lie to death
for an instant. But it wasn't enough for him, the total
adoration
of a girl. He must have whole cities' adorationâand
he'd had that, once,
rightful prince of Iolkos, the throne his uncle had
usurped
and he might have won back, without shame, by
bloody deeds; yet chose
the reasonable way, for all his might in arms, for all his people's love. “Evil deeds commit their victims,” Medeia had said, “to responses evil as the deeds
themselves.”
That was the law he'd sought to change.
No wonder if the child of Aietes hadn't understood,
had struckâ
sky-fire's childâwith the pitiless force of her father's
father.
And so Lord Jason had lost it all. I remembered again the crowd of outraged sailors, turning and turning,
grinding â¦
My memory seethed with the image, all space astir like
grain
in the narrowing flume of a gristmill. Against that
ceaseless motion,
Jason stood in the great hall still as a rock, a tree, as gentle of mind, as reasonable, as firm of will as the cool, intellectual moon. Ah, Jason knew, all right, of the riots. Calm, his voice an instrument, he spoke:
“Six weeks the god's wrath banged us shore to shore
among foemen,
men who fought naked, cut off their enemies' heads.
All that
for Circe's failure to forgive. Old Argus' wonderful
engine,
driven as if by its own will, struck rocks and laughed at the steering oar of Ankaios. I lost there fourteen men to wrecks and those savage raids. I gave what attention
I could
to Medeiaâwhatever was left, to the needs of my men.
She was sick,
hour on hour and day on day, some strange collusion of body and mind, or a poison shot down from Helios. I loved her, yes, though her bowels ran black, and at
times, in pain,
she raged. I loved her, if anything, more than before
that time,
as you love a child you've nursed through the night,
alarmed by his trembling,
cooling his forehead in terror of convulsions. Loved her
for the shame
that closed her hands to fists, made her jawline clench.
A love
that trenched past body to the beauty deeper, the
humanness
astounded by love not earned by its outer form. She was, in her own crazed, blood-shot eyes, a thing despicable,
vile;
to me the wealth of kingdoms, dearer than my flesh,
her acrid
lips, distilled wild honey, her tangled hair more joy
than goat flocks frisking in the hills. âYet rage she did;
demanded
more than my hands could give, my reeling mind hold
firm.
Raged and wept, while claws of rock reached up at us and savage strangers struck us from every tree and rock on shore. I clung to my scrap of sanity like Theseus
clutching
Ariadne's thread in the Labyrinth. At times I sobbed, clenched my teeth at the loss of friends. At times, with
the help
of Butes, king of the spear, and Phlias and Akastos,
kept calm
by fear for me, I heartened my men with words. Mad
Idas
mocked, shouted at the winds, demanded that Zeus
destroy him.
He beat his chest with his great black fists and
slobbered, convinced
that for him, for his slight against Zeus, we endured
this punishment.
Once, in the night, he went overboard. Medeia
awakened
with a scream, aware of catastrophe.
We saw him at once, and Leodokos, mighty as a bull,
went over.
Swimming like a dolphin, he dragged him back to the
Argo,
poor Idas
spluttering, cursing the gods and the skewbald sea.
   “So, hurled by unknown winds and waters, we came to the Sirens'
isle.
I shackled my men and Medeia like slaves; myself as
well.
Orpheus played, struggling to drown out their song,
or untune it.
The sea was calm, full of sunlight.
   “I heard it well enough: music peeling away like a
gull
from Orpheus' jazz. Dark cavern music, the music of
silent
pools where no moon shines: the music of death as
secret
hunger. What can I say? They were not innocents, those sirens: it was not peace they sang, fulfillment
in joy.
Who'd have been sucked to his death by that?âby
holy dreams
of isles forever green, where shepherds play their pipes softly, softly, for girls forever white? It wasn't gentleness, goodness, the sweetness of age those sirens
sang:
the warmth of a family well provided for, a wife grown old without a slip from perfect faithfulness. I have heard it said by wise old men that âhistory' is all you have left in the end, the fond memories shared by a man and a woman who've seen it all, survived it all, together. There is no nobler reward, they say. Perhaps. But that was not the unthinkable hope they lured
us with.
They sang of known and possible evils driven beyond all bounds, slammed home like crowbars driven to the
neck in great, thick
abdomens of rock. Oh, not like sailors' whores,
who whisper with girlish lust, the nebulous verge of love, what wickedness they mean. (She arches her back
to you,
her breasts grow firm, packed tight with passion, as if
they're filled
to the bursting point with milk. She seizes your mouth
with hers;
plunged in, you can't break free, clamped in by a fist,
her legs
closed on your hips like jaws.) All that, for the moment
at least,
is love. They did not sing to us of love. They sang ⦠terrible things. No generous seaport prostitute, whispering, screamingâwhatever her tricksâcould
satisfy
our murderous, suicidal lust from that day on. Nothing (by no means islands forever green) could quench,
burn out
our need beyond that day. It was pain and death they
sang:
terrible rages of sex beyond the orgasm,
blindness, drunkenness bursting the walls of
unconsciousness,
the murderer's sword plunged in beyond the life-lock,
down
to life renewed, midnight black, imperishable.
Such was the song, cold-blooded lure, of those
cunning sly-
eyed bitches. Orpheus' fingers jangled the lyre,
but couldn't
blot from our minds their music's deadly mysticism.
One of our number, Butes the spearman, went
overboard,â
snapped steel chains and plunged. We'd have followed.
him down, if we could.
