11
Eumenes’ camp sprawled across several
stades of scrub and red dirt, and the smell hit them while they
were still a stade away - raw excrement, human and animal, from
forty thousand people and twenty thousand animals, a hundred of
them elephants. Tents of linen and hide stretched away in
disorderly rows, intermixed with hasty shelters made from branches.
Every tree on the plain was gone, cut by thousands of foragers from
both sides to fuel thousands of fires. The smoke from the fires
rose with the stench.
‘That’s the smell of war,’ Diodorus said. ‘Welcome
to war, lad.’
‘Antigonus’s camp looks bigger,’ Satyrus
said.
‘He has a bigger army. He has every Mede cavalryman
in the east. Asia must be empty - he’s got Bactrians! And Saka!’
Diodorus watched the enemy camp. ‘See the patrol going out? Those
are Saka, with some Macedonians for stiffening.’
The enemy camp was so close that Satyrus could see
the flash of gold from the Saka horses.
‘Why are the Massagetae fighting for my enemies?’
Melitta asked. ‘Someone should speak to them.’
Diodorus shook his head. ‘You are your mother’s
daughter, lass. Why don’t you just ride over there - whoa! That was
what passes for humour around here.’ He had a hand across her
chest. ‘Honey bee, I’m taking you to my wife, and she’s going to
look after you. Greek maidens don’t belong in army camps.’
‘I am not a Greek maiden,’ Melitta said. ‘I am a
Sakje maiden.’
Diodorus took a deep breath and looked at
Philokles.
‘They’re growing up,’ Philokles said. He spread his
hands. ‘I couldn’t stop them.’
Diodorus gave his friend a look that indicated that
he held the Spartan responsible. ‘Let me get you children under
cover,’ he said.
Philokles rode up next to Diodorus. ‘They’ve both
killed,’ he said. ‘They’ve fought and stood their ground.’
Satyrus felt as if he might swell from the
praise.
‘They aren’t children,’ Philokles said.
Diodorus let out another breath. ‘Very well.
Satyrus, would you care to come with me?’
Satyrus nodded politely, and the cavalcade rode
on.
They passed through two rings of sentries to enter
the camp. The outer ring was cavalry, small groups of them spread
wide apart, a few mounted and the rest standing by their horses.
Closer in, spearmen stood in clumps where there was shade. Eumenes
was being careful.
‘Where are the elephants?’ Satyrus asked.
‘The opposite side of the camp from the enemy,’
Diodorus replied. ‘Antigonus made a grab for them last year - nasty
trick. We only just stopped it. We can’t put them with the horses -
horses spook. So they have their own camp where it’s safest.’
‘May I see them later?’ Satyrus asked.
‘I’ll take him, lord,’ Hama said.
Diodorus nodded. ‘Listen, twins. I’m a strategos
here - a man of consequence. I love you both, but we’re a day or
two from the largest battle since Arbela and I won’t have much time
for you. Understand?’
‘What’s the battle about?’ Satyrus asked.
Diodorus looked at him. ‘You really want to
know?’
Satyrus nodded. ‘I know that Eumenes is one of the
contenders for Alexander’s empire, and Antigonus One-Eye is
another. I know that Ptolemy is backing Eumenes because Antigonus
is a bigger danger to Aegypt.’
‘Then you know more than most of my cavalrymen,’
Diodorus said. ‘We’re fighting for the treasury at Persepolis and
the allegiance of the Persian nobles - winner take all. This is the
Olympics, boy - the winner of this battle should be able to
reconquer all Alexander took. Unless—’
‘Unless?’ Melitta asked.
‘What am I, your war tutor? Unless the price is too
high, and the battle wrecks both armies.’ Diodorus squinted south,
into the dust. ‘Eumenes and Antigonus have each beaten the other.
Eumenes is a superb general, but he forgets he’s not a Homeric
hero. Antigonus is not a superb general, but he tends to get the
job done and his preparations are always excellent. Now - is that
enough? I have several thousand men to see to.’
‘Of course!’ Melitta shot back. ‘Do you think we’re
foolish?’
‘I’ll see to them,’ a handsome blond man said. He
made a barbarian bow from his saddle. He had a pair of gold lion
fibulae and gold embroidery on his cloak and a sword that seemed to
be made from a sheet of beaten gold. He was covered in dust.
