rest of us.
Then Herakles spoke. Said stupid words, great
bloated mushroomsâ
Honor, Loyalty, Lofty Mission, Cowardice, Fameâ grand assumptions of his lame-brained, muscular soul.
As if
the universe had honor in it, or loyalty, or lofty mission because, in the mindless knee-bends,
push-ups,
hammer-throws of his innocence, he believed in them. We could not look him in the eye or give him answer.
He had
the power to take off our heads as children tear off
branches
in a nut orchard, if he chose to think that “honorable.” Was I willing to die for Hypsipyle? Would she for me? You've lived too long, no doubt, when you've learned
that time takes care
of grief. We were young, but many bad lived too long.
So that
we said, rational as curled, dry leaves in an angry wind, we'd go. And prepared our gear.
“When the women got word of it
they came down running, and swarmed around us like
bees that pour
from the rocky hive when the meadows are jewelled with
dew and the lilies
are bloated with all bees need. Hypsipyle took my hands in hers and said, âGo then, Jason. Do what you must. Return when you've captured the fleece. The throne
will be waiting for you,
and I will be waiting, standing summer and winter on
the wall,
watching, surviving on hope. Believe in my love, Jason. Set my love like a seal on your heart, more firm
than death.
Swear you'll return.' I said I would. She didn't believe it, nor did I believe she'd wait. We kissed. The gods be
with you,
âI said. She studied my face. âDon't speak of the gods,'
she said.
âBe true to me.' She guided my hand to her breast.
âRemember!'
“And so we sailed. My gentle cousin Akastos wept for fair Iphinoeâthey were both virgins when we'd
first arrived.
âI'll love her till the day I die,' he said. listen to me,
Jason.
I see the defeat in your eyes. They say what Idas says: God is a spider. But I say, No! Beware such thoughts! God is what happens when a man and woman in love
grow selfless,
or a man feels grief for his friend's despair, or his
cousin'sâgrieves
as I do for you.' He turned his head, embarrassed
by tears,
and Phlias the mute, Dionysos' son, reached out and
touched him.
âI'm only a man. I can't undo all the evils of the world or answer the questions of the staring Sphinx who sits,
stone calm,
indifferent to time and place, his kingly head beyond concern for the love and hate that his lional chest
can't feel.
I can't undo your scorn for words, whether Herakles'
words
or mine. But I can say this, and be sure: I'll love Iphinoe and swear that my gift is by no means uncommon, as
you may learn
by proof of my love for you. Scorn on, if scorn gives
comfort.'
I understood well enough his depth of devotion. I felt the same for him. How could I not? Those violent eyes, that scrawny frame in which, in plain opposition to
reason,
he'd stand up to giants. God knew. And be slaughtered.
“I let it pass,
watching the sea-jaws snap at our driving oars. So
Lemnos
sank below the horizon and little by little, sank from mind. The
Argo
was silent. Tiphys watched the prow, steering through rocks like teeth. Above, no two clouds
touched.
The sky was a sepulchre. It did not seem to me, that day, that gods looked down on us, applauding. No one spoke.
We sailed.
Ankaios saidâhuge boy in a bearskinâ'Who can say what his fate may bring if he keeps his courage
strong? âI laughed.
Akastos' jaw went tight. I understood, understood.”
Jason paused, frowning. He decided to say no more. So the day went, by Jason's gift, to Paidoboron, mournful, black-bearded guest from the North. And
yet the day went
to Jason, too. From him those gloomy sayings came, sayings darker, I thought, than any Paidoboron spoke. Kreon said nothing when the tale was done, but stared
at his hands
on the table, looking old, soul-weary, as if he'd been
there.
As Jason rose, excusing himself to go homeâit was
lateâ
the king stopped him. “You've given us much to think
about,
as usual. It's a tale terrible enough, God knows. It's filled my mind with shadows, unpleasant memories. My philosophy's been, perhapsâ” he paused, “âtoo
sanguine.” He looked
at Pyripta. Her gentle eyes were shining, brimming
with tears
for Lemnos' queen. She had not missed, I thought, what
Jason
meant by that talk of betrayal. Were they not now
asking the same
of himâbetrayal of Medeia? And was he not toying
with it?
“Consider Pyripta!” the tale cried out. But she was
a child,
and the demand strange. It came to me that she
was beautiful.
Not handsomely formed, like Medeia, and not
voluptuous,
but beautiful neverthelessâa beauty of meaning, like
a common
hill-shrine, crudely carved, to the gentlest, wisest of gods, Apollo, avenger of wrongs. The king said, glancing up, “You'll return and tell us more? We'd be sorry to be left
in this mood.”
He said nothing. I noticed, of Jason's staying in the
palace, this time.
Jason was looking at the princess, seeing her as I had
seen her.
No wonder. I thought, if he longed to escape from
Medeia's stern eyes
to thoseâunjudging, filled with innocent compassion.
“If you wish,”
he said. The old king squeezed his hand. Pyripta smiled. “Come early tomorrow,” she said. She seemed surprised
that she'd spoken.
That morning, seven of the sea-kings made small
tradesârich ikons,
jewels and tapestriesâand left. The omens were bad.
Medeia
naked on her bedâold Agapetika beside herâstared at nothing. For a moment, like Jason, I thought she was
dead. The slave
shook her head, too grieved for speech. He called a
physician.
The doctor examined her, listened to her heart, looked
solemn. She would
be well, he said, though the lady might lie in this
deathlike carus
for daysâperhaps three or four, perhaps a week. He saw her face but did not inquire concerning the scratches.