We couldn't. We strained at our shackles and raged; we
frothed at the mouth;
the
Argo
sailed on, and Orpheus played, immune to
our wrath
as he was to their song. He took no stock in absolute
evil,
or good either. (The god of poets, the Keltai say, is a sow, rooting, rutting with boars, able to converse with wind.)
Orpheus sighed, endured by his harp-playing.
Which was well enough for him, but what of the rest
of us?
   “We sailed on, sorrowing, Medeia blaked with a fury
that had
no possible vent: fury at the father she loved; at herself; at me for the murder of the brother whose murder she'd
engineered â¦
And so we came to the terror of Skylla and Kharybdis.
On one side,
sheer rock cliff, on the other the seething, roaring
maelstrom.
We looked, Ankaios sweating. I scarcely cared. My soul was thick with the torpor of those who have listened to
the sirens and failed
to act. Was I half asleep? On the left, rock scarp as steep as the walls of a graveyard trench, and as certain to
grind our dust:
call it death by rectitude. On the right side, turning like an old constrictor, a woman enraged,âdeath by
violence,
bottomless shame; betweenâbarely possibleâdeath by
indifference,
soul-suffocation in the corpse that stinks, plods on.
Ankaios
wept, abandoned the steering oar. I called on Asterios, son of an endless line of merchants. He seized the oar, tongue between his teeth, his brown eyes luminous. I laughedâGod knows, without joy. And clumsy as he
was with the oar,
he knew the line and kept it, who cared for nothing in
life
but the clinquant possible of profit tomorrow. The heavy
ship
was as easy for him as a lighter by the quay.
Short-sighted fool,
valueless, podging, unfit for the company of thinking
men,
I give you this: You kept possibilities open, so that, plodding, stinking, we may yet have time to reconsiderâ
perhaps
oppose you, perhaps turn tradesman and find
amusement in it.
   “We came to the wandering rocks. The sky was
choked. Hot lava
shot up on every side through spicious, roiling steams. Great islands loomed around us, rowelled like brustling
whales,
sank once more into darkness. The sails were like ruby,
like blood.
By the light of explosions from the hills surrounding
we chose our channels
âthere, and thereâthe options shot up like partridges, wide roads, keyholes of daylight, all of them fair, all fine in the instant's vision of the possible. But the black
sky closed
like a curtain, and the steam came swirling again, and
the channel was gone,
another one gaping to the right of us, sucking us inâ
in the distance,
sky. Yes, this then! Good! âBut a belch of flame,
cascade
of boulders, and the sea was revised once more. Old
Argus watched it,
fascinated, too preoccupied for fear. Again and again
he glanced
from the tumbling seas to the sky. He shouted, swinging his eyes to me, shaggy beard splashed red by
the sea,
âIt's all Time-Space in a duckpond, Jason! See how it
moves
by law, yet unpredictably. So the galaxies turn
in their aeviternal spans, some bodies wheeling to the
left,
some wheeling right, some rolling head over heels like
bears,
a fewâlike the overintellectual moonâstaring, as if with a mad
idée fixe,
at a single point. It's food for thought, this sea. It teaches of terrible collisions,
the spin
of planets battered to chaos by a dark star drifting free, the plosion of a sun in the northwest corner of the
universe,
flash of a comet, collapse of a cloud of dust. Like
colliding
balls, the planets scatter in dismay, then quickly settle on a new course, new synchysis, and feel secure.
Then
CRASH!
an instant later (as the ends of the universe read their
clock)
a new, more terrible collisionânew cries of alarm in the
heights â¦
We here, who assess durabilities by clicks too brief for the mind of space to vision except by number theory, we watch the sun sail west, and we nod, approve the
stupendous
rightness of things, “Choose so-and-so,” say we, “and
we bring on
such-and-such.” We frigate the hills with purpose: “This
oak,
meaningless before, I delimit as wood for my cart.”
We move,
secure, never glancing down, on precarious stepping
stones,
Mondays and Tuesdays a-shiver in the torrent of Time.'
He laughed,
indifferent to grim implications. He meant no harm
in life,
Argus, observer of mechanics, creator of machines.
A man
who hated war so long as he thought as a citizen, but fashioned the mightiest engine of war yet built,
with the help
of the goddess. A man who lived by order, fashioned
by his grasp
of predictables, but observed, cold-blooded, and laughed,
that order
was illusion, a trick of timing. Incredible being!
Knowledge
was all, in the end; the pawks in the book he'd leave to
the future,
if luck allowed its survival. Not so with Orpheus, whose machine was art, a bit for piercing the surface
of things,
advancing nothing, returning again and again to the
cryptarch
heart, where there is no progress and each new physical
engine
threatens the soul's equilibrium. At the words of Argus
he paled, though I'd heard him express, himself,
thoughts twice as grim.
âNot true,' he shouted. He clutched my shoulder, pointed
at a glode
where blue burst through with a serenity like violence.
The gods see more than we mortals dream. I tell you,
Jason,
and swear to it too, these seas that fill us with terror
are alive
with nymphs, pale nereids sent here by Hera. They
leap like dolphins,
running on the reefs and breaking waves, fanning our
sails
with the swing of invisible skirts; and the hand of the
tiller is the hand
of Thetis herself, sweet nereid wife of Lord Peleus. Whatever the bluster of the wandering rocks, we need
not fear them.
The world is more than mechanics. If that weren't so,
we'd be wrecked
long since!' In a sea of choices, none of them certain,
I chose
to believe him. We kept her upright, scudding with the
wind, accepting
any opening offered. Whatever the reason, we came to quiet seas and sunlight, for which we thanked the
gods,
on the chance they'd had some hand in it. It was not