unfortunate, granted. But there have been cases, here
and there,
of incest by accident. She set her sights too high,
it seems.
An idealist. Couldn't bend, you know. And Antigone
the same.
All thatâgreat God!âfor a corpse, a few maggots, a passing flock of crows! Well, let us learn from their
sad
mistakes. Accept the world as it is. Manipulate the possible. “
Strangeâ¦
“I've wondered sometimes if the gods were aware
at all of those terrible, noble deeds, those fiery
orationsâ
Oidipus blind on the steps, Antigone in the tomb,
Jokasta
claiming her final, foolish right to dignity.”
He covered his mouth with his hand and squinted.
He said, voice low:
“Compare the story of the perfect bliss of ancient
Kadmos,
founder of the line, with Harmonia, whose marriage
Zeus
himself came down to attend. King Kadmosâ
Kosmos, rightlyâ
loved so well, old legends claim, that after his perfect joy in lifeâhis faultless rule of soaring Thebes, great golden city where for many
centuries
nothing had stirred but the monstrous serpent
Kadmos slewâ
the gods awarded him power and Joy after life,
Zeus filled
his palace with lightning-bolts, and the well-matched
pair was changed
to two majestic serpents, now Lady and Lord of all the Dead. So, surely, all who are good get recompense. If Oidipus did notâhot-tempered and vainâor
haughty Jokasta â¦
âBut let it be. I don't mean to judge them, you
understand.
They behaved according to their natures. Too good for
the world.” He nodded.
The wind came up. The sky overhead was as
dark-robed
as the god. Old Kreon pursed his lips as if the storm had taken him unawares. A spatter of rainfall came, warm drops, and the king hiked up his skirts and ran,
his servant
close behind, for shelter under the portico. The trees bent low, twisting and writhing, their
parched leaves
swaying like graygreen witches in a solemn dance.
The sky
flashed white. A peal of thunder shook the columned
house,
the stamping hoof of Poseidon's violent horse above, and rain came down with a hiss, splashing the
flagstones. The king
breathed deep, a sigh, stretched out his arms. “Rain!” It was as if the gods had sent down rain for his
pleasure. “God
bless rain!” The king and his servant laughed and
hugged themselves,
watching it fall and listening, breathing the charged air.
Inside the king's vast house a hundred servants
padded
softly from room to room, busy at trivial chores, scrubbing, polishing, repairingâthe unimportant lives reamed out of time by the names of kings. Slaves, the children of far-famed palaces broken by war, moved through the halls of Kreon's palace carrying
flowers,
filling the smoke-black vases that darkened the royal
chambers,
driving away the unpleasant scents of humannessâ sweat, the king's old age, the stink of beloved dogs, stale wine, chamberpots, cooking. Eyes on the floor,
young men
of fallen houses from Africa to Asia moved silently opening doors to admit the lightning smellâ
then,
eyes on the floor, soundless as jungle birds, moved on. The rumble of thunder, the dark murmur of rain,
came in.
A young blond slave with eyes as gray as the
North Sea
paused in the grillwork shadow of columns, his head
lowered,
peering intently, furtively, out toward distant hills where shafts of sunlight burst, serene, mysterious, through deep blue glodes; the shafts lit up the far-off
trees,
the rims of the hills, like silver threads in a tapestry. He stood unmoving except for one hand reaching out, as if for support, to a great white marble chair afire with figuresâgoddesses, nymphs, dryads, unicorns, heroes of ancient tales whose names were clouded in
mists
long before the sculptor carved the stone. The figures burgeoned from one anotherâarms, legs, wings, limp
hornsâ
as if the stone were diseased, as if some evil force inside it meant to consume the high-beamed room with
shapes,
fat-bellied, simpering, mindlessâshapes to satisfy a Civilization hip-deep in the flattery of wealth and influence, power to the edges of the
world. The slave
moved his hand, as if in pain, infinite disgust, on fat breasts sweetly nippled, polished buttockses, the dwarf-pear little penises of smiling boys.
The distant shafts of sunlight dimmed, died out; the
hills
went dark. In the gray garden, rain drummed steadily on the rude, unadorned coffin carved from gray-black
rock
to house a dead king's bones, forgotten founder of a city, ancient pessimist locked away safe in the earth's stiff
heart.
No rune revealed the monarch's name; no gravid wordshape hinted which god he trusted in.
The old slave dressed in black, Ipnolebes, dear to
the kingâ
his eyes were mortal nowâappeared at the columned
door.
“Amekhenos,” the old man called. The fair-haired slave looked down, drew back his hand. Whatever smoldered
in his mind
was cooled, for the time. He turned, waiting, to the
old man.
Take more wine to the king's guests, Amekhenos.” The young man bowed, withdrew. The old man watched
him go,
then turned to his business, supervision of the kitchen
slaves
at work on the evening meal. Wherever the old man
walked,
slave girls scrubbed or swept more busily, their
whispering ceased,
laments and cursesâsilenced not by fear, it seemed, but as if all the household were quickened by something
in the old man's face,
as if his character carried some wordless meaning in it To a boy he said, “Go help Amekhenos with the wine.”
Without
a word, quiet as an owl in the hall, the boy ran off.
Travellers were gathered in the dark-beamed central
room of the palace,
men from farther away than the realm of Avalon, men who brought gold from Mesopotamia, silks from
Troy,
jewels from India, iron from the foot of the Caucasus. They sat in their fine apparel, kings and the minions
of kings,
drinking from golden bowls and exchanging noble tales of storms, strange creatures, islands enveloped in
eternal night;
they told of beasts half bird, half horse, of talking trees, ships that could fly, and ladies whose arms turned men
to fish.
