Ben Bova – Orion and the Conqueror

“There is talk,” said Aeschines gloomily, “of making an alliance with Thebes.”

“Thebes!” A stir went around the long table.

“They have the best army outside of Macedonia,” Hephaistion blurted.

“Their Sacred Band has never been defeated,” said dark-skinned Nearkos.

“Well, neither have we,” Alexandros countered.

Harpalos, sitting on Alexandros’ left, made a disappointed frown. “Maybe we haven’t been defeated in battle, but the king has walked us away from victories. Perinthos isn’t the first city that we’ve besieged without taking.”

Alexandros’ face started to turn red with anger. Aristotle spoke up. “Philip has gained more cities at the parley table than on the battlefield,” he said mildly. “That is the art of a true king: to win without bloodshed.”

“There will be blood between Athens and us,” Alexandros predicted, his anger barely under control.

“I fear you’re right,” Aeschines agreed. “Demosthenes will not stop until he has them marching against the barbarians.”

“Barbarians?”

“You,” he said directly to Alexandros. “He calls you barbarians. And worse.”

Again trying to ward off an explosion, Aristotle said, “To the Athenians, anyone not of their city is a barbarian. The word originally meant stranger, nothing more.”

“But that’s not how Demosthenes uses it now,” Aeschines said.

I could see Alexandros was struggling to control his temper. “I saw him once, years ago,” he muttered. “He came to Pella at the king’s invitation. He was so flustered he became completely tongue-tied. He couldn’t speak a complete sentence.”

“He speaks whole sentences now,” Aeschines said, somberly. “With devastating effect.”

“I must hear him for myself,” Alexandros said through tight lips.

But there was something else the prince wanted to see first. We were all quartered in one large room, all except Aristotle. After supper, as I was preparing for bed, I saw that Alexandros and his Companions were heading for the door, cloaks wrapped around their shoulders, swords at their sides.

“Where are you going?” I demanded.

“To the Acropolis,” Alexandros replied, smiling like a boy setting off on an adventure.

“It’s forbidden. The gates to the Sacred Street are locked.”

“There’s a trail up the cliff side. One of the servants told me of it.”

“You’re going to follow a servant?”

“Yes, why not? I want to see the temples up there.”

“Maybe we’ll raid their treasury.” Ptolemaios laughed.

“Perhaps it’s a trap,” I said.

“We are armed.”

“I’ll go with you.”

“That’s not necessary, Orion.”

“Your father commanded me to take good care of you. If you break your neck climbing the cliff in the moonlight, I’d better jump off and land beside you.”

He laughed as I grabbed my sword and cloak and went with them, thinking that his mother had also ordered me to protect him.

The climb was much easier than I had feared. The moon was bright, although the night wind cut like a razor. The servant turned out to be a young girl, no more than twelve, I guessed. Harpalos had spotted her in Aeschines’ household. I imagined that he intended to reward her by taking her virginity.

We reached the flat top of the cliff without trouble and stood gazing at the Parthenon and the other temples. The Parthenon was absolutely breathtaking: graceful fluted columns, perfect Pythagorean symmetry, wonderful friezes along the roof line so marvelously carved that the cold marble figures seemed almost to come alive. I had seen it before, I realized. It stood, in all its original harmonious balance, in the empty city of the Creators that I had visited in my dreams.

It was wondrously beautiful, especially in the soft silver radiance of the moonlight. And standing in front of it was the giant statue of Athena, warrior goddess and patroness of the city, goddess of wisdom whose sacred symbol is the owl.

We all stood gaping at the marble splendors of temples and statues. All of us except Alexandros. He took everything in with a single glance, then strode purposefully toward the statue of Athena.

I hurried after him.

“They say you can see the sunlight glinting off her spear tip from the harbor of Piraeus,” he told me.

