squarely on the forehead,
and Kaanthos, astounded, fell, and his life ran out.
Nor was that
the least of my men to be lost on sandswept Libya. As for Herakles, we found no trace. They all returned; we prepared to set sail for home.
   “And then came Mopsos' time, foreseen by him from the beginning, thanks to his
birdlore. He was
the noblest of seers, for all his peculiarityâ his whimsy, the grime on his fingers, the bits of dried
food in his beardâ
but little good his wisdom did him when his hour
arrived.
   “An asp lay sleeping in the sand, in shelter from the
midday sun,
a snake too sluggish to attack a man who showed no
sign
of hostility, or fly at a man who jumped back. It meant no harm to anything alive, though even a drop of its
venom
was instant passage to the Underworld. Old Mopsos,
chatting
and strolling with Medeia and her maidens, while the
rest of us worked on the ship,
by chance stepped lightly, with his left foot, on the
tip of the creature's
tail. In pain and alarm, the asp coiled swiftly around the old man's shin and calf and struck, sinking its fangs to the gums. Medeia and her maidens shrank in horror.
Old Mopsos
clenched his fists in sorrow. The pain was slight enough, but he knew he was past all hope. He lifted his foot to
free
the asp. Already he was paralyzed, numb. A dark mist clouded his sight, and his heavy limbs fell. In an instant,
he was cold,
his flesh corrupting in the heat of the sun, his hair
falling out
in patches. We dug him a grave at once and buried him. Then went down to the ship, full of woe.
   “With Ankaios dead, no sure helmsman among us, our chances of reaching
Akhaia
were slim. But Peleus took the oar, the father of
Akhilles,
and we drew the hawsers in. There must surely be
some escape
from the wide Tritonian lagoon, we thought. Having no
aim,
we drifted, helpless, the whole day long. The
Argo's
course,
as we nosed now here, now there, for an outlet, was
as tortuous
as the track of a serpent as it wriggles along in search
for shelter
from the baking sun, peeping about him with an angry
hiss
and dust-flecked eyes, till he slips at last through a dark
rock cleft
to freedom. And so we too found freedom. Once in the
open,
we kept the land on our right, hugging the coast. The
sun
was kinder now, though fierce enough. We slept in the
shadow
of rocks by day, and drove the
Argo
by the power of our
backs
from twilight till dawn's first glance. And so wore out
by stages
the curse of Helios.”
   Here Jason paused, looked down, his dark eyebrows knit. The hall was silent, waiting, Kreon leaning on his arms, his gaze intent. I could feel their dread of the man's conclusions.
   He said: “Except, of course, that no manâno houseâwears out a curse by his own
power.
We may with luck propitiate the gods, live through our
trials;
but the offense is still in the blood, and our sons
inherit it,
and our sons' sons, and shadow progeny arching to the
end
of time. I half understood them now, those ghostships
riding
the
Argo's
wake. By some inexplicable accident we were, ourselves, the point of no turning back. We
closed
an age. The Golden Age,' men will call it. They'll honey
it with lies
and hone for it, with languishing looks, and bemoan
their fall
and curse my name and treasonâ¦. Their curses will
not much stir
my dust. I was there; I saw the truth. A childish age of easy glory in petty marauding, of lazy flocks on bluegreen hills where every stream had its nymphs,
each wood
its men half-goat; where the rightful monarch of a
sleepy throne
could be set aside, as was I at Iolkos, and given the
choice
of fighting for his right like a long-horned ram
dispossessed of his gray
indifferent ewes, or accepting the slight humiliation and moving on. I changed the rulesâdeclined the
gauntlet,
made deals, built cunning alliances, ambitious in
secret,
with always one thought foremost: keep to the logic
of nature.
Be true, within reason, to friends, with enemies ruthless.
Be just,
but not beyond reason. Honor the gods and men and
the stones
of the earth, but not to excess. Have faith sufficient to
fight;
beware all expectations.
   “For there is no power on earth but treaty, no love but mutual consentâwhatever the
relative
power of those consenting. Not even the gods are firm of character; much less, then, men. The promise I make, I make to a man who may change, become anathema
to me.
Therefore, be just, recall no vows still meet, but know we sail among wandering rocks. By these few
principlesâ
some known to me at the start, some notâI organized the Akhaians. It would be, from that day forward, powers pitted against powers, the labor of monstrous
machinesâ
at best, a labor for universal good; at worst, perhaps, exploiters faceless as forests, and the cringing exploited,
the forests'
beasts.
   “So riding by night, my hand on Medeia's, I watched the shadowy ships like mountains that followed in our
wake. As before,
Time washed over us in waves. I dreamed it was stars
we sailed,
and our oars stirred dust on the moon, or our shadow
stretched out, prow
to stern, in the shadows that tremble and float down
Jupiter.
At times stiff birds passed over us, roaring, and
mountains took fire.
Medeia, watching at my side, said nothing, and whether
or not
she understood these visions, I could not guess. I told
her
the words I'd heard in my dream, off the isle of Phineus: You
are caught in irrelevant forms. Beware the
interstices.
She studied me, child of magic; could tell me nothing.
Gently,
I covered her hand. Sooner or later, I knew, I'd grasp
that mystery.
I'd pierced a part of it already: it was there at the
intersections
of the billion billion powers of the world that the danger
lay,
and the hope; the gaps between gods, or men, or gods
and men;
the gaps between mindsâmy own and Aiaian Medeia's.
