by John Dolan
The War Nerd Iliad
Copyright 2017 John Dolan
All rights reserved. No parts of this book may be reproduced without the author or publisher’s prior consent.
ISBN: 9781627310642
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Published by
Feral House
1240 W Sims Way #124
Port Townsend WA 98368
Design by Jacob Covey
Cover Art by C.M. Kosemen
Three people helped make this:
Jan Frel, who came up with the idea;
Katherine Dolan, who read it first;
and my mother, who taught me to read
and know proper behavior with
a child’s version of The Iliad.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
I TWO KINGS, ONE ARMY
II STICK TO WAR; LOVE IS TOO DANGEROUS
III MORALE
IV AGAMEMNON
V GODS
VI FAMILY
VII DUEL
VIII SLAUGHTER
IX EMBASSY
X RAID
XI RAGE
XII BREAKTHROUGH
XIII FIRE
XIV SLEEP
XV APOLLO
XVI PATROKLAS
XVII AEGIS
XVIII SHIELD
XIX RECONCILED
XX TOURNAMENT
XXI RIVER
XXII HEKTOR
XXIII GAMES
XXIV PITY
INTRODUCTION
I DIDN’T WRITE THIS STORY. I’m just delivering it. Every now and then it has to be repackaged and delivered. It comes from way back, from the gods. You’ll meet them in here. They’re not the gods you might be expecting, though. These are more like The Sopranos.
You may have heard of this story as something called The Iliad, found only on undergraduate syllabi. But this story was never meant as a textbook. This is a campfire story, the greatest of all tall tales. It moves easily from tone to tone—from raw slapstick comedy, to ultraviolence that makes Clockwork Orange seem like a panto for Eton lads, to hard-earned pathos that will moisten your mucous membranes whether you like it or not.
I’ve called it Rage because that was its name back when people listened to it around the hearth. My job as delivery guy is to give you this wonderful story as close to its raw, funny, weepy, haunted original as I can.
To do that, I’ve ditched the poetic meter. I’m delivering it to you in prose, because prose is what our culture reads. (Trust me, I started out as a poet and learned this the hard way.) What was the last book-length poem you read? Such things might get published occasionally, but they don’t get read.
In our language, poetic effects work best in paragraphs. Besides, this was always more a story than a poem. Virgil, gods curse him, wrote poetry; Homer wrote a story.
I think it works. Read on and decide for yourself.
1
TWO KINGS, ONE ARMY
THE CAPTIVE GIRL IS WAITING TO HEAR if she’s going back home. She watches her old father, the priest, limp down the beach toward her master’s tent.
Her father’s carrying a bag and a wreath. The wreath is a flag of truce from his god. She’s trying not to think about it. She needs to forget her old life. Back then she was from a good family; she’d never even been out of the family compound without a slave to guard her. Until the day the Greeks ran up from the sea.
Her town was on the coast, allied with Troy. But the Trojans weren’t around on the day the Greeks swarmed off their long ships. There was nobody around who could call himself a warrior. Fishermen and traders, mostly. The Greeks splashed ashore at a run, not saying a word. They killed all the men without a sound. And even the little boys, to prevent future vengeance. Easier that way. They caught her favorite brother, still learning to talk. She remembers him, spitted on a spear, wriggling in the air. When the first Greek ship hit the beach, she had three brothers; an hour later, no brothers at all.
She lost a husband too that day, but you can always get another husband. Where will you get more brothers? They didn’t kill her father. He’s a priest, and not just any little god’s priest. He belongs to Apollo. The Greeks fear Apollo. He loves her country, the east coast of the Aegean. But you can never count on a god. Apollo, her father’s lord and master, did not exert himself to stop the Greeks that day. He must have been watching, but he did not lift one godly finger. Apollo prefers not to get involved.
He’s watching now, as his priest limps toward the Greek camp at Troy. Apollo is an old god, though a young man. He’s from the East, and he doesn’t like Greeks. Loud, pushy, new people. Worse yet, they’re favorites of his little sister Athena, a new god.
Apollo prefers the old ways; he goes way back, to the dawn, the glow in the east. He speaks without words, with music in a good mood, with the glare of sunlight, and in his rougher moods, with his bow. He loves to teach lessons with the bow. He’s planning a great lesson for these Greeks.
Apollo sees how the priest’s visit will end: Agamemnon, the Greek commander, will shame him, make the old man cry. Which will give Apollo all the pretext he needs to punish these Greeks. Apollo feels a vague pity for his pawns, the girl and her father. They’re loyal enough, good eastern folk. But people are to be used.
Once Agamemnon has talked loudly to them, as Greeks always do—no respect, no manners—Apollo will have a free hand. No god can kill without a nod from the Olympians, the whole squabbling family.
He’ll have it now. He remembers the day the Greeks stormed ashore and insulted his priest. He was there, in low orbit, zeroing in, as the Greeks enjoyed themselves; they didn’t lose a single man, burned everything they didn’t kill, and took everything they didn’t burn.