‘Crax!’ Philokles said. ‘It has been a long
time!’
Crax bowed again, a broad smile dimpling his round
Getae face.
‘You look prosperous,’ Philokles said.
‘I like gold,’ Crax said. He drew his sword and
presented the hilt to Melitta. ‘I was sword-sworn to your mother.
Now I will swear to you - both of you.’
‘That is a beautiful sword,’ Satyrus said.
‘You like it, lord? It is yours,’ Crax said.
Philokles laid a hand on Satyrus’s shoulder. ‘Gift
it back to him,’ he whispered. ‘If you are his lord, he must
give you anything you ask.’
Melitta put her hands on either side of the sword
hilt. ‘You are our man and our knight,’ she said, using the Sakje
words.
Satyrus reversed the sword and handed it back. ‘It
pleases me for you to have this,’ he said. ‘It is one of the finest
swords I’ve seen. As fine as Papa’s.’
Crax took the sword back with pleasure. He turned
to Diodorus. ‘We waited all night, Strategos. We were not
discovered - neither did the gods give us a challenge. We collected
a dozen prisoners and returned by the secret way.’
Diodorus nodded. ‘Get some rest. Crax commands my
scouts.’
Melitta leaned forward. ‘May I ask a question,
Uncle?’
Diodorus nodded, although there were other men
waiting for him under the awning of a striped tent. ‘Go ahead,’ he
said.
‘Where is Ataelus?’ she asked.
‘Off with Leon, searching the oceans for lost
money. Perhaps in the Hesperides fetching golden apples. Not here,
where I need him.’ Diodorus slipped off his big charger, and a
swarm of slaves took his horse and began to take off the tack. As
soon as his feet hit the ground, men fighting for his attention
surrounded him.
‘Take them to Sappho,’ Diodorus ordered. Then he
was lost in his staff.
Crax kept them mounted with the wave of a hand.
‘This is his command tent,’ he said. ‘He sleeps in our camp.
Come!’
They rode off, unnoticed in the masses of soldiers,
servants and slaves who filled the camp. They passed wide streets
and narrow streets, stalls selling produce and wine and a
hide-covered brothel whose occupants were as noisy as the animals
in the street outside, much to Satyrus’s embarrassment and his
sister’s amusement.
The camp was larger - and better populated - than
most of the towns that passed for cities on the Euxine. Satyrus
tried not to stare as they rode, although there was more to
contemplate than you’d ever see in a town - there were no walls and
no courtyards, so that every business was plied in the open. Boys
squatted in front of tents, polishing bronze helmets or putting
white clay on leather corslets to make them whiter. A
sword-sharpener hawked his talents to a pair of Argyraspids, men in
their fifties with shields faced in solid silver and inlaid with
amber and ivory. Phrygian infantrymen stood in groups having just
left an inspection, and a squadron of Lydian lancers cantered by,
shouting and laughing. Their officer wore a garland of roses and he
bowed to Melitta and then blew her a kiss. A porne knelt in the mud
of a street, servicing a client while he dictated orders. A pair of
dirty children sold sweets off a broad leaf.
The twins drank it in as if they had been starved.
Philokles told an abbreviated version of their adventures to Crax,
and introduced Theron, who seemed as stunned as the children at the
spectacle around him.
The Getae man pointed to a magnificent pavilion in
scarlet and yellow that towered over every other tent in the
central area. ‘Banugul,’ Crax said. ‘Remember her?’
Philokles laughed. ‘It’s rather like muster day for
old friends,’ he said. Satyrus couldn’t tell whether he was joking
or not. But his attention drifted when Kallista threw back the
shawl on her hair and immediately drew whistles and more vocal
attention. She smiled on every admirer.
Theron watched her. ‘Going into business?’ he
asked, his voice tense.
She pouted and flipped her shawl back over her
head.
Philokles shook his head. ‘You can’t transform a
porne into a wife overnight,’ he said. ‘And I believe that she is
the slave of my mistress.’
Theron glared at the Spartan. ‘Ahh, the philosopher
is back,’ he said. ‘Perhaps you would like to give me some sage
advice?’
