Ben Bova – Orion and the Conqueror

“I will stand watch outside the tent, then.”

He nodded.

“Do you want to leave and return to your own quarters?” I asked.

“The king has commanded me to stay with him. I am a general of the army now, he says, and I must be part of all the conferences that the generals attend.”

I looked around the tent. Philip had clutched one of the serving girls around the waist. With his free hand he was beckoning to another of them.

“It doesn’t appear that military strategy will be discussed this night,” I said.

Before Alexandros could reply, Philip staggered toward us, half supported by the two serving girls.

“We’ve won!” he said drunkenly to his son. “Why aren’t you celebrating?”

“I am celebrating, sir,” replied Alexandros. “I am with you.”

Philip grunted. “I suppose you’d rather be with your own Companions, eh? I’ll bet Ptolemaios’ got a girl or two with him.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised,” Alexandros said.

“But Hephaistion won’t. He’ll be waiting for you, won’t he?”

“Yes. Of course.”

Taking a deep breath, Philip clutched the two young women closer to him. Then he asked, “D’you know what we’ve won today, my son?”

“A great battle.”

“No, more than that.” Philip wagged his head from side to side. “We’ve won peace, my boy. Peace! There is no other power in all of the Greek states to oppose us. Macedonia is safe now. We can dictate terms to the Athenians and stop them from nibbling at our coastal cities. The tribes of the north and those savages in the Balkans will all calm down now, because they know we can turn our full power against them whenever we choose to. We’ll have peace, Alexandros, for the first time since I took the throne.”

Alexandros’ brows knit. “But what about the Persians?”

“They’ll accept us as supreme in Europe, we’ll accept them as supreme in Asia. That will do it.”

“But—”

“I know, I know. There’s the Greek cities in Ionia. Dareios will tax them lightly, you’ll see. He has enough troubles holding his empire together without stirring up the Ionian cities.”

Alexandros rose to his feet. I realized that, short though he was, he was the same height as his father. Somehow Philip had always given the impression of being taller, even when his bad leg made him stoop.

“We are destined to conquer the Persian Empire. It’s my fate,” Alexandros said.

Philip grinned crookedly at him. “Perhaps it is your fate, young godling. But my fate is to rule a strong and secure Macedonia. When you’re king—if you are accepted as king after me—you can go off and conquer the whole world. If the army will follow you.”

I saw Alexandros’ hands tightening into fists. His face went red. Not trusting himself to speak another word, he brushed past his father and the two young women supporting him and strode out of the tent. I followed him into the cool night air.

Behind us, Philip lurched and staggered through the tent’s entrance, shouting, “We’ve won the peace, young fool! I’ve worked all my life for this and I’m not going to ruin it now. I’m not going to let anybody ruin it!”

Alexandros stalked off into the night, with me trailing dutifully behind him.

Among the spoils the soldiers collected from the battlefield was a large round shield, painted blue, with the word “With Fortune” lettered on it. When Alexandros heard of it, the morning after the battle, he ordered the shield brought to his tent—and the man who had found it, as well.

“Was the man whose shield this was also found on the battlefield?” he asked the young man. He was a Dardanian shepherd’s son who had joined the army as a slinger.

“No, sire,” said the youngster, clutching his felt cap in both hands, half bent over into a sort of bowing posture before the Little King. He might have been a year or so older than Alexandros, but he seemed much less sure of himself than the prince.

“The shield was found by itself?”

“Yes, sire. The man who owned it must have thrown it away as he fled from our phalanxes.”

“I will keep it,” said Alexandros. Turning to the servant at his left hand, he ordered, “Give this lad coins to make up for the value of the shield.”

The young Dardanian bowed and thanked his way out of the tent, beaming. He had never seen so much money in his life.

Alexandros called me from my post at his tent’s entrance and pointed to the shield, resting against his table.

“This is Demosthenes’ shield.”

“Yes,” I agreed.

An icy smile flickered across his lips. “I would enjoy returning it to him.”

“Assuming he survived the battle.”

“Oh, he survived, all right. He threw down his shield and ran for his life. He probably ran all the way back to Athens.”

Philip, merciless in battle, was generous in victory. He called Alexandros to his tent to discuss with his generals the peace terms he would exact.

“We will put a garrison of picked men into the acropolis of Thebes,” he said flatly. “That will keep the city under control.”

“That,” added Parmenio, “and the fact that their army no longer exists.”

“Their Sacred Band fought almost to the last men,” Antigonos said, a bit of awe still in his voice.

Philip gave a snort. “Yes, they’ll be celebrated in poems for all time to come. All we’ve got is the victory.”

Everyone laughed. Except Alexandros. I could see that he was still smoldering over his father’s pronouncement of the previous night.

“So what do you propose to do about Athens?” Parmenio asked.

“I want to send you, Alexandros,” Philip replied, “into Athens to give them my terms.”

“Which are?” asked Antigonos.

“They must sign a treaty that promises they will not make war against us again. They must recognize that we control the coastal cities up to and including Byzantion.”

“And?”

“That’s all.”

“That’s all?” Antigonos challenged. “Don’t you want to install your own men in their government? Don’t you want them to lay out their silver to pay for the cost of this war?”

Parmenio winked and said, “At least we can parade the army through their city.”

“None of that,” said Philip, quite seriously. “They’re beaten and they know it. If we rub their noses in it they’ll resent it and start a new war as soon as they’re able to.”

“They’ll do that anyway,” mumbled Parmenio.

Philip shook his head. “No, I don’t think so. Demosthenes and his war party are discredited now. Their democracy will turn on them and toss them out of power, maybe exile them from the city.”

“I’d rather see him hanging from his golden throat,” Antipatros said.

“All I want from Athens is that they leave us in charge of the seaports and stop making war against us.”

“And what about the Persians?” Alexandros asked, his voice as thin and hard as a knife blade.

“The Great King will make his settlement with us. If we offer no threat to him, he’ll offer no threat to us.”

“For how long?”

Philip fixed his son with his one good eye. “For as long as we control all of Greece. Which will be for as long as I sit on the throne of Macedonia.”

I wondered. Philip had forged a powerful instrument in his army, and armies need enemies to fight. Otherwise they go to rot. Or worse, their officers begin to scheme against the king. Still, I could not see Parmenio or Antipatros or One-Eyed Antigonos plotting to overthrow Philip.

Alexandros, however, was a different matter. And there was his mother to consider.

This time Alexandros entered Athens openly. No disguises, no deception. He rode bareheaded in a gold-leafed chariot pulled by a brace of magnificent white stallions, followed by his Companions, all mounted on their war chargers, and then a squadron of the heavy cavalry that had crushed the Thebans.

The whole city turned out to see the boy-hero of Chaeroneia. If they resented the Macedonian conquest of their army they did not show it. The narrow winding streets of Athens were thronged with citizens shouting and waving to Alexandros, even throwing flowers. Many of these men must have been marching against us in the battle, I thought. Many of the women must be widows because of Chaeroneia. How can they cheer for their conqueror?

Perhaps because they were still alive, I reasoned, and not enslaved. Philip did not pursue the fleeing Athenian hoplites as ruthlessly as he might have. Instead of harrying them to their deaths he turned his phalanxes against the Thebans, coming to the aid of us in the cavalry.

Apparently the news of Philip’s lenient terms had already been spread through the city. They thought he admired Athens, revered it so highly that he felt himself too humble to enter the city himself. Actually Philip was busy settling with Thebes and the other cities that had arrayed themselves against him. He was working at a king’s tasks; he had no time for glory and adulation.

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