The gigantic statue was clad in ivory. Her upraised spear reached higher than the Parthenon’s peaked roof. In the moonlight Athena towered above us. Her face was painted, her eyes as gray as my own. But empty, blank, cold ivory.

Alexandros started up the temple steps. “There’s a smaller statue inside. They say it’s clothed in gold.”

It was. This statue was merely twice life-size, much more graceful, much more lifelike. In the shadows inside the temple it seemed to glow with an inner radiance. It’s the gold leaf of her robe catching stray moonbeams, I told myself. And then I looked up into her face.

I recognized her. Athena, Anya, Ardra, I had known her under many names in many times and places. Known her and loved her. And she had loved me. But now I was alone in this timeplace, without her, without my love, lost and abandoned.

I felt a cold dark misery enveloping me. I could remember so little, yet I remembered her. The face of this statue was the face of the woman I had loved. No, not a mortal woman. A goddess.

I was a creature, a mortal fashioned by the Creators to do their bidding. I had dared to fall in love with a goddess who had dared to take human form and fall in love with me. And now I was without her.

I strained with every fiber of my being to make that statue stir, to bring it to life, to have her breathe and move and smile at me.

But it remained cold marble sheathed in gold. I could not reach beyond its form to find the goddess it represented.

“Come on,” said Alexandros brusquely. “I’m getting cold. Let’s go back to our beds.”

Feeling as cold and dead as the stone all around us, I followed him back to the house of Aeschines.

CHAPTER 10

The meeting of the Assembly was held in the open air, under the crisp clear blue sky, in the natural auditorium created by the hill slope facing the Acropolis. A huge crowd turned out. Although only free male citizens could vote in the Assembly, there was no law prohibiting the whole city from listening to the orators. I imagined that clever demagogues could work up the crowd to fever pitch and sway the voting citizens with mob passion.

The orators had to compete with the vendors from the market place hawking broiled lamb strips, wine, nuts, even honeyed fruits. And when the wind gusted from the direction of the Agora there were the smells of butchered meat and dried fish in the air. And flies.

The orators’ stand was cut out of the natural rock of the hillside. Off to one side the fifty members of the city council sat on stone benches.

Demades was the first to speak. He was tall and slim, elegant-looking. His powerful deep voice carried well all the way to the rear of the crowd, where I stood with Alexandros and his Companions. I was tall enough to see over the heads of the throng, but Alexandros had to stand on tip-toe and try to see between those in front of us.

“Why should we tax ourselves to fight a man who harbors us no ill-will?” Demades asked. “What do we care of the petty squabbles in the northern lands? Philip has no intention of fighting us; why do we strive against him?”

A voice in the crowd shouted back, “He stole our grain!”

Seeming to ignore the heckler, Demades went on, “This pointless war increases our taxes, drains our treasury, and sends our navy out on foolhardy missions. Philip has no desire to harm us. Even when he seized the grain harvest from our ships he returned it to us in exchange for a city that we neither want nor need.”

He went on for what seemed like hours, stressing the cost of the war against Philip and its pointlessness, pounding home again and again how high taxes had been raised to prosecute the fight against Philip.

“And what have we gained from our sacrifices? Nothing whatsoever. Philip remains in his own land, fighting against his fellow barbarians, not against us.”

I saw Alexandros’ face twitch in an angry tic at the word barbarian as he leaned on the shoulders of Ptolemaios and Hephaistion, both of them a good head taller than he.

At last Demades finished and Demosthenes took the platform. The crowd stirred. This was what they had come for.

He was a small man, with narrow shoulders and a slightly bent posture as he walked slowly to the center of the platform. His hairline was receding, although his hair was still quite dark and his beard thick and bushy. His eyes were deep-set beneath dark brows; I suspected that his beard hid a weak chin. His robe was plain, unadorned white wool. Clasping his hands in front of him, he stood with balding head slightly bowed until the vast throng stilled into absolute silence. I could hear the breeze sighing; a bird chirped in the trees behind us.

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