11
A grippa and his small band of men rode
south to Krimissa and to the temple of Apollo, dedicated in the
time of Troy by the warrior Philoctetes. All of Italy was founded
on myth, and when Nicolaus had told him the tale of what this place
concealed, he’d nodded in recognition. He knew the story. It was
part of the living and proud history of Rome, like the hut of
Romulus.
Nicolaus was not with Agrippa’s group. With a
sword, the historian would be a danger to no one but himself.
Instead, Agrippa had left him to watch over Augustus, enlisting the
seiðkona as well. All that was necessary was that Augustus stay in
the residence. The emperor was weakened by the potion he insisted
on consuming. It would take little effort, even for a scholar and
an ancient, to keep him stationary.
Agrippa held out little hope that anyone could keep
Chrysate away from Augustus, but he hoped that Augustus might be
tantalized by the historian introduced as a new biographer. The
emperor fancied himself a writer of some skill, though he typically
wrote only rhymes. Agrippa smiled in spite of himself, thinking of
it as they rode around a promontory. He felt better, now that he
was out of Rome. He was doing something about the problem. Never
mind that he was the only one who was. At least Cleopatra was no
longer under Chrysate’s control. The room she was jailed in was
lined at every seam with silver, and the box she was inside was
wrapped in silver chain. Agrippa’s most trusted men guarded
it.
The Psylli had come to him before he left, and
asked to go with him to Krimissa, but even after the battle at the
Circus Maximus, he was no Roman soldier. Usem could not possibly be
as well trained as Agrippa’s own men, and he did not seem likely to
follow orders. Agrippa had left him, instead, guarding the silver
room. If Chrysate tried to use magic, Usem would know it.
At last, the temple was in view, and Agrippa’s
smile faded.
From below, the building shone in the
late-afternoon sun, placed at the top of a spiraling cliff and
nearly inaccessible by road. Agrippa looked up at it,
nervous.
It was what he wanted, though, he could not deny
that. He’d prayed for a solution, and the historian had given it to
him.
Agrippa directed his company to wait for nightfall,
and when it was fully dark, they rode hooded up the hillside,
approaching the temple from the rear. The horses had to place their
muffled hooves carefully, and a journey that under better
conditions should have taken but a few minutes took well over an
hour. The darkness was well used, however. Agrippa did not wish the
temple’s inhabitants to have advance warning of the soldiers’
approach.
He hoped to do things peacefully, but he did not
expect this would be the case.
The temple guarded a prize, or so Nicolaus swore.
Weapons that would kill an immortal, that would fight against
magic. They would be fatal to Cleopatra as well as to Chrysate.
Chaos to fight chaos.
Agrippa adjusted his armor and ran his hand over
his shaven head, smoothing nonexistent hairs. The horses crept
onward up the hillside path, and the warriors of Rome sat tall in
their saddles, the shine of their armor covered by dark cloaks.
This was by no means the worst thing they had done in service to
their leader.
Agrippa signaled, and his men dismounted to
approach the gate. They ran their fingers across the stone wall,
feeling for cracks in the mortar. One legionary began to climb,
fitting his fingers into the stone.
A hoof slipped on a rock, and a ringing note
sounded in the silence. Agrippa froze, directing his men to draw
their blades.
After a few moments, a man opened the door slowly.
This priest was not a problem, a crippled ancient with clouded blue
eyes, but he was flanked by a younger companion, a dark-skinned man
with a piercing gaze.
“I am Marcus Agrippa, and these are my men,”
Agrippa announced. “We travel on behalf of the emperor.” They did
not, of course. The emperor was in no condition to know anything
about this journey.
“Greetings,” the younger priest said. “We’ve been
watching you come up the hill since sunset. You do not travel as
discreetly as you imagine.”
Agrippa straightened his shoulders. He was not as
skilled as he had once been, or these priests were privileged with
unearthly information.
“Your emperor calls on you,” Agrippa informed him.
“He asks that you provide him a service.”
“We are simple men,” the priest replied. “We can
set you a table with what little food and drink we possess. You are
welcome to bed here.”
“It is not food and drink we require,” Agrippa
said. “It is not sleep.”
The man looked steadily at him, a half smile on his
face.
Agrippa began to wonder if he would need to kill
him before entering the temple. He had no way of knowing how many
were behind the walls, however. Such a killing might be less than
advisable. He also had no idea of the whereabouts of the item he
sought. It would be an unfortunate errand should all the priests
become indisposed, leaving their treasure still hidden.
“No,” the man said at last. “Warriors of Rome, I
see that you call for more than a meal. I see that you call for the
impossible. Is that not what your emperor does? He plays with fire,
does he not?” The expression on the priest’s face was unreadable.
Was he mocking the empire?
Agrippa was uncertain, but at last the priest
opened the gate of the temple and beckoned them in.
“Welcome to our fire, then, meager though it be.
Sheathe your swords. This is a sacred place, and there is no use
for them here.”
Agrippa glanced up reflexively as he passed through
the gates, and saw the arrows nudging out of windows and cracks in
the rock. Bows aimed at him and his men. It was good that he hadn’t
acted in haste. They guarded their treasure. Agrippa felt oddly
cheered.
He noted the muscles rippling in the arms of even
the stable boy. He assessed the elder priest who’d first opened the
gate and decided that perhaps the man was not as decrepit as he had
initially appeared. The priest’s walking stick seemed to conceal a
blade, and the hunched posture he’d affected when opening the gate
had evolved into a loose-limbed stride.
Agrippa pretended that he neither saw nor minded
the villains aiming at him. He signaled silently to his men, and
they rode into the temple grounds quiet, calm, and in absolute
peace. They would act when Agrippa directed them and no sooner.
These men were seasoned warriors, and they trusted their
commander.
A marble statue of the warrior Philoctetes,
grimacing in pain, the bow of Hercules in his hands, stretched over
the entrance to the temple. The statue’s leg was wrapped in
bandages, and his wounded foot was raised off the ground. There was
an inscription, which stoked Agrippa’s heart into a secret, joyful
fire.
Here lies Philoctetes, Hero of Troy,
and inheritor of the poisoned arrows of
Hercules, envenomed with the poison of the conquered
Hydra.
Warrior, fall down and weep for the death of
Chiron, the immortal, killed by these same arrows.
Fall down and weep for Hercules, killed by this
venom.
Sing hymns to the bravery of Philoctetes, who
suffered ten years, wounded by Hercules’ gift.
Let these arrows never again be released from
their bow,
but guard them with your own mortal
lives.
Another statue was placed just inside the doorway,
this one depicting the tremendous centaur Chiron, pierced in the
leg with an arrow, his agonized face lifelike enough to startle the
men as they passed by it in the near darkness. The centaur’s blue
glass eyes dripped marble tears as he tried to pull the arrow from
his body. Agrippa shuddered as he passed beside it, feeling the
unpleasant cool of the statue brushing against his bare arm.
The priests led the soldiers down a tight
passageway and out into an inner courtyard where a table was
already laid.
Agrippa smiled. His adversaries were charming. They
seated themselves and beckoned for the small group of soldiers to
join them. They took the first bites of the food, knowing that the
soldiers would suspect poison.
Agrippa ate heartily. It was rare to be away from
his commander. He found that he preferred it. Augustus had altered
tremendously in the past months, and Agrippa mistrusted his
friend’s instincts. The food here was simple but good, and it
reminded him of better days. He sat back from the table when he had
taken his fill.
“You will give us what we came for,” he said, and
moved his hand to signal his soldiers. He heard the sound of arrows
being fitted, of bowstrings being drawn.
He then heard the rushing noise of an arrow flying.
It embedded itself in the table, directly before his plate. It had
not been shot to kill but to warn.
“Why should we surrender our holding to you?” the
elder priest asked. His eyes were no longer clouded but
bright.
“And why should I not kill you?” Agrippa asked the
priest, pulling a concealed dagger from its sheathe against his
thigh and swiftly drawing it beneath the old man’s chin, not to cut
his throat but to warn the other priests. Why did Agrippa’s men not
move? What delayed their hands?
A thin trickle of blood made its way down from the
blade. A scratch.
It was then that Agrippa felt his own throat begin
to constrict.
Outside the temple walls, three men in
homespun cloaks watched the gate. The smallest of the three fit his
gloved fingers into the spaces in the stone. He hauled himself
carefully up the wall, his muscles wobbling with exertion.
His companions, a younger man with ink-stained
fingers and saddleweary thighs after three days’ hard riding from
Rome, and a tall man, his dark skin nearly invisible in the
shadows, hesitated for a moment and then, breathing deeply,
followed the emperor into the temple.