Glyn Iliffe - King of Ithaca (Adventures of Odysseus)
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- Название:King of Ithaca (Adventures of Odysseus)
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- Издательство:Macmillan Publishers UK
- Жанр:
- Год:2009
- ISBN:9780230744486
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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‘You did a brave thing,’ he said. The others murmured their agreement. ‘After you escaped Odysseus told us it was him, not you, who had been in Penelope’s room, and that your sacrifice probably saved his life. I wonder how many of us would have done the same.’
‘You all would have,’ Eperitus said, dismissing the compliment. ‘Now, is someone going to tell me who these others are?’
‘They’re Spartans,’ said Damastor, stepping forward and offering his hand. ‘Tyndareus lent them to Odysseus as a wedding gift, to help him retake Ithaca.’
This was the moment Eperitus had thought about and dreaded more than any other since waking that morning. Should he refuse Damastor’s gesture of friendship and denounce him as a traitor in front of everybody, without the slightest proof to support his accusation? Or should he keep silent and bide his time, waiting for some evidence that Clytaemnestra was right? After a moment of doubt, he decided the latter would be the wisest course of action and took Damastor’s hand.
Soon after, the march to the sea resumed. Odysseus did not return to the chariot, but walked beside Eperitus. The matter of his sudden appearance still needed explanation, he said.
‘Does it?’ Eperitus asked. ‘You of all men should know I’m a man of my word. I offered you my loyalty and now it’s my duty to help you restore Ithaca to Laertes’s rule. Did you really expect me to let you and these clumsy oafs you call warriors fight Eupeithes alone?’
‘Of course I didn’t,’ he laughed. ‘But I should really like to know where you hid yourself these past few days, and what you lived on. And just how did you ghost into the palace armoury and retrieve your own weapons?’
‘That’s a story I’ll keep to myself,’ Eperitus replied, thinking of Clytaemnestra and knowing that the mere mention of her would reveal everything to Odysseus’s clever mind. ‘But you must answer a question for me: how do you intend to retake Ithaca with the force you have? These Spartans look like good men, fully armed and battle-hardened, but the Taphians aren’t children either. We were lucky to beat the ones that ambushed us, and from Mentor’s account their army on Ithaca is at least twice our number.’
‘The people of Ithaca will come to our aid,’ Odysseus began. ‘They may only be fishermen and farmers, but they love their country and they’re loyal to their king – that’s more powerful than the gold Eupeithes pays to his Taphians. But Athena’s the one I’m counting on.’ He dug into his pouch and brought out the clay owl the goddess had given him. ‘Her spear and aegis are worth a thousand men each, and when I use this to call on her no power on earth will be able to save Eupeithes.’
Darkness began to fall before they reached the coast, putting an end to the day’s journey. As the others made camp for the night Eperitus and Antiphus gathered wood and built a fire. The archer sniffed the air and announced that the sea was only a quick march away. Although Eperitus did not possess his seafarer’s senses, the gulls flocking about their camp in the twilight seemed to confirm his verdict.
‘I know the coast around here,’ Antiphus added. ‘The river empties out beside a large fishing village. I stopped there once when I was a lad on a merchant ship, and I remember we came inland to buy livestock for the voyage home. We might even have come this far, though it was a long time ago and it’s difficult to recognize a place in this sort of light.’ He looked about at the rocky hills on either side. ‘But it feels familiar, you know, and if I’m right there’s a temple to Athena nearby.’
‘What’s that you say, Antiphus?’ Odysseus asked, who was standing nearby and watching the last of the sunset over the peaks of the Taygetus Mountains.
‘A temple of Athena, my lord, on a hilltop not far downstream from here. It wasn’t very big, as I remember, but you’d easily catch its silhouette if there’s any light left.’
‘Then I’m going to look for it,’ Odysseus said. ‘I’ll be back by the time it gets dark.’
‘My lord!’ Eperitus said, noticing Damastor amongst a group of Ithacans preparing food nearby. ‘Surely you’re not going alone? At least let me accompany you.’
‘Eperitus, if I’d needed a nursemaid I’d have brought old Eurycleia with me. Now, sit down by the fire and stop worrying about me.’
Eperitus felt uneasy as he watched his friend go. Soon he and Antiphus were joined by the other Ithacans, Damastor amongst them. The blaze was already puffing burning embers into the evening air and a few early moths were attracted into its circle of light. One of the Spartans, a tall, bearded man by the name of Diocles, came over and politely requested a brand from their fire. There were too many of them to share a single fire, so Eperitus helped him carry some burning logs over to the stack of wood his comrades had constructed and soon had it ablaze. The Spartans thanked him and he returned to his own group.
The last embers of the day were burning over the western hills, leaving an insipid pink stain on the sky that gave warning of an even warmer day to come tomorrow. But the faint glow was rapidly succumbing to the deep blue of evening and the stars were already beginning to gleam and twinkle at every point on the horizon. As Eperitus watched them his thoughts turned to Penelope, who was in a makeshift tent with her slave Actoris, over by the tethered horses. He was wondering whether she would join them that evening when he was struck by a sudden sensation that something was wrong. It was a feeling of growing fear, though he could not think what had caused it. He looked about and instinctively put a hand on the hilt of his sword, but there was nothing. Then he knew. He looked once around the circle of faces, illuminated orange by the fire, and his heart sank into his stomach. Damastor was gone.
Odysseus propped his sword against the outside wall of the temple and walked in. The doorway was so low he had to dip his head to enter, and once inside he saw it was little more than a simple, unadorned country altar. There were no anterooms, no columns supporting the broken, sagging roof, no elaborate murals on the flaking walls and no rich ornaments to lend it the required sense of divine majesty. It was perhaps a quarter the size of the great hall in his father’s palace and boasted nothing more than a pitted stone altar at the far end. This was watched over by a badly formed midget effigy, which he could only assume was meant to represent Athena.
The stub of a torch had been lodged in a groove upon the wall to his right. It was sputtering its last as Odysseus entered, but by its wavering light he could tell that the chamber was empty. A bunch of early spring flowers lay to either side of the altar, which along with the torch were the only signs that the temple had been visited in months. Even they were probably the work of a lone peasant or local holy man, whose daily duty it was to light the single room and attend to its altar.
Odysseus knelt before the clay figurine and eyed it, making a mental comparison between its stunted, grimacing features and the matchless glory of the goddess it represented. But for all its rude art and rough edges he sensed something of Athena had been caught in the representation; compared with the voluptuous, richly curving statuettes of Aphrodite and Hera he had seen in other temples, the figurine’s long body, straight hips and crude breasts reminded him of her boyish masculinity; the jutting brow and the straight nose that shot down from it were every bit as stern as the face of the goddess herself. And as he looked he sensed a new presence filling the temple. Suddenly fearful that the spirit of Athena might be watching him through the thumbed pits of the figurine’s eye sockets, he threw his glance to the base of the altar and closed his eyes.
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