Invisible
gaps at the heart of connectedness, where love and will leaped out, seek to span dark chambers, and must not
fail. I seemed
for an instant to understand her, as when one knows
for an instant
a tiger's mind; the next, saw only her face, her radiant, wholly mysterious eyes. I was not as I was, however, with Hypsipyle on the isle of Lemnos. It was not mere
fondness,
shared isolation that I felt. I put my arms around her as a miser closes his arms, half in joy, half in fear,
around
his treasure sacksâas a king walls in his city, or a
mother
her child. As the raging sun reaches for the pale-eyed, vanishing moon, so Medeia's burning
heart
reached for my still, coiled mind; as the moon reforms
the light
of the sun, abstracts, refines it, at times refuses it,
yet lives by that light as memory lives by harsh deeds
done,
or consciousness lives by the mindless fire of sensation,
so I
locked needs with Medeia, not partner, as I was with
Hypsipyle,
but part. She returned the embrace, ferocious: a wild
off-chance.
Thus as Helios' wrath withdrew we staked our claims, all our curses smouldering still in our blood.
   “And so we came at last by the will of the deathless
gods to Akhaia.
“It wasn't easy, sharing the rule with senile Pelias.
All real power in the kingdom was mine. It was not for
love
of the stuttering, wrinkled old man that Argus devised
the palace
that made us the envy of Akhaia, or built the waterlocks that transformed barrenness to seas of wheat, or built,
above,
the shining temple to Hera that soared up tower on
tower,
mirrored by lakes, surrounded by majestic parks. It was
not
for love of Pelias that Orpheus brought in the mysteries of Elektra to Argos, and made our city of Iolkos chief of the sacred cities of the South. Nor was it for him
that Phlias
created the great dance of Heros Dionysos, which
brought us glory
and wealth and favor of the god of life and death. I
shared
all honors with Pelias, though I'd changed his kingdom
of pigs and sheep
to a mighty state; and I did not mind the absurdity
of it.
And yet he was thorn, a hedge of thorn, and I might
have been glad to be rid of him.
I could move the assembly by a few words to
magnificent notionsâ
things never tried in the world before. I could have
them eating
from my hand, and then old Pelias would rise, wrapped
head to foot
in mufflers and febrile opinions. His numerous chins
a-tremble,
blanched eyes rolling, the tip of his nose bright red, like
a berry
in a patch of snow, he'd stutter and stammer,
slaughterer of time,
and in the end, as often as not, undo my work with a
peevish
No.
Nor was he pleased, God knows, to share the rule with me. He hadn't forgotten the oracle that warned,
long since,
that he'd meet his death by my hand. He couldn't decide,
precisely,
whether to hate and fear me outrightâwhatever my
pains
to put him at easeâor feign undying devotion,
avuncular
pride in my glorious works. At times he would snap like
a mongrel,
splenetic, critical of triflesâinsult me in the presence
of the lords.
I was patient. He was old, would eventually die. His
barbs were harmless,
as offensive to all who heard them as they were to me.
My cousin
Akastos would roll his eyes up, grinding his teeth in fury at his father's ridiculous spite. I would smile, put my
hand on Akastos'
arm, say, âNever mind, old friend.' It drew us closer, his shame and rage at his bumbling father's stupidity. He had, himself, more honor with the people than his
father had,
having sailed to the end of the world with usâa
familiar now
of Orpheus, Leodokos, and the mighty brothers Peleus and Telamon. He'd become, through us, a friend of the hoary centaur Kheiron, and come to
know
the child Akhilles, waxing like a tower and handsome as
a god.
What had Akastos to do with a snivelling, whining old
man,
Akastos who'd stood at the door of Hades, listened to
the Sirens,
braved the power of Aietes and the dangerous Kelts?
The old man
hinted that after his death Akastos should follow him as my fellow king. It was not in the deal; I refused.
Akastos
was furiousânot at me. And now he seldom came to the palace, bitterly ashamed. He remained with
Iphinoe, at home,
or travelled with friends, supporting their courtships
or wars.
   “At times Pelias would drop his peevishness, put on, instead, a pretense of cowering love. He'd sit with his head to
one side,
lambishly timid, and he'd ogle like a girl, admiring me. âNoble Jason,' he'd call me, with lips obscenely wet, and he'd stroke my fingers like an elderly homosexual, his head drawn back, as if fearing an angry slap. His
desire
to please, in such moods, was boundless. He couldn't
find honors enough
to heap on me. He gave me giftsâhis ebony bed (my father's, in fact), jewels, the sword of Atlantisâ
but with each
gift given, his needâhis terror of fateâwas greater
than before.
In the end he gave me the golden fleece itself as proof that all he owned was mine, I need not murder him. He was mad, of course. I had no intention of murdering
him.
And still he cringed and crawled, all bootlicking love.
That too
I tolerated, biding my time.
   “Not all on Argos shared or understood my patience. On the main street, on the day of the festival of Oreithyiaâour chariot
blocked
by the milling, costumed crowdâa humpbacked
beggarwoman
in fetid rags, a shawl hiding all but her hawkbill nose and piercing eyesâa coarse mad creature who sang
old songs
in a voice like the carrion crow's and stretched out
hands like sticks
for almsâleaped up at sight of me, raging, âAlas for
Argos,
kingless these many years! Thank God I'm sick with
age
and need not watch much longer this shameful travesty! We had here a king to be proud of once, a man as
noble beside these pretenders
as Zeus beside two billygoats!
That king and his queen had a son, you think? He
produced what seemed oneâ
an arrogant, cowardly merchantry-swapper with no
more devotion
than a viper. The father's throne was stolenâboldly,