Apollo was floating in the sunlight, hoping they’d kill his priest, the girl’s father, and free his bow-hand for revenge. But the Greeks knew better than to kill Apollo’s priest. They settled for killing his sons, then kicking the old man around, telling him all the things they’d do to his wife and his daughters. Then they left him crying in the dust.
Apollo remembers that day very well. It is like a happy song in his heart, because now it will all be avenged. All these things work out, in the long run … for the gods. He remembers leaning into the wind that day, keening with the simple blood joy of a falcon, watching the Greeks run through the alleys of the town. He knew it was all to his advantage.
The girl can’t see that, of course. There are always casualties. Apollo turns his falcon eye to her for a moment, as she watches her father approach Agamemnon’s tent. Her sorrow interests him, as a musician. What happened to her interests him, as a tactician. Otherwise—just another weeping woman.
She catches Apollo’s thought—god thoughts are contagious, even when not meant to be—and remembers her father sprawled in the dust, with a bloody face, the Greek warriors laughing as they tied her and the other decent-looking girls and women in a coffle and set them down on display on the shore. The Greek chiefs strolled along, checking a set of teeth here, feeling a buttock there, before they took their pick. She went first, to the commander, Agamemnon. Even now, the name makes her gag. But then she blanks it all out again.
When Agamemnon wants her, he grabs her arm and throws her down. He seems to hate her, but then he hates everyone, even his own people.
She feels shame for her father. He’s a fool to come here. He has no idea what the Greeks are like. Why is he coming? They should have killed the whole family, but Greeks are too cruel for that.
He’ll beg Agamemnon to let him take her home. But Agamemnon will never let her go. Her father is a kindly old man, and Agamemnon will enjoy making him beg, hearing him weep. Agamemnon has always been cruel, but he’s worse now, with the wa
r going nowhere.
Nine years they’ve been camped on this miserable beach, and the walls of Troy are intact. The Trojans still jeer from the walls, throwing anything they have at the Greeks, anything from pig shit to spears. The Greeks are always running short—water, firewood, wheat. The tents are full of sand and fleas; half the best men are dead; and there’s nothing to show for it, not one Trojan earring, not one Trojan woman to sell.
And it’s all Agamemnon’s fault. It’s his war, him and his family. Everyone knows they’re cursed. He knows it too, and takes it out on everyone.
A slave man runs into the tent to tell Agamemnon a stranger is coming.
She hears Agamemnon buckling up inside the tent. She knows all those sounds of dressing and undressing, and goes to hide behind the tent so she won’t see her father. So he won’t see her. She can hear the old man’s ragged breathing. He’s been limping across the dunes, and his knees are bad. She hears him take a breath, begin speaking in that pompous voice he uses for formal orations. It makes her eyes moist to remember it, and her breath catches as she hears him chant:
“O noble Greeks! Noble Achaeans! And most noble son of Atreus, Agamemnon, king of kings!”
No answer. She can imagine the sneer on Agamemnon’s face.
The old man goes on: “I wish you success in your enterprise! May you sack Troy! May its riches become your property, its people your slaves, its cattle your sacrifices!”
Silence again. She knows her father, poor old man—how he loves these courtesies! But he’s come to the wrong place, he’s flattering the wrong man. Agamemnon will be enjoying himself now, sneering, waiting for more.
Her poor old father goes on: “I will offer prayers to Apollo that you take Priam’s city, but I beg you, take this offering …”
She hears metal clink; it must be the gold the family buried in the corner. She winces; that little handful will only infuriate Agamemnon. The old man goes on, oblivious:
“And return my daughter to me in return for this ransom! I ask this in the name of the god I serve, Apollo, son of Zeus, lord of all!”
She hears some approving grunts from the soldiers. The Greeks are afraid of Apollo; they don’t like the idea of offending his holy man. Bad luck.
But Agamemnon laughs: “Waddle back home, old bed-wetter! And take your wreath with you!” She gasps. It’s one thing to insult her father, but to insult his master, Apollo, is asking for death. There’s muttering; the Greeks don’t like the way Agamemnon’s acting.
Someone in the crowd yells, “Take the gold!”
Another voice: “What’s the point? Why make the god angry?” Someone else yells, “Let her go home!”
Another, a squeaky voice, the comedian of the crowd: “You’ve already had her a hundred times, Agamemnon; that tent’s not as thick as you think!”
They all have a laugh. This is Greek tact, a way of letting the boss know what he should do while showing him proper respect.
It would probably work on anyone but Agamemnon. He can’t stop himself, won’t stop until he makes the old man cry.
Agamemnon makes a spitting noise and sneers, “Look at the worthless trinkets you bring me!” Metal clinks again. “Worthless trash—just like you, old man!”
Now she hears her father’s breathy, choked weeping. She tries to bury her face in the goat-hair of the tent. He should never have come. They should both have died that day. If only the Greeks would kill them both, together, father and daughter.
But Agamemnon is not kind enough for that. He wants to draw this out. He imitates the old man’s weeping noises. No one laughs; they don’t like this. It’s bad luck. But Agamemnon doesn’t care. He’s breathing heavily, like he does when he’s excited.
