Wrath of the Furies (19 page)

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Authors: Steven Saylor

BOOK: Wrath of the Furies
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The Grand Magus thought about this. “You planned to go to the Temple of Artemis—is that correct, Agathon?”

I nodded.

“Then I say, let him go to the temple. If the goddess sees fit to cure him of his muteness, then this is not the man for us. On the other hand, if he makes propitiation to Artemis but remains mute, then we may take that as a sign that Agathon of Alexandria is indeed the mute witness we seek. Would you agree, Your Eminence?”

“Heartily! As high priest of the goddess, I think it proper that Artemis should have her say in the matter. That will make the ritual all the more definitive. Do you agree, my fellow Megabyzoi?”

A great many yellow headdresses nodded ever so slightly around the room, like long-stalked flowers stirring in a breeze.

“Do you agree also, Magi of the royal court?”

All the Magi nodded. The jewels on their turbans sparkled in the lamplight.

“Then it is agreed. Tomorrow morning, the Grand Magus and I will escort young Agathon of Alexandria to the Temple of Artemis. There, he shall make supplication to the goddess to restore his power of speech. And we shall see the result.”

The Great Megabyzus swept his gaze around the room. Satisfied that the agreement of his fellows was unanimous, he looked me up and down a final time, then turned to the chamberlain. “Help the mute witness get dressed, then escort him back to his quarters.”

 

XV

[From the secret diary of Antipater of Sidon:]

Late in the day, a messenger arrived at the house of Eutropius to summon me to the royal palace.

Am I allowed to use the main entrance, so that I may see and be seen by the other dignitaries in the grand vestibule? No! I must come in by the back door, tramping through the lower level where mimes loiter and jugglers practice. I passed a group of giggling dancing girls clad in flimsy gowns that left very little to the imagination. They have no manners. One of them asked me if my beard was real, and gave it a tug. She thought I was an actor!

A chamberlain (I don't remember which one; there are scores of these nameless fellows, all busy running the royal household) escorted me upstairs, not to a ceremonial hall or throne room, but to a small chamber that appeared to be part of the king's private quarters. The king stood on a small balcony, his back to me. He wore a simple tunic, though the white and purple fillet remained on his head. I noticed that the cloak of Alexander was nearby, folded atop a small table. To my surprise there was no one else present, not even a bodyguard or scribe. When the chamberlain withdrew, I was alone with the king.

My heart pounded in my chest—not a pleasant sensation for a fellow as old as I am. Why was there no one else in the room? All sorts of wild ideas raced through my head. Did the king wish to apologize to me for the shameful way I had been treated? That was certainly something he would want no one else to overhear. Yes, that might be it, I thought—or … was he for some reason angry with me, so angry he planned to throttle me with his own hands, and wished to have no witnesses?

Killing a man by his own hand was not beyond him. Nor was cold-blooded murder, committed before thousands of witnesses. Everyone knows the old story of how he murdered his own nephew, young King Ariarathes of Cappadocia, when the two were on the brink of war and met face-to-face in front of their troops. First, they both laid down their weapons, so as to meet unarmed, but Ariarathes, sensing treachery, insisted that his uncle be searched. When the man patting him down came near his crotch, Mithridates snidely said, “Take care, lest you should find another sort of weapon down there,” and the man drew back—just as Mithridates intended, for concealed next to his genitals was a slender knife. The two kings drew close. Mithridates put his arm around his nephew's shoulders, and before Ariarathes could say a word, Mithridates pulled out the knife and slit his throat. While the young king writhed on the ground and bled to death, Mithridates picked up Ariarathes's crown and placed it on the head of his eight-year-old stepson, and no one, including the army of the murdered king, dared to oppose him.…

With such images in my head, you may understand why I was so fearful at being in the king's presence, especially in circumstances that seemed irregular. Night was falling, and the room was dimly lit. As the king turned to face me, I looked first at his hands to see if they held a weapon or some instrument of punishment—they did not—then at his face. His expression was somber, but not angry.

I lowered my face and began to bow.

“You can dispense with the groveling,” he said. “There's no one here to see it. Besides, I can hear the cracking of your joints, and the sound is most unpleasant.”

I began to apologize for making such a noise, but the king interrupted me. “What do you know about the Furies?” he asked.

“I beg Your Majesty's pardon?”

“The Furies—what do you know about them?”

“I'm not sure … I mean … Your Majesty is aware that I am not a priest or wise man—”

“Great Zeus, man! I have priests and wise men running out my ears! If I lined them up outside this door and gave each one an hour to talk to me, I'd still be listening to them a month from now. Of course I know you're not a priest. You call yourself a poet, don't you?”

I sighed. “Perhaps, if Your Majesty would give me a chance to recite some of my work, Your Majesty would call me a poet, too.”

He laughed. Harsh as it was, the sound of that laughter caused me to relax a bit. “Perhaps I would. But that's not what you're here for. Poets are like priests in a way, aren't they? They know things that others don't—see what others do not. Well, then—have you ever seen a Fury?”

“I have not.”

“Ha! Neither have any of the Megabyzoi or Magi I've talked to. Yet they seem to know a great deal about these Furies. What do
you
know about them, poet?”

I thought about this for a moment.

“For one thing, there are those who believe it's unlucky even to speak of them, or say their names aloud.”

“But speak of them you will, because I command you!”

I racked my memory, and recited back to him all I could remember about the Furies. The winged sisters are three in number: Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. They are older than Zeus and the other Olympian gods, having been born from the blood of Uranus when his son Kronos castrated him. They dwell among the dead in Tartarus, but are sometimes drawn to earth to punish certain kinds of wickedness. Once they find the mortal culprit, they hound him relentlessly, circling him and shrieking, striking him with brass-studded scourges. To be forced to see their hideousness is itself a punishment. They have snouts like dogs, bulging, bloodshot eyes, and snakes for hair. Their bodies are as black as coal, and they flit through the air on batlike wings.

I recited for him various lines from the poets and playwrights having to do with the Furies. He paced back and forth on the balcony, not looking at me. When I could recall no more about the subject, I fell silent for a long moment, then dared to speak again.

“Why does Your Majesty wish to know about the Furies, if I may ask?”

“That's none of your business!” he snapped. He stopped his pacing and gazed at the first stars to appear in a sky of darkest blue. “But you'll know soon enough—if you don't know already! It's supposed to be a secret, known only to those who need to know, but with a scheme of this magnitude, there are always rumors flying about.”

“Rumors?” I said, as innocently as I could, for I was remembering what Eutropius had told me, about being enlisted to help organize a massacre of unprecedented proportions—the slaughter in a single day of every Roman still alive in the territories conquered by the king. If such a scheme could be realized, tens of thousands of men and women—frightened, unarmed, guilty of no crime—would be murdered in a matter of hours.

“Why do I ask about the Furies? I have been advised by the leading religious authorities—Persian as well as Greek—that a certain ritual sacrifice must be carried out before this … secret event … takes place. The exact timing of this event was determined by my astrologers. But before the event, there must be the sacrifice. Otherwise…”

He was silent for so long that I dared to whisper, “‘Otherwise,' Your Majesty?”

“Otherwise, the enormity of the event may rouse the Furies … may incur their anger … may cause the full, dreadful, unthinkable wrath of the Furies to be unleashed against
me,
not against my enemies.”

“And if the ritual sacrifice
is
properly carried out?”

“Then the Furies will be propitiated. If their wrath is stirred, it will be in my favor, like a wind against a runner's back. The Furies will be on my side when … the event … takes place. The wrath of the Furies will be unleashed not against me, but against…”

Your victims,
I thought—for surely he was speaking of the tens of thousands of Romans who were to die at his command. By making a sacrifice to the Furies, he intended to harness the very power that might otherwise be directed against the slayer of those victims. Instead of punishing the perpetrator of the slaughter, the Furies would sate their hunger for human suffering by taking part in the slaughter. Mithridates would receive the blessing of the Furies, not their curse.

Mithridates was an even greater monster than I had imagined. And yet … if he could truly harness and direct the terrible rage of the Furies, was he a monster, or something more closely approaching a god? The king turned toward me, saw the awe on my face, and smiled.

“From the look on our face, Zoticus of Zeugma, I think perhaps I've given you the inspiration for a poem.”

What sort of poem would that be? I wondered. What epic would celebrate the slaughter of innocents? What words could capture the amazement and horror I felt in the presence of a man who intended to bend the will of the Furies?

He sighed wearily, and suddenly looked not like a god at all, but simply a tired man of middle age at the end of a long day. “You haven't been very helpful to me, poet. Or perhaps you have. This is the first time I've stated out loud what I expect to achieve with the sacrifice in the Grove of the Furies. My mind is clearer than before. Yes, I see my path more plainly now. You may go.”

Reflexively, I bowed as I retreated, and saw him wince at the noise made by my creaking joints.

Outside, the chamberlain awaited me in the hallway. Two men were walking toward us. I gasped a little when I recognized Metrodorus of Scepsis, the Rome-Hater. With him was the Roman exile, Rutilius—the Roman without a toga, as I shall always think of him.

The two were deep in conversation. I heard a few scattered words, something to do with “logistics” and “weapons to be used” and—at this my ears pricked up—“the problem of disposing of all those bodies.”

Then, quite clearly, I heard Rutilius say, “Burn them, bury them, take them out to sea and dump them overboard! I'm more concerned about what's to be done with all the personal effects—jewelry and coins and such. It mustn't descend to simple looting and chaos—”

Rutilius at last took notice of me, and fell silent. He gave me a quizzical look. Did I look vaguely familiar? Had he seen me across a room on some occasion, back in Rome? I was certain we had never been introduced.

Nor were we to be introduced now. Metrodorus spoke to the chamberlain. “Don't just stand there, man. The king is expecting us. Go in and announce us.” He stared at the ceiling for a moment, then turned to look me in the eye.

Without thinking, I spoke his name aloud, as one sometimes does in the presence of a famous man. “Metrodorus the Rome-Hater!”

He smiled rather grimly and nodded. “And who are you?”

“Nobody,” I said. “Nobody at all.”

The chamberlain showed them into the room and announced them to the king, then withdrew. Without a word he escorted me back the way we had come, all the way out of the palace. I was not even fed dinner with the entertainers and buffoons below stairs.

[Here ends this fragment from the secret diary of Antipater of Sidon.]

 

XVI

After the examination by the Magi and Megabyzoi, on the way back to my quarters, again I thought I saw Antipater.

I was following the chamberlain, lost in thought, when I happened to look down a hallway that opened to our left. In the passageway parallel to ours I saw—for only a moment, since they were heading in the opposite direction—another chamberlain escorting a man with a white beard. I was certain this was the man I had seen before. I was almost certain it was Antipater.

I very nearly called his name, but bit my tongue. I tugged at the chamberlain's cloak.

“What are you doing?” he snapped. “Your room is this way.”

I gestured with some urgency my desire to go the other way.

“If it's a latrina you need, that's in this direction, as well.” He grabbed my arm.

I broke from his grip and headed down the adjoining hall, walking fast. When I reached the spot where I thought I had seen Antipater, I turned and headed in the direction they had been walking. I went for some distance, looking up and down the intersecting hallways. The gray-bearded man and his escort were nowhere to be seen.

The chamberlain caught up with me. “If you keep running off like this, I shall assign an armed guard to watch you! What were you thinking, anyway? If only you could speak…” He shook his head. “Now, are you going to follow me or not? Your dinner is this way.”

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