could take him — but the risk is too high, and my merchantmen would suffer.’

  ‘Wait a few weeks, then. Dekas can’t wait for ever — Antigonus needs him to fight Ptolemy down off Cyprus. Or blockading Rhodes-’ Phillip shook his head. ‘You can wait here. I won’t charge you much,’ he added.

  Satyrus nodded. ‘Thanks,’ he said. ‘But no.’

  ‘You mean to fight?’ Phillip asked, and his glance at Charmides, already stowing his gear under a rowing bench, spoke volumes.

  ‘No,’ Satyrus said.

  Satyrus went west out of Mythymna, rather than east through the Straits of Lesvos as he had planned. It was a risky course in late spring, and his next move was still riskier, leaving the safety of the Lesvian coast at Eressos on a clear morning, crossing the deep blue to the lonely island of Psyra, south by west, and raising her as evening fell. His men ate crab and lobster on the beach, and danced with the local men and women who came down to them when it became clear they were not raiders.

  They sailed before Eos, the lust-filled goddess of the new morning, had touched the sky with her rosy fingers, and they sailed due south all day, more than a hundred stades of the deep blue and never a single sight of an island or even a gull after they left the rocky slopes of Psyra astern. And into the night — the greatest risk of all, forty ships sailing the deep blue in darkness, and every stern lit like a temple on a festival.

  In the morning, Satyrus’ squadron was spread over fifty stades of sea but he sailed on, the wind fresh and dead astern, carrying him south by south until, at the rising of the stars, Mykonos rose between the bow post and the foremast.

  Neiron nodded. ‘Good landfall,’ he said. Then he grinned like an Aegyptian jackal. ‘Excellent landfall.’ Few things made sour old Neiron smile, but good seamanship was always worth a laugh. ‘What’s on your mind, young man?’

  Satyrus bridled as he always did to be called ‘young man’, but then he shrugged. ‘The price of grain,’ he said. ‘It is never far from my thoughts, these days.’ He looked out over the sea towards Mykonos. ‘I have ten thousand mythemnoi of grain — more, I suspect. All the grain from my farms, all the grain from most of the Maeotae farms on the Tanais and all the surplus from Pantecapaeaum. At four drachma per mythemna, Athenian price, we break even. Not a good year for the small farmer. At five and a half drachma, we make a small profit.’

  ‘I’m no farmer,’ Neiron said. ‘What’s a small profit?’

  Leosthenes, the priest of Poseidon, made a snorting noise. He’d been sitting on the helmsman’s bench, reading from a scroll. He got up. ‘Didn’t you even grow up on a farm, old man?’ he asked.

  Neiron smiled and shook his head. ‘Fishing boats and merchant ships.’

  Leosthenes nodded. ‘My pater was hard put to make his zygote quota of two hundred mythemnoi every year. Two hundred measures or more, and you are a full citizen. Fewer, and if the assessor wants to, he can take away your right to serve — lots of rights. If you don’t make quota, your son can’t train in the gymnasium.’ Leosthenes looked out to sea, clearly remembering something painful.

  Satyrus hadn’t thought of it like that. Of course, except for being a terrified exile for a few weeks, Satyrus had never wanted for money. He looked at the priest. ‘Did it ever happen?’

  Leosthenes laughed grimly. ‘Never. Once in a while we’d have a year where the crops were good and the olives were good and we’d make quota and then some — and pay our taxes and lay aside money for dowries. One year in five. The rest, we’d work in the fields with the slaves, gleaning every grain before the crows took them. In Athens, they have a special name for oat grains with dirt on them.’ He shrugged.

  Satyrus looked back at Neiron. ‘So — at five drachma, we make a small profit. One of my Maeotae farmers is lucky to have two hundred mythemnoi — like Leosthenes’ father. Let’s say he has four slaves and a horse and oxen and a plough, six children — well, do the maths. Two hundred mythemnoi of grain at five drachma gets him a thousand drachma. Ten mina of silver. A sixth of a talent. Seems like riches, until you feed the children, the
slaves and the oxen. Not to mention the horse.’

  Neiron nodded. ‘Every merchant ship knows the score, lord.’

  Satyrus made a face. ‘When I look back there,’ he waved at the merchant ships in their trailing arrowhead, ‘all I see are the hopes and fears of a thousand small farmers. If I lose it all in a storm — what then? Pirate attack, bad choice of port, low prices when we get there-’

  Leosthenes looked interested. Neiron frowned. ‘That’s life in the merchant trade, Satyrus. Every cargo bears its weight in worry, or so my pater used to say.’

  Satyrus jutted his chin at Mykonos, now well up on the horizon. ‘So it’s not just a landfall. It’s a risk passed. We should be around Dekas now. I could fight him. Hades, I’d like to fight him, outnumbered or not. But this isn’t my grain. Or half of it isn’t.’

  Leosthenes nodded. ‘Lord, you should cross the strait and visit the god at Delos.’

  The idea appealed to Satyrus, and he was surprised he hadn’t thought of Delos at all, separated from Mykonos by a narrow strip of water. ‘My mind has been too much at sea,’ he said. ‘I will find the time to visit the god.’

  They lay the night on the north beaches of Mykonos, with ships coming in all night. Satyrus declared the next day a day of rest, and the sailors mended ropes and sails while the oarsmen slept and the marines drilled, did the war dances and threw javelins until their arms hurt. Young Charmides threw so well that Apollodorus refused to be responsible for the boy.

  ‘The men will either throw him over the side or get lovesick over him,’ Apollodorus said. He shook his head. ‘He’s so likeable.’

  Satyrus laughed. ‘I’m just trying to decide who he reminds me of,’ he said.

  He took Helios and young Charmides with him, walked down the sand to Diokles and the Black Falcon and arranged to be rowed across the narrow channel to Delos and the Temple of Apollo — the holiest shrine in the Hellenic world. Satyrus had never seen it — never had a chance to visit. And while he led his ships in a long end-round of Antigonus’ naval dispositions, he’d felt — perhaps as a result of his encounter with Amastris and its results — a sense of pollution, of having made himself unclean.

  What did he owe Amastris?

  Why had he not made sure to part on better terms with his sister?

  Diokles’ men rowed with a will, every one of them as eager for the market at Delos — one of the best markets on the sea — as Satyrus was for the temple.

  ‘They must be pissing in their chitons,’ Diokles said with a laugh, looking at the beach.

  Satyrus came out of his thoughts to see the landing beach for the great Temple of Apollo — the hieron of Apollo’s birth, and of his sister, Artemis. There were at least a hundred priests and acolytes on the beach.

  Satyrus looked at them and shook his head. ‘Is that for me?’ he asked.

  Diokles laughed again. ‘You have twenty warships just a few stades away. This temple has backed Antigonus since the dawn of the war — and here you are.’

  Glaucon, Diokles’ master, was a man with one of the pleasantest voices that Satyrus had ever heard. He pointed past the headland to where the great temple stood by the sacred lake. Very little of it was visible from this close in.

  ‘Worth a few drachmas to sack yon,’ he said.

  Satyrus gasped at the blasphemy. ‘Are we pirates?’ Satyrus asked.

  Diokles shook his head. ‘No, lord. We ain’t pirates. They are.’

  Satyrus smiled. ‘My family has a legend about one of our ancestors being badly treated here — but he got a good prophecy, nonetheless, or so it is told.’

  ‘Getting cheated by the priests is part of the pilgrimage,’ Diokles said.

  ‘Worth a few drachmas to sack this place,’ Glaucon said again, his voice dreamy.

  ‘Snap out of it!’ Satyrus said, but now he was laughing. ‘I forget that I am a king, and a sea wolf. I expect that, with a little effort, I can take a sociable revenge for my ancestor.’

  ‘Bet it’s worth a thousand talents of silver,’ Philaeus said — but then he put his hand over his mouth.

  Satyrus took Helios and Charmides up the beach, where they dutifully kissed the sand and were greeted enthusiastically by the priests.

  Satyrus endured several hours of obsequious service in exchange for his sacred moments in the cleft of rock and his opportunity to worship the Lord of the Silver Bow, which he did, sacrificing a ram with his own sword, and another for Melitta on the altar of Artemis, to the high priestess’s delight. He left them some of the loot from the pirates at Timaea, which seemed to please them more than his piety.

  He stood by the sacred lake and looked into the black waters, but the god did not speak to him. And in the sacred cleft, he heard muttering and a shriek — a very dramatic shriek — but the voice of the god was still for him.

  The place itself was dramatic and beautiful, ancient with the touch of a thousand years of worship, and perhaps a thousand years before that. And when he turned to leave the sacred lake, where he felt that he had stood too long, the hierophant was waiting for him.

  ‘My lord,’ he said quietly. ‘Did the god speak to you?’

  Satyrus shook his head. ‘No. The cleft and the lake were equally silent. I confess that my thoughts are most often turned to my ancestor, Herakles, and perhaps I have neglected the Lord of the Lyre.’ Satyrus shrugged. He regretted the impulse that had brought him here.

  The hierophant shook his head. ‘You have not offended the Lord Apollo.’ He paused. ‘Not in particular.’

  ‘What, then?’ Satyrus asked. The gods he worshipped, but priests sometimes annoyed him.

  The hierophant gave him a hard look. Oddly, that made Satyrus like him better — it was the obsequious priests that Satyrus disliked.

  ‘I had a dream about you, my lord. You bear the impurity of enormous blood guilt. You have killed many men — many men, my lord, and without apology. Your line are killers, back to the generation of Herakles, may his name be blessed.’ The hierophant’s eyes bored in on him, unblinking. ‘You must consider expiation.’

  ‘Sacrifice?’ Satyrus asked. Even as a pious man, he was tempted to ask if a large enough donation would cover this supposed blood guilt.

  The priest narrowed his eyes. ‘You have a reputation as a man who loves and fears the gods,’ he said. ‘You act like a sophist from Athens.’

  Satyrus squirmed. ‘Both men may inhabit the same body,’ he said.

  The priest nodded. ‘Even the body of a priest. Listen to my dream, and the word of the Lord Apollo, and act on it or not, because the gods grant men their will, to do or not to do, and expect men to take the consequences, I think. Apollo asks that you make a sacrifice of your time, and learn to play the lyre. My dream tells me that you skimped on music as a boy. Apollo commands that you learn his instrument, and through it, perhaps, you will see things that you have not seen.’

  Satyrus fell back a step, stunned by the simplicity of the god’s demand and its subtlety. ‘I thank you, lord priest. I will. . I will consider the god’s demand. Will act on it.’ Indeed, the faintest whiff of damp cat’s fur came to his nostrils, the first sign from his ancestor god in many passages of the moon, and he was moved. He embraced the priest, who nodded graciously.

  ‘Teachers will come to you,’ the priest said suddenly.

  ‘A music teacher?’ Satyrus asked.

  The priest shrugged. ‘I — some daemon gave voice. I spoke without thought.’

  Satyrus was satisfied. The gods had spoken, and his visit was not wasted. Blood guilt — aye, Satyrus admitted that the deaths of many of his victims sat just below the surface of his mind, waiting for his every dive into deeper waters. The Sakje girl he’d killed in his first fight. The sailors he had once executed on a beach to maintain discipline. The dead of his battles. The women massacred when his marines stormed the town. A king quickly piled up corpses.

  Back on the beach, Charmides thanked him prettily for allowing him to come along.

&nb
sp; ‘Are you pious, Charmides?’ Satyrus asked. He was deep under, seeing all his dead.

  The young man blushed — a remarkable talent in a man who could throw a javelin half a stade. ‘I–I believe in the gods, lord.’

  Satyrus nodded. ‘Helios?’

  ‘I believe in the gods more strongly as a free man than I did as a slave,’ he said. ‘The gods have very little to offer a slave.’

  Satyrus stared out over the stern. ‘Helios, do you play the lyre?’

  Helios looked uncomfortable. ‘No, lord.’

  Satyrus glanced at Charmides. He blushed, and stammered something.

  ‘I’ll bet he plays very well indeed,’ Satyrus said to Helios. ‘All the people of Sappho’s island should be musicians.’

  Charmides shook his head. ‘No, lord. I never — I never put in the time. Music is difficult.’ He shrugged. ‘I spent my time running and learning to fight.’

  Satyrus pursed his lips. ‘I seem to have surrounded myself with non-musicians. And yet Theron and Philokles both loved to play and sing. Apollo commands me to learn the lyre, gentlemen. When I have engaged a teacher, I will invite both of you to learn with me.’

  The two younger men beamed with pleasure, and that made Satyrus happy as well.

  Satyrus thought about music all the way back to Mykonos.

  South and east, down the ‘gullet’ between the Cyclades and the Sporades. A night on a beach with no name on an islet off the coast of Astypalaia, eating stores and keeping the fires small, and in the morning they were off again, due west of Cos. That morning, they saw two ships away north on the horizon — sixty stades or more.

  ‘Miletus is off our port quarter,’ Neiron said.

  ‘With most of Antigonus’ smaller warships, if Phillip of Mythymna was right,’ Satyrus said. ‘We should be south of Dekas, though.’

  ‘Unless those were his scouts,’ Neiron said.

  ‘We won’t beach until dark,’ Satyrus said, and went back to watching the sea. Twilight found them coasting along a headland that should have been Telos but looked strangely different.

 

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