“You want to know what will happen to your daughter, old fool? I’ll tell you: She’ll live and die as my slave, my property. She’ll scrub floors all day, and when it’s night, I’ll take her to my couch and bend her over, bend her any way I please! While she’s young, that is. After I’ve used her for a few years, she’ll be too old and ugly to be worth having, and then she’ll carry out the shit-jars every morning and sleep with the pigs, and when she’s old she’ll die one day and be dragged off to where we bury the livestock.”
The old man is weeping more loudly now. Worse than she imagined, and she knew it would be bad.
Agamemnon, though, is happy. Relieved, relaxed. Almost the way he is after he finishes with her.
Agamemnon sneers at the old man, “You want to cry? You want something to cry about, drooler? Dog-face? If you don’t get out of my sight right now, I’ll show you what it is to cry! So GO!”
She hears a shuffle, an old man’s stumbling walk, fading away.
Agamemnon shouts after him, “That’s right, waddle off!”
The soldiers sigh, get up to leave. No use arguing with Agamemnon when he’s like this.
The feeble old priest stumbles off, over the dunes. He has been shamed, but he has a weapon of his own. He can call on his master, Apollo. He has credit with the god; he’s spent whole decades burning meat and fat on Apollo’s altar, sending up the nice steak smell the gods like, just so he’ll have a weapon to deploy in a moment like this.
He limps down into a hollow in the dunes and falls to his knees. He breathes more slowly and deeply; the sniffling stops. He calls to the sky, in a younger voice: “Apollo! You heard all that as well as I, Lord; you saw what the Greek king did to your priest. I am nothing, but for the sake of all the fat meat I’ve sent smoking up to you, for the sake of your own pride, punish them! Kill them, Lord Apollo of the bright bow! Make them beg me to take my daughter back!”
This is music to Apollo, floating, riding the breeze from the sea. Besides, he likes the old man. Many a fine strip of fat has this priest laid over marrow-thick femurs, for Apollo to sniff. And the human is humble, unlike those pushy Greeks. And what he asks is what Apollo has been itching to do anyway. That always helps.
Apollo hates the Greeks. He’s been flexing his bow, waiting to be provoked … and now Agamemnon has given him the perfect excuse to send some poisoned arrows at the Greek campfires on the shore.
Apollo laughs, glittering like sun on the waves: Thank you, Agamemnon, you are my favorite Greek!
Apollo is as good at drawing out the pain as Agamemnon himself, so he doesn’t kill the Greeks immediately. That sort of quick, easy death is something only an amateur would do. Apollo wants to have some fun with Agamemnon, just the way Agamemnon likes to have his fun with the slave girl. And he wants to make it last.
So he starts killing everyone in the Greek camp—but just to increase the terror and draw out the agony, he starts low: the animals.
First the mules, tied up near the beached boats.
Apollo sends his virus arrows fizzing and sizzling down through the mules’ thick hides, easily as a needle through flax. The mules’ eyes cross, their muzzles foam, they kick and squeal and topple over. By the time the slaves wake at dawn, the Greeks’ mules are lying as stiff as fallen trees, their legs splayed out at every angle.
Then it’s the dogs. If there’s one thing these little kings love more than their mules, it’s their dogs. Friends on the hunt, the one contribution they deign to make to feeding their people. Friends at the feast, toss ’em a hunk of bone and gristle before passing out drunk at the table. Friends in battle, providing a little comic relief by biting the corpses their masters have just made, lapping up the enemy’s pooling blood. Oh, they love their dogs.
So Apollo sends his fizzing arrows festering with tiny malevolent life into the dogs. And the hounds howl and twitch and die there on the beach, ending lineages longer and purer than their masters’.
By this time, the smarter Greeks can see the trend. Mules, then dogs … not hard to figure out who’s next.
And sure enough, the men begin to die. Apollo starts from the bottom again, killing commoners first. He loves this game. He even deigns to coalesce, become visible, for a fraction of a second just above his chosen ta
rgets. A few look up and see him as the envenomed dart dissolves in their flesh. Their expressions are hilarious.
Soon, the unburied bodies are swelling up and bursting with a terrible smell all over the camp. The Greeks can only sit in their tents, feeling for sores or bumps, some sign they’ll be next to be cremated.
Where’s the loot? Where’s the rape spree Agamemnon and his stupid cuckold brother Menelaos promised? They’re going to die out here, or if they’re lucky, go home poorer than they came.
For nine straight days Apollo practices his archery, picking victims at random like they all had bull’s-eyes on the top of their heads.
He moves up the chain of command as the days pass, killing mid-level men, then nobles. What really amuses the god is the rich Greeks’ notion that they can hide from his arrows in their tents. His divine arrows slip through the goat’s-hair weave of the tents as smoothly as a shrimp through a fish net, without a sound. The Greek cowering under his sheep hide feels something like a flea bite, a pinprick … and a day later, his corