the fleece,
and the ship rode low in the water, it seemed to me,
with guilt.
The snake would be waking now, I knew; its dumb wits
grieved,
its earth-old spirit shaken. It made no sound.
“We came
to the harbor mouth like a high sentry-gate guarding
the port
where my father maintained five hundred of his fastest
ships. Inside,
the water was dark, the sun still struggling with the
hills. Mad Idas
spoke, eyes rolling, mule-teeth gleaming, spitting in
Jason's
ear. The
Argo
could slip in and out of there quicker'n
a weasel.
Consider what warmth we could get for our chilly bones,
out of all
that wood! Recall how we sent up the city of the
Dolionesâ
a city well guarded and wide awakeâwhereas here
there's hardly
an upright creature, discounting the chain-wrapped
bollards.' His brother,
catlike Lynkeus, studied the docks, the black-hulled
ships.
He pointed the guards outâten of them. Jason mused,
then nodded.
âWe'll risk it,' he said, and signalled Ankaios at the
steering oar.
The ship veered in, oars soundless all at once, though
those on the selmas
rowed more swiftly than before. In the shadow of the
sleeping hills
the
Argo
was black as the water, invisible as death
except
for the silver virl on her bows, a downswept sharksmile,
cruising.
We shot in nearly to the anchor stones of the resined
fleetâ
I'd hardly guessed their skill, those professional killers
of Akhaia,
and my heart thrilled with pride. Then suddenly all
was light,
shocking as crimson ruddle on a snow white lamb:
their spears
arked through blackness to the tinder of sails like
rushing meteors,
like baetyls hurled by infuriate gods. Then men on the
ships,
stumbling, half awake, snibbed the hawserlines,
struggling to flee
the incineration of the ships struck firstâthere men
with mattocks
and fire-axes struck out, blinded by smoke and steam, at timbers redder than rubiesâbut they found no
channel for flight,
pleached on all sides by their own burning ships, lost in
a forest
of hissing swirls of smoke. Hulls shogged together,
sailmasts
clattered to smouldering decks, and still the resin that
saved them at sea caught fire,
racing from barque to barque like flame through grass;
and above where the moored ships burned,
ash hung white as mist, then slowly settled, a floating
scurf. And now
came the rowing cry, unholy celeusma ringing on the
cliffs, and we shot to seaward,
a third of Aietes' fleetâfive hundred lean-prowed
shipsâdescending, flaming,
bartizans fallen like collapsed tents, to seek out the
harbor floor. Old Argus
stared back, sooty and sweaty, at the sinking ships,
and his fists
were clenched. âInsanity!' he whispered, but no one
heard.
“As vast
as the sea, numberless as the leaves that fall in autumn
from the beams
of trees, the army of Aietes gathered and rushed to the
shore,
the king in his chariot of fire drawn, swift as the wind,
by the horses
of Helios. Beside him rode Apsyrtus, my brotherâ Apsyrtus, golden maned, gentle-eyed as a girl. But
already,
driven by gods and the Argonauts, our ship stood far to sea. In a frenzy, Aietes lifted his hands to Helios calling his father to witness the outrage. Then howling,
half mad,
he cursed his people and threatened them one and all
with death
if they failed to lay hands on his daughter; said whether
they found her on land
or captured the ship on the high seas, they must bring
him Medeia,
for Aietes was sworn to be avenged for that monstrous
betrayal. Thus
Aietes thundered. The sun dimmed; the gray earth
shook.
But the
Argo
sailed on, protected by a wind from Hera.
At once
the Kolchians equipped and launched their remaining
shipsâan immense
armada despite all the damage we'd doneâand out they
came,
flight on flight of dark swallows, fleeing catastrophe. Hera was determined that Medeia must reach the
Pelasgian land,
bring doom to the house of Pelias. But the Argonauts'
eyes were grim,
their faces stern, for still Lord Jason was strange with
them,
no longer himself.
Then young Orpheus abandoned his shield
and took up, instead, the golden lyre with which he
could tame
not only trees, fish, cattle, but even the grudge-stiff
hearts
of men. Lord Jason looked fierce, but I reached out my
hand to him,
touching the border of his mantle, and he kept his
silence, waiting.
“It was strange music for that desperate time: not
charging rhythms
urging the rowers to out-do themselves, but music as
calm
as the glass-smooth sea untouched by the magical wind
from Hera.
One by one the Argonautsâwho, heaving at the oars or proffering shields, had glanced again and again at
Jason,
distrustful, stirred by wordless doubtâgrew calmer,
forgetful
of the secret anger they could not themselves
understand. Orpheus
sang of the pride of Zeus and the labor of Hephaiastos, and how Zeus, awakened from his dream, wept. The
lyre fell silent.
Jason stared down, ashamed, yet hardly aware what
his shame
might mean. Aithalides spoke, whose memory never
slept.
âYou cast your eyes to the sky, the shore, and at times,
it seems,
toward us, apprehensive. It's a trifling slight, though
we should have deserved,
by now, more trust. But for all your care that the
fleece be guarded,
you've forgotten the words of Phineusâthat we'll sail
back home
by a different route. Surely his words were not idle,
Jason.
Troubles await us in the route we steer. So the seer
foretold.
Turn your mind from its jealousy to that!' The son of
Aison,
touched like the rest by the music, showed no anger.
He glanced
in my direction for help. But despite the pursuing fleet and my certain knowledge that I, beyond all the rest,
was the quarry,
I could not advise him. The wind blew steadily,
plunging us on.
He turned to the old seer Mopsos, bedraggled, smiling
like a fool
at some joke. He too was helplessânot a bird in sight.
Then, moved
by a god, or by his lunacyâwho can say?âmad Idas crowed like a rooster and lifted one hand from his oar
to flap it
like a wing, to mock the seer. With strange attention,
the old
man watched. And when Idas fell back laughing, the
old man said,
âIt's true, yes. Ridiculous ⦠but never mind.' And to
Jason:
âImagine a time when the reeling wheel of stars was not yet firmâwhen one would have looked in vain for the
Danaan race,
for no men lived but the Arcadians, who were there
before even
the moon. Egypt was the corn-rich colony of dawn,
for the sun
arose, in those dim days, from the south. Dark tales
remain,
remembered by migrating birds, old sundials wrong
about time,
as earth tells timeâremembered by temples whose holy
gates
are askew by a quarter turn. Old sea-birds speak of it. Birds of the farmyard scoff.' He paused,
straining to remember. âFrom Egypt, a certain man set
outâ
there had been some terrible catastrophe, explosions in
the ocean,
a continent lostâa man set out with a loyal force and made his way through the whole wilderness of
Europe and Asia,
and founded cities as he went. A few, so birds report, survive. I have seen myself old tablets of stone
containing,
allegedly, old maps. On one there's a river. The priests of the Keltai, old as their oak trees, call it Ister. I can say no more, or nothing but this: If the ancient stream still
flows,
if the ages have left that forgotten seaway navigable, our route lies somewhere to the west.' No sooner did
his voice cease
than Hera granted us a sign. Ahead of us, a blinding
light
shot westward, down to the horizon. The Argonauts sent
up a shout,
and away, all canvas spread, our black ship sailed.
“One fleet
of Kolchians, riding on a false scent, had left the
Black Sea,
between the Kyanean rocks. The rest, with Apsyrtus in
command,
unwittingly made for Ister, blindly hunting. âBut it
was
more than that, I know; was he not my brother? He was
no
devil, sorcerer or not. He had hoped to have no part in capturing me. But the stars at his birth were
unkind to him.
They discovered the river and entered itâhis heart full
of dreadâ
turned at the first of the river's two mouths, while we
took the second,
and so his fleet outstripped us. His ships spread panic
as they went.
Shepherds grazing their flocks in the broad green
meadows by the banks
abandoned their charge and fled, supposing the ships
great monsters
risen from the sea, old Leviathan-brooder, for never
beforeâ
or never in many a centuryâhad the Ister been plagued by ships. Apsyrtus' eyes grew vague. He was of two
minds,
fearing for my life, fearing for his own if he incurred
our father's
wrath. And so in anguish he set down watchmen as
he passed,
to report, by the blowing of horns or flashing of mirrors,
if we
on the
Argo
sailed behind him. The message soon
came. In sorrow,
he drew up his fleet as a net.
“Ah, Jason, reasonable Jason!
Had not the moon's song warned me?ââmy light, my
life-long heartache!'
But reasonable, yes. If the Argonauts, outnumbered as
they were,
had dared to fight, they'd have met with disaster. They
evaded battle
by coming to terms with Apsyrtus. Both sides agreed
that, since
Aietes himself had said they'd be given the golden fleece if Jason accomplished his appointed task, the fleece was
theirs
by rightâApsyrtus would blink their manner of taking
it.
But as for meâfor I was the bone of contention
between themâ
they must place me in chancery with Artemis, and
leave me alone
till one of the kings who sit in judgment could decide
on the fate
most justâreturn to my father or flight with the
Argonauts.
“I listened in horror as Aithalides told me the
terms. I paled,
fought down an urge to laugh. Had they still no glimpse
of the darkness
in Kolchian hearts? Could Jason believe that, free of
me,
Apsyrtus would sweetly make way for themârude
strangers who'd burned
his father's ships, seduced his sister, set strife between a brother and sister as dear to each other as earth
and sky?
He must carry me home or abandon Kolchis; but once
his sister
was off their
Argo,
he'd sink that ship like a stone.
âYet rage
burned hotter by far in my heart than scorn. I trembled,
imagining
the tortures that king, old sky-fire's child, would devise
for me.
He had loved me well, loved me as he loved his golden
gates,
his gifts from Helios and Ares. No need to talk of reason in Aietes' pyre of a brain. He'd become a man like the
gods,
like seasons, like a falling avalanche. Not all the earth
could wall out the rage
of the sun's child, Lord of the Bulls.
“And so I could not rest
till I'd spoken with Jason in private. When I saw my
chance I beckoned,
getting him to leave his friends. When I'd brought him
far enough,
I spoke, and Jason learned to his sorrow what his
captive was.
His mind took it in. No spells, no charms would I use
on him,
though I might by my craft have had all I wished with
ease. Lips trembling,
cheeks white fire, I charged him: âMy lord, what is this
plan
that you and my brother have arranged for my smooth
disposal? Has all
your triumph fuddled your memory? Have you forgotten
all
you swore before heaven when driven to seek out my
help? Where are
those solemn oaths you swore by Zeus, great god of
suppliants?
Where are the honey-sweet speeches I believed when
I threw away conscience,
abandoned my homeland, turned the high magic of gods
to the work
of thieves? Now I'm carried away, once a powerful
princess, become
your barter, your less-than-slave! All this in return for
my trust,
for saving your hide from the breath of the bulls, your
head from the swords