The Ionia Sanction (6 page)

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Authors: Gary Corby

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BOOK: The Ionia Sanction
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“No.”

“You have to tell me something.”

“Why? Would it get me out of here?”

The dealer said to me, “It’s time.”

The auction commenced. The slave dealer called, “What am I bid?”

A man not far away from me bellowed, “One hundred drachmae!”

Another on the other side of the crowd immediately replied, “One hundred and twenty!”

Someone I couldn’t see shouted, “One hundred twenty-five!”

The crowd murmured in appreciation. That was a decent price for any child, and this auction had barely begun.

They edged each other up, until the third man dropped out and it became a two-horse race. Or rather, a two brothel keeper race. The man closest to me was fat, his chiton was stained with sweat, and he reeked of the sickly sweet incense the brothels use to cover other smells. There was no doubting what he was. I assumed the other man was a competitor, since they seemed to know each other, and both called to the dealer by name.

Finally the one I could see called, “Two hundred and five drachmae!”

Silence.

The owner is often the one to break in a new purchase. This one stared up at the girl and licked his lips; it was obvious he couldn’t wait to get on top of her. After that, he’d turn her over to the clients. The girl stood upright, and stared over the heads of the crowd, her face a mask of nothing.

The slave dealer allowed the silence to continue for heartbeats. He looked back and forth among the crowd. When he spotted me, he raised an eyebrow.

I shook my head.

The girl began to weep.

He called, “For two hundred and five drachmae, going to—”

“Two hundred and fifty drachmae!”

Did I say that?

The dealer didn’t look at all surprised.

The brothel keeper did. I glanced at him, he glanced at me. The brothel keeper licked his lips, called, “Two hundred and fifty-five drachmae!”

“Three hundred drachmae!” I winced at the sound of my own voice.

*   *   *

A poor family could live for a year on what I had paid for the child. Now I owned her, Asia would have no choice but to tell me what I wanted to know, and I couldn’t wait to find out. She was my link to Araxes.

The dealers always hand over a slave with a wristlock so no one can blame them if the slave later escapes. My first action was to unpeg the lock. I wanted her cooperation, I didn’t want to hear coerced lies.

Asia rubbed her wrists and said, “Thank you,” her expression neutral. I couldn’t tell if she was pleased or disappointed to be my property, but there was one thing that had to be sorted out at once.

“Thank you,
master
.”

She looked at me blankly.

“I am your master. You will address me correctly.”

I thought for a moment she would argue, but she seemed to get control of herself and said, “Yes,
master.
” She didn’t quite spit it out.

“Master, are you really an agent?”

“Yes, of course.”

“In that case, master, I want to hire you.”

I laughed. “Asia, I think we might have this master-slave relationship thing around the wrong way.”

“No, I mean it, master. I need you to return me to my father.”

“Your father’s the one who sold you.”

“My father loves me. He’d never sell me.”

Sure he wouldn’t. That’s why I’d found the girl in a slave market. “All right then, I’ll humor you for a moment. Who is your father?”

She drew herself up to her full height, which wasn’t much, and announced, “I swear destruction for the man who enslaved me. As my father did to his enemies, so I follow his example. I am Asia, daughter of Themistocles. My father is Satrap of Magnesia in the name of the Great King, and I am hiring you to take me home.” She paused, then said anxiously, “I’m afraid you’ll have to take payment on delivery.”

 

5

A man of substance dear to his fellows; for his dwelling was by the road-side and he entertained all men.

Was she telling the truth? I didn’t have time to quiz Asia on the spot, I barely had time to deposit her at home before preparing for the symposium. I ushered her in through the front door, having warned her to tell no one her father’s name.

“Where did you get her?” It was Socrates. He’d wandered into the entrance hall, and looked Asia up and down appreciatively. It occurred to me my little brother was growing up.

“She’s a slave. I bought her. Today.”


You
bought her?”

“Yes.”

Socrates inspected my purchase once more, and said, “I wouldn’t want to be in your place when Diotima sees her!”

“Who’s Diotima?” Asia asked.

“His girlfriend,” Socrates said to Asia.