‘I would,’ Philokles said. ‘But you wouldn’t take
it. I scarcely ever take my advice myself - but that doesn’t mean
it isn’t good.’
‘Did you find all this wisdom in your amphora of
wine?’ Theron spat.
‘There, and elsewhere,’ Philokles returned, but the
comment hurt him, Satyrus could tell. ‘She will not do well with
jealousy,’ Philokles said.
‘And you are an expert with women, I find!’ Theron
said. ‘Really, it is a pleasure to have you sober!’
‘Theron, shut up,’ Melitta said. ‘Philokles, please
don’t be offended. Theron is as happy to find you returned without
your ill-daimon as we are. He has forgotten his place and will
apologize. Theron, if you ever wish to lie with my serving maid
again, you’ll apologize.’
Theron shook his head. ‘You are going to be a
formidable woman, Melitta. Mistress. Philokles, I’m sorry.’ He
extended his hand.
The Spartan took it. ‘As am I.’
Kallista glared at all of them from under her
shawl. ‘I was only playing, ’ she said.
Melitta nodded. ‘Ask my permission next time,’ she
said. ‘Your actions reflect on me.’
Satyrus watched it all with admiration, but while
they were dismounting, he said, ‘I thought that you were against
slavery.’
‘I am,’ his sister agreed. ‘But if you are going to
do a thing, do it well. Kallista needs a mother. Since she doesn’t
have anyone but me, I’ll do it as her owner.’
And then they were led into a tent with cool, dark
panels of blue-green canvas.
Sappho - a family friend since they were born -
reclined on a couch, fanned by a pair of children. She sat up as
soon as they were escorted in.
‘Children! I have wine and cakes for you. I heard
that Srayanka is - dead. I’m sorry to be so blunt - my wits are
astray and I’m an old woman.’ She spoke at random, her arms wrapped
around both of them.
Satyrus had forgotten her smell - a wonderful smell
of incense and musk and flowers. No one in the world smelled like
Sappho, and she was as beautiful at forty-five as she had been at
twenty-five, her beauty the outward form of a hard-won happiness.
Her shoulders were held high and her skin soft, her face lined with
both laughter and pain, but more enhanced by the lines than aged,
especially when she smiled. Her eyes were unchanged, large and
liquid.
They both kissed her and allowed themselves to be
held while slaves bustled around them, and then they were taken
away to another tent to be bathed. Satyrus was mortified to be
bathed by women, as if he was a child, but he was clean for
the first time in thirty days. He found his riding boots and a
fresh chiton on a stool and he put them on.
Melitta had beaten him to it, although she seemed
embarrassed to be dressed in a long woman’s chiton and gilded
sandals. To Sappho, she said, ‘I cannot ride like this. Please,
domina - I am not a Greek woman.’
Sappho shook her head. ‘You are while under my
tent, my dear,’ she said. ‘There is likely to be a battle. Women
dressed as men will be in danger.’
Melitta’s brow furrowed. ‘I can be raped to death
as effectively in this kit as in my trousers,’ she shot back.
‘Where did you learn such things?’ Sappho asked.
‘War is awful - but no one is going to be raped to death here. Sold
into slavery is more likely.’ She raised an eyebrow. ‘I would
know.’
‘From my mother,’ Melitta answered. But she had
lost the initiative. Sappho, who had endured the sack of Thebes,
had survived rape and worse, and Melitta had no answer for her
calm.
‘If you wish to go riding,’ Sappho agreed, ‘I will
see to it that you dress appropriately. In the meantime, you will
be a Greek maiden for a while. And that slave of yours?’ she said,
reaching out a long white arm to point at Kallista. ‘She is a
hetaira, not a maidservant. Why do you have her? She’s worth a few
talents.’
‘It is a long story, despoina,’ Satyrus
said. ‘Melitta - inherited her from Kinon, Uncle Leon’s factor in
Heraklea. We promised to free her.’
Sappho crooked a finger at the beautiful girl -
more beautiful still, now that her hair was clean and she had on a
clean gown. ‘Come here, my beauty. Can you dress hair?’ she
asked.
Kallista nodded.
‘And perfumed oil? I imagine you know how to apply
it?’ she asked.
Kallista looked at the ground under her feet.