Jason
closed the door on her softly, going to his sons. He took
them
from the old man's care and held them a moment. Then
they went out
and walked in the early morning air, though he hadn't
yet slept. I sat
beside her, touching her hand, watching the shadows of
the garden
travel across her face. Her slave had cleaned the wounds. They'd leave no scars. Her scars were deeper. Poor
innocent!
My hands moved through the cloth when I tried to
cover her.
Kreon, looking at the city, showed his age. His fingers shook. The game has changed,” he said. Ipnolebesâ
standing
bent, morose, beside himâpeered into memories:
tongues
of flame exploring curtains, the silent collapse of beams, hurrying men in armor, old women screaming, their
shrieks
soundless in the roar of fire. (I saw what Ipnolebes
sawâ
trick of the dead-eyed moon-goddess. “End it, my
lord,” he said.
But Kreon frowned. “The gods will see to the end when
it's time.
Our man has begun a voyage on what he took to be familiar seas, and found the world transformed. By
chanceâ
the accident of an angry woman, a scene on the streetâ Athena's ship is transmogrified, and all of us with it. Get off if you can! The pilot's eyes have changed;
the world
he sailed, all childish bravura, has grown more dark.
Shall we
pretend that his darkened seas are a harmless phantasy? I don't much care for nightmare-ships. No more than
you do.
But I do not think it wise to flee toward happier dreams, singing in the dark, my eyes clenched shut, if the
nightmare world
is real. Somewhere ahead of us, the throne of Corinth waits for her king's successorâlaw or chaos. Towns are not preserved, I fear, by childish optimism. Alas, my friend, he's turned the
Argo's
prow to the void.
We'll
watch and wait, follow him into the darkness
and through it.”
So the old king spoke, nodding to himself. Then went to bed. Ipnolebes sighed, went down to his own small
couch.
“Hopeless,” I whispered, bending close to the old
slave's ear,
for surely he, at least, had the wits to hear me.
“Darkness
has
no other side. Turn back in time!” The slave slept on, snoring. I stared at the hairy nostrils, peeked at the blackness beyond the fallen walls of teeth, then
stepped back,
shocked. There was fire in his mouth: the screams of
women and children.
“Goddess! Goddess!” I whispered. But the walls of the
dream were sealed,
dark, deep-grounded as birth and death. I heard their
laughter,
dry and eternal as the wind. No trace of hope.
He said:
“Faith wasn't our business. Herakles' business, maybe; sailing the cool, treacherous seas of the barbarians. Or faith was Orpheus' businessâsinging, picking at his
lyre,
conversing with winds and rain.
“We beached at Samothrace,
island of Elektra, Atlas' child, where Kadmos of Thebes first glimpsed his faultless wife. The stop was
Orpheus' idea.
If we took the initiation, learned the secret rites, we might sail on to Kolchis with greater confidence, âsure of our ground,' he said. I smiled. But gave
the order.
I knew well enough what uncertainty he had in mind, on my back the sky-blue cape from Lemnos' queen,
a proof
of undying love, she said; and all around me on the
Argo,
slaves of Herakles' strength, if not of his idiot ideas; betrayers, as I was myself, of vows of faithfulness. Trust was dead on the
Argo,
though no one spoke of it. We had at least our manners ⦠perhaps mere mutual
compassion.
“We glided in where the water was dark, reflecting
trees,
the steering-oar turning in Tiphys' hands like a part of
himself,
the rowers automatic, the laws of our nautical art in
their blood.
And so came in to our mooring place, where vestal
virgins
waited in the ancient attire, and palsied, white-robed
priests
stood with their arms uplifted, figures like stone. We
waded
in, and told them our wish. They bowed, then moved,
formulaic
as antique songs, to the temple. And so that night we
saw
the mysteries. Impressive, of course. I watched, went
through
the motions. Maybe, as the priests pretended, the land
had mysterious
powers; and maybe not. All the same to me. Sly magic, communion with godsâit made no difference. Tell me
the fire
that bursts, sudden and astounding, in the huge dark
limbs of an oak,
lighting the ground for a mile, is some god visiting us, and I answer, “Welcome, visitor! Have some meat!'
Politely.
What's it to me if the gods fly to earth, take nests
in trees?
Black Idas scornfully lifted his middle finger to them, daring their rage. Not I. I wished the gods no ill. No more than I wished the grass any ill, or passing
salamanders.
Herakles pressed his forehead to the ground and wept,
vast shoulders
swelling with power, a gift of the holy visitor, he
thought.
I wished him well, though I might have suggested to
the hero, if I liked,
that terror can trigger mysterious juices in the fleeing
deer,
and the scent of blood makes lions unnaturally strong.
More tricks
of chemistry. But live and let live. Idmon and Mopsos, the
Argo's
seers, were respectful. Professional courtesy,
maybe;
or maybe the real thing. Of no importance. Orpheus watched like a hawk. As for myself, I made the intruder welcome, since he was there, if he was. I might have
been happy
to learn the principles of faith between menâhusbands
and wives,
fellow adventurersâor the rules of faith between one
man's mind
and heart, if any such rules exist. I'd been, all my life, on a mission not of my own choosing (the fleece no
more
than an instance), a mission I was powerless to choose
against. Such rules
would perhaps have been of interest. But they did not
teach them there.
Elsewhere, perhaps. I'll leave it to you to judge. We
learned,
there, that priests can do strange things; that
worshippers have
a certain stance, expressions, gestures submissive to
reason's
analysisâas the worshipped is not. We learned what
we knew:
politeness to gods is best. Then sailed on. over the gulf of Melas, the land of the Thracians portside, Imbros
north,
o starboard.
“We reached the foreland of the Khersonese,
where we met strong wind from the south. We set our
sails to it
and entered the current of the Hellespont. By dawn