“No, she’s not,” I said. “Diotima will never see her, and anyway I don’t care if she does.”

“That’s bad logic,” Socrates said. “Either you don’t care if Diotima sees her, or else you do care but you’re not worried they’ll meet. They can’t both be true; it’s an exclusion principle, you see—”

“Socrates, I need you to do something for me,” I said, cutting him off before he could go on about his principle, whatever it was. “I have to get ready for the symposium. Get Asia some food and a proper tunic, will you? The tunic the slave dealer threw in is so moth-eaten it’s ready to fall apart. She needs something tough enough for travel.” I paused. “Sandals too.” Sandals were a major extravagance for a slave, but I reasoned we had some hard traveling to do.

“Can I take the slave girl to the agora?”

“I have a name, it’s Asia.” She glared at Socrates.

Socrates would be there to watch her, but Socrates … hmm.

I said, “Run along and play, children.”

Asia ran into the street at once. I grabbed Socrates’ arm as he followed her, looked into his eyes, and said firmly, “She was a virgin when I bought her. She better still be a virgin when you bring her back. Got it?”

Socrates grinned. “Yes Nico.”

I washed at the gymnasium and had a barber cut my hair and shave me. One doesn’t call upon the mighty without looking one’s best, especially if one is as low as one can get and still be a citizen.

My mother’s slaves laundered my best chiton. It was a rush job, so the smell of the laundry still hung about the cloth—they use urine to bleach, and it lingers—but they sprinkled me with scented water that almost erased the smell. The chiton was tied about my waist with clean ceremonial rope, into which strands of blue ribbon had been threaded. The only sandals I owned were old, scuffed, and had been soaked in blood on more than one occasion. I sent a male slave to the agora with my old sandals for comparison, and orders to buy a decent pair of formal wear. The ones he returned with were pretty, made of highly polished light leather with silver buckles, and minutely embossed with a Dionysiac scene. They would fall apart after a day’s hard walking, and cost five times what my sturdy pair had done. I sighed and reflected that the slave had done exactly what I’d ordered. Next time I would think before I sent a slave to market with general instructions.

Callias rose as I was shown into his courtyard. He was graying, well dressed, and manicured, showing none of the paunch an older man might acquire. Callias made his money mostly from renting slaves to the silver mines run by the state. That was his private business, but he was also a man who took part in public affairs. He was probably Athens’ most experienced diplomat, and certainly the smoothest.

He gave me a broad smile and said, “Nicolaos, so good to see you. Pericles told me you were coming. I’m glad.”

The home of Callias is remarkable for its size, and its beautiful courtyards and garden.

“I could work for a hundred years and never afford the equal of this,” I said, looking around in appreciation.

“You are too kind.”

“Merely realistic.” I paused for a moment, not sure how to broach the subject. “Callias, did Pericles tell you why he asked me here?”

“Pericles has told me everything. It was I who suggested he invite you. Now hush, don’t mention it until after dinner. I think you will enjoy your fellow guests. Among them will be Anaxagoras, the philosopher. You may know he’s a friend of Pericles. The others are my son Hipponax and his friend Telemides. Hipponax is a good lad and in high spirits. He’s recently married.”

At that moment Pericles and Anaxagoras were announced and walked into the courtyard side by side. Pericles nodded his head to Callias, turned an ice-cold smile on me, and uttered a few simple words; Anaxagoras greeted his host by taking Callias’ hands and quoting Homer, “‘A man of substance dear to his fellows; for his dwelling was by the road-side and he entertained all men.’ Thank you, dear Callias, for this invitation. Would that Homer were alive today so that he could describe you in such language.”

Hipponax and Telemides arrived before Anaxagoras could continue with more flowery words, and we all settled onto our couches. It was a warm night so they’d been moved into the courtyard and torches lit. Slaves brought out scented garlands, which we placed around our heads, and cups of aromatic wine. A flute girl emerged from the colonnades and played something soft and lilting.

Slaves brought in the first of the dishes: plates of fish, eels, octopus, vegetables, and two hares. We ate with little conversation, as is the custom. Revelry waits upon the removal of the dishes.

As we ate, I looked sideways with interest at Anaxagoras. He was a famous man, not for his wealth, politics, or military prowess, but because Athens had never seen his like before: a professional philosopher, a man who earned his living by telling other men what he thought of things, as if his views were better than anyone else’s. Everyone knew Pericles funded Anaxagoras. The philosopher had arrived in Athens five years ago and attached himself to the young politician long before he had risen to the top. Was it luck, or had Anaxagoras seen something in Pericles right from the start?

The philosopher wore a rather bushy beard but was half bald. What hair he had on top and his beard were a light brown, almost blond. His eyes were a dark blue, his manner lively, and his paunch particularly visible as he lay upon his dining couch. I guessed him to be about forty years old, or perhaps a little older. That made him five to ten years older than Pericles.

Anaxagoras belched and declared, “Callias, my friend, that was the most delightful meal I have enjoyed in a long time. Thank you.” He turned to me and stage-whispered, “A philosopher should always praise his host. The Gods know where his next meal is coming from.”

Socrates stood as my attendant, behind my couch. Even without turning my head I could feel him taking all this in.

Slave boys carried a krater into the middle of the gathering. Callias, as host, would be the symposiarch, who would determine the ratio of water to wine to be poured in. A symposiarch controlled the nature of the evening with this single decision.

Callias ordered the boys, “I think we will begin with three to one.” Three parts water to one of wine meant a refined, cultured evening of discussion rather than a raucous party, but with enough wine to keep everyone glowing happy. The boys poured water and wine into the krater and stirred slowly before handing out cups. I took my first sip. The wine was excellent, heavily spiced with fenugreek.

“This is excellent, Callias, as good as anything we have at home,” Anaxagoras said as he swirled the wine in his cup.

“Anaxagoras comes to us from the other side of the Aegean Sea,” Callias said to me. “From the city of Clazomenae.”

Anaxagoras sighed. “Oh, for my own estates and my own wine. I miss them so.”

“Have you ever considered going home, Anaxagoras?” I asked. Perhaps if he went, Athens might lose its obsession with philosophy.

He looked at me in surprise and said, “Do you know why I moved to Athens?”

“I imagine because Athens is richer, and you were more likely to find a host here to act as your patron.”

He snorted. “It was to save my skin. The Persians wanted me dead after the Hellenes of Ionia rebelled thirty years ago. The Persians crushed the revolt and then went looking for the troublemakers who started it. One of them was me.”

“Every city rebelled?”

“Every city under Persian rule, which meant all the provinces on the Asian side of the Aegean Sea. All except Ephesus. The Ephesians decided to remain quiet and subservient. The reward for their cowardice was permission to govern themselves. They have the illusion of freedom as long as they do nothing to offend the Great King.”

“The Athenians supported the revolt,” said Callias. “But alas, it came to nothing. Many of our friends suffered.”

“I had a fine house, a farm for olives and another for sheep, an orchard, and a vineyard. It’s all gone. Fortunately I have my philosophy to sustain me.” Anaxagoras knocked back his wine and called for more.

The slave boys mixed more wine, and I took a moment to admire the krater. Like everything else in the house of Callias, it was a thing of beauty. The krater was painted with red figures and showed a battle scene, Hellenes fighting in phalanx against Persians.

Callias said, “I see you are admiring my krater, Nicolaos. It comes from the workshops of Ceramicus. I commissioned it years ago from Hieron the potter and had Makron paint the scenes to my direction. He was a touchy man, old Makron.”

Callias had named two of the greatest craftsmen of the past generation. This pot was worth more than most houses.

He was still speaking. “I couldn’t make a single suggestion without touching off his temperament. Why is it so many artists must be temperamental? Your own artistic father is a delight to deal with. All I wanted was a particular scene.”

“It’s very beautiful. But what is particular about the scene?”

“Look closely.”

I did. Something was odd about the Hellenes in the scene, but for a moment I couldn’t put my finger on it. Then I inspected the leading figure in the phalanx. He carried a spear and hoplon shield like all the others, but he wasn’t wearing armor. In fact, he was dressed in the robes of a priest.

I laughed. “Oh, Callias, this is the battle at Marathon, and the man leading the charge is you.”

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