‘Your mistress came into my tent looking like a
cross between a barbarian warrior and a ragpicker. Do you have any
excuse?’ Sappho asked. She had the other girl’s wrist between her
fingers.
‘Please, mistress! We were in disguise! People
tried to kill us!’ Kallista’s voice was breathy.
‘Hmm,’ Sappho said. She looked at Melitta. ‘I can
give you a far better maidservant and have this one sold. She’d
benefit herself - with that body and voice she’ll be free before
she’s twenty.’ Sappho’s look at the girl was not unkind. ‘You’ll
never purchase your freedom as a maid, dear.’
‘We promised to free her,’ Satyrus said. ‘We owe
her.’
Sappho nodded sharply. ‘Very well. We’ll discuss
this later. Satyrus, you are to go with Crax to see the elephants.
Melitta will stay with me. I see that I have a great deal to catch
up on.’
‘Despoina,’ Satyrus said in his new-found voice,
‘we are not children. Please, Aunt, don’t be offended, but we’ve
spent a month being chased and poisoned. We’ve killed men and seen
- things.’ He kept his voice steady by force of will. ‘Melitta is
not a child. Neither am I.’
Sappho reached out and took their hands in hers. ‘I
hear it in your voices, dears. But it is exactly because you are
not children that I must be so careful, especially with your
sister. She could be married - any day. And her reputation will
matter to her.’
Melitta stamped her foot, which didn’t do her case
any good at all.
Satyrus, feeling like a traitor, slipped out of the
complex of tents with a cleaner Crax by his side. ‘It’s not fair,’
he said to Crax, and to Philokles, who was waiting by the horses,
‘It’s not fair,’ he said again. ‘She’s always been allowed to ride
and hunt. She’s braver than I am!’
Philokles gave him a hard look. ‘I doubt it, boy,’
he said.
Crax shrugged. ‘Greeks hate women,’ he said. He
shrugged again. ‘I don’t know why. Afraid, maybe.’ He smiled.
‘We’ll break her out, lad. But listen. Lady Sappho - well, she’s
the only wife in this camp. There’s some soiled flowers of
various shades, but she’s the only wife. She needs somebody
to talk to. Hear me?’
Satyrus shrugged.
‘Want to see some elephants?’ Crax asked, vaulting
on to his mare’s back.
Satyrus banished thoughts of his sister.
‘Yes!’
The elephants were huge. Not only were they the
largest animals Satyrus had ever seen, they were many times larger
than anything in his experience - horses and camels. They had long,
wicked tusks that looked like curved white swords and they made
noises that all but panicked his horse.
On the other hand, their eyes had a curious
intelligence. ‘Are they as smart as a horse?’ he asked Crax.
‘Fucked if I know,’ the Getae replied. ‘Let’s ask a
mahout. Hey - India-man!’ he shouted at a wrinkled brown man
sitting in the shade.
The elephant-keeper stood from his cross-legged
squat with a foreign elegance and walked over. ‘Master?’ he
asked.
‘Are they intelligent?’ Satyrus asked.
‘Yes,’ the man said, with an odd sing-song
inflection to his Greek. ‘Very smart. Smarter than horse or cow or
dog. Smart like person.’ He patted a big cow-elephant on the
shoulder. ‘Like person, they don’t make war until man teach them.’
He shrugged. ‘Even then, they won’t fight unless they have men on
their backs.’
Hesitantly, Satyrus patted the heavy skin of the
animal’s shoulder. It was criss-crossed with scars. ‘She has been
in battle?’ he asked.
‘Since she was five years. Now she has fifteen
years. Ten big fights and ten more.’ The mahout beamed with pride -
a sad pride, Satyrus thought. He spoke to her in another language -
liquid and rather like a paean, Satyrus thought. She raised her
head.
‘I tell her - battle comes.’ The India-man shrugged
expressively. ‘Men teach them war - but when they make war so
much?’ He shrugged again and smiled. ‘Like a drunk man with wine?
So is an elephant trained to war, and a battle.’
‘War has the same effect on some men,’ Philokles
said.
‘Yes!’ the India-man said. ‘Like elephants, man can
be taught to love anything - even murder.’
‘You’re a strange one, for a soldier,’ Crax said.
He grinned at Philokles. ‘Long-lost brother of yours?’
The India-man had a name, which proved to be
something like Tavi, so Tavi was what they called him. They spent
most of the afternoon roaming the elephant camp, meeting the
beasts. None of them seemed very warlike, despite their size.
‘Let them smell you,’ Tavi said. ‘Let them see you.
Then they know you on the day of battle.’
Satyrus submitted to being smelled, and in some
cases prodded, by elephants. He fed them nuts and grass, delighted
by the manipulations of their trunks and the play of intelligence
in their beady little eyes. ‘I want to be a mahout,’ he exclaimed
with twelve-year-old enthusiasm.
Tavi put him up on the older cow, and he rode on
the beast’s neck with the India-man behind him. He was allowed to
carry the goad, and he tapped the old girl, called Grisna, on her
shoulder and she turned obediently.
‘This is power,’ he said to Philokles and Crax when
he had jumped down from the beast’s neck.
‘More proof, if any were needed, that war is the
ultimate tyrant,’ Philokles said. ‘These beasts are as intelligent
as men.’ He shook his head. ‘More intelligent, in that Tavi says
they won’t make war without men.’
Crax bit his lip. ‘Always you say war is so wrong,’
he said. ‘Why? How do you stop an invader? How do you keep your
freedom? By talk?’
Philokles made a clicking noise with his tongue and
nodded to the Getae. ‘That’s the root of the matter, isn’t it,
Crax? You must train every man in the world out of his love for war
at the same time - if you leave just one, he’ll drag the rest of us
back to Ares’ bloody altar.’
Crax glanced around, as if looking for another
speaker. ‘So I’m right?’ he asked.
Philokles looked at the elephants. ‘Too right.’ He
turned away.
Dinner was a subdued affair, punctuated by
Satyrus’s excited descriptions of the elephants and of Tavi, the
mahout, who had made a lasting impression on him and on Philokles.
But Sappho was attentive to her husband, and Diodorus was far away.
He would listen with a smile on his face to an elephant story and
then his eyes would drift off the speaker and he would eat
absently.
‘Is it upon us?’ Sappho asked, as the roast kid was
cleared away.
‘I’m sorry,’ Diodorus said. ‘I’m not happy with the
arrangements for my wing. Excuse me for a moment.’
He rolled off his couch and went to the door of the
tent and called one of his officers. They could all hear him
speaking, and the brief replies, and then he was back. ‘That’s
better,’ Diodorus said when he returned.
‘Will we fight tomorrow?’ Philokles asked.
‘Yes,’ Diodorus said. ‘Crax pulled in a dozen
prisoners today, and Andronicus brought in as many yesterday. They
all say the same thing. Antigonus will form his line of battle in
the morning.’
Sappho bit her lip. But when she spoke, her voice
was light. ‘Then we must get you to sleep early, my dear. You’ll be
up in the dark.’
‘You are the best soldier’s wife in this army,’
Diodorus said fondly.
‘Faint praise indeed,’ she returned. ‘Considering
that I’m the only wife around.’
‘What of the children?’ Philokles asked.
Diodorus shook his head. ‘They’ll stay in camp, of
course. I expect that we’ll fight on the plain to the north.
They’ll be safe enough here. Shall I find you a corslet,
Philokles?’
‘No, thanks. I’ve never accustomed myself to the
idea of fighting on horseback, and I don’t care to stand among
strangers - Asiatic strangers, at that. I’ll stay in camp with the
children.’
Theron nodded. ‘As will I, Strategos. Without
offence, this is not my fight, and I have equipment only as a
hoplite.’
Diodorus looked at the two of them and smiled. ‘I
could base one hell of a taxeis on you two,’ he said.
‘Theron, you’re like a second Philokles. I’ll bet you’re a terror
in the scrum.’
Theron shook his head. ‘I’ve never done it,’ he
said. ‘I’ve drilled with the ephebes, and I’ve fought men, but I’ve
never stood my ground like my father at Chaeronea.’
Philokles smiled grimly. ‘You haven’t missed a
thing,’ he said.
Sappho’s steward came in and bowed deeply. ‘Master,
there are more and more men waiting outside, asking for the
strategos.’
Diodorus wiped his mouth. ‘Excellent meal, my love.