They told of the spirits and men and gods in the war
now raging
on the plains of Ilium. The kings and Corinthian nobles
laughed,
admired the tales and treasures, awaiting their host's
return.
The time for exchange was near. The strangers itched
for canvas,
sea-salt spray in their beards, the song of the halcyon, sweeter to sea-kings' ears than all but the shoals of
home.
Kreon would hardly have slighted such men in the old
days,
they said. They'd burned men's towns for less.
The lords of Corinth
smiled. The king was old, and the wealthiest Akhaian
alive.
It gave him a certain latitude, as one of the strangers saw more clearly than the rest. He spoke to his
neighborsâa fat man,
womanish-voiced, sow-slack monster of abdomens and
chinsâ
a prominent lord out of Asia known as Koprophoros. His slanted eyes were large and strangely luminous, eyes like a Buddha's, an Egyptian king's. His turban was gold, and a blood-red ruby was set on
his forehead.
I heard from one who claimed to know, that if he
stamped his foot
the ground would open like a magic door and carry him
at once
to his palace of coal-black marble. He wore a scimitar so sharp, men said, that if he laid the edge on a tabletop of solid oak, the blade would part it by its own weight. I laughed in my hand when I heard these things, yet
this was sure:
he was vastâso fat he was frighteningâand painted
like a harlot,
and his eyes were chilling, like a ghost's.
He said:
“Be patient, friends, with a good man's eccentricity. We all, poor humble traders, have got our pressing
affairsâ
accounts to settle, business mounting while we sit here cross-legged, stuffing our bellies like Egypt's pet baboons, or fat old queens with no use left but ceremony. And yet we remain.” He smiled. “I ask myself, “Why?'
And with
a sly wink I respond: âHis majesty's daughter, you've
noticed,
is of marrying age. He's not so addled in his wits, I hope, as not to have seen it himself.'” The young man
chuckled, squinted.
“I'll speak what I think. He's displayed her to us twice
at meals,
leading her in on his arm with only a mump or two by way of introduction. Her robe was bridal white impleached with gold, and resting in her golden hair, a
crown
of gold, garnets, and fine-wrought milleflori work. Perhaps he deems it enough to merelyâvenditate'â not plink out his thought in words. These things are delicate, friends. They require some measure of
dignity!”
They laughed. The creature expressed what had come
into all their minds
at the first glimpse of Pyripta. What he hinted might
be so:
some man whose treasures outweighed other men's,
whose thought
sparkled more keen, or whose gentility stood out white as the moon in a kingdom of feebly blinking stars, might land him a lovelier fish than he'd come here
baited forâ
the throne of Corinth. Even to the poorest of the foreign
kings,
even to the humblest second son of a Corinthian lord, the wait seemed worth it. For what man knows what his
fate may bring?
But the winner would not be Koprophoros, I could pretty
well see,
whatever his cunning or wealth. Not a man in the hall
could be sure
if the monster was female or maleâsmooth-faced as a
mushroom, an alto;
by all indications (despite his pretense) transvestite, or
gelded.
And yet he had come to contend for the princess' handâ
came filled
with sinister confidence. I shuddered, looked down at my
shoes, waiting.
And so the strangers continued to eat, drank Kreon's
wine,
and talked, observing in the backs of their minds the
muffled boom
of thunder, the whisper of rain. Below the city wall, the thistle-whiskered guardians watching the sea-kings'
ships
cursed the delay, huddled in tents of sail, and cursed their fellow seamen, hours late in arriving to stand their stintâslack whoresmen swilling down wine like
the hopeful captains
packed into Kreon's hall. The sea-kings knew their
grumblingâ
talked of that nuisance from time to time, among
themselves,
with grim smiles. They sent men down, from time to
time,
to quiet the sailors' mutterings; but they kept their seats. The stakes were high, though what game Kreon meant
to play
was not yet clear.
The Northern slave, Amekhenos, moved
with the boy from table to table, pouring Cretan wine to the riveted rims of the bowls, his eyes averted, masked in submissiveness. The boy, head bent, returned the
bowls
to the trestle-tables, where the strangers seized them
with jewelled hands
and drank, never glancing at the slavesâno more aware
of them
than they would have been of ghosts or the whispering
gods.
The sun
fell fire-wheeled to the rim of the sea. King Kreon's
herds,
dwindling day by day for the sea-kings' feasts, lay still in the shade of elms. The storm had passed; in its
green wake
songbirds warbled the sweetness of former times, the age when gods and goddesses walked the world on feet so
light
they snapped no flower stem. The air was ripe with the
scent
of olives, apples heavy on the bough, and autumn honey. Already the broadleafed oaks of every coppice and hurst had turned, pyretic, sealing their poisons away for the
time
of cold; soon the leaves would fall like abandoned
wealth. Below,
the coriander on the cantles of walls and bandied posts of hayricks flamed its retreat. The very air was medlar, sweet with the juice of decay. The palace of Kreon,
rising
tier on tier, as gleaming white as a giant's skull, hove dreamlike into the clouds, the sea-blue eagles'
roads,
like a god musing on the world. As far as the eye could
seeâ
mountains, valleys, slanting shore, bright parapetsâ the world belonged to Kreon.
The smells of cooking came,
meat-scented smoke, to the portico where Kreon stood, his hand on his faithful servant's arm, his bald head
tipped,
listening to sounds from the house. The meal was served.
The guests
talked with their neighbors, voices merging as the sea's
welmings
close to a gray unintelligible roar on barren shoals, the clink of their spoons like the click of far-off rocks
shifting.
“Old friend,” the king said thoughtfully, looking at
the river with eyes
sharpened to the piercing edge of an evening songbird's
note,