I must go and listen to Eumenes’ fears and worries.’
‘I remember him as a first-rate commander,’
Philokles said.
‘He is. But the Macedonians hate him for not being
Macedonian. One of the reasons he hired me is to have a Greek
officer on whom he can rely - but even that has made trouble. The
Macedonians dislike me - all of us, really.’ ‘They haven’t changed
much, have they?’ Philokles asked.
He and Diodorus both smiled, sharing some memory.
Satyrus thought that it was like dining with the gods, to hear such
things. They discussed the great Eumenes the Cardian as if he were
just someone they knew, like a playmate!
Theron sat up on his couch. ‘I heard some things I
didn’t much like today,’ he said. ‘About Greeks. About
Eumenes.’
Diodorus looked around and lowered his voice. ‘You
notice that I came back to my own regiment to eat and sleep - that
we have our own guards, and we’re a little separated from the rest
of the army? It’s that bad, friends. If we lose tomorrow - if we
even look as if we’re losing, this army will disintegrate.
The idiots in the Argyraspids would rather kill Eumenes because
he’s a Greek, than beat Antigonus who hates them.’
Sappho drank wine carefully, held her cup out to a
slave to have it refilled and spoke slowly. ‘You have never spoken
so directly, husband,’ she said. ‘Should I make
preparations?’
Diodorus rubbed his beard. ‘It’s never been so bad.
I suspect that One-Eye is putting bribes into the Argyraspids but I
can’t figure out how he does it. I keep telling Eumenes to parade
Banugul and her brat to quieten the hard-liners—’
‘That’s Banugul who claims to have been Alexander’s
mistress, and Herakles her son,’ Sappho said, with a significant
look at her husband. ‘He’s just your age, or a little younger, and
the very image of Alexander.’ She smiled, but her eyes did not
smile. ‘She herself is unchanged.’ To the twins, she said, ‘Banugul
is the inveterate enemy of Olympias. Her son Herakles threatens
everything Olympias aims at.’ She shrugged. ‘She should be your
ally.’
Diodorus spoke over his wife as if she hadn’t made
a sound. ‘But he won’t. Says that he’s not going to run his army
through a child. Yes, Sappho. There’s going to be trouble. In fact,
I’m pushing us into a battle to see if we can beat One-Eye before
the Macedonians assassinate my employer.’ He shrugged. ‘All in a
day’s work.’
Sappho summoned her steward. ‘Eleutherius? Collect
a string of horses and pack animals and have us packed and ready to
move by first light. Leave the tents standing and all their
contents. Just pack the clothes and bedding and what we’d need to
live, eat and move fast.’
Diodorus got off his couch, leaned over his wife
and kissed her. It was embarrassing for the other men in the room,
because it was a lustful kiss, and it went on for too long. When he
broke off, she slapped him lightly. ‘I’m not a flute girl,’ she
said.
Diodorus kissed her again. ‘No, you are the best
staff officer in this camp. You just come with certain other
benefits. I’m off. I may join you later and I may be up all night.’
He glanced around the tent and lowered his voice. ‘I’ve given the
boys a rally point - in case of the worst. It’s a stade behind the
gully - the gully that’s south of here. Philokles, you should get
with Crax and see that you know the spot. May I rely on you to get
the hippeis women and children there, if it all goes bad?’
Philokles was eyeing a wine cup. He rubbed his
chin. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘That’s a big responsibility.’
‘You’ve handled bigger,’ Diodorus said. He took a
purple and dust-coloured Thracian cloak from a slave and swung it
on to his shoulders.
‘Go with the gods,’ Philokles said.
Diodorus gave a sketchy salute and went out of the
dining tent.
Sappho rolled off her couch. ‘Bed - right now,
children. We’ll be up before the cock crows and in sensible clothes
for riding.’
Satyrus looked at his sister. ‘We’re good at
riding,’ he said.
Melitta looked triumphant. ‘I know it’s wrong to
hope we lose!’ she said. ‘But - I’m already stifled. I don’t want
to be a good Greek maiden. A kore.’
A few minutes later they were on their sleeping
couches, listening to the bustle of a dozen slaves packing all
around them. Each of them thought it would be hard to get to sleep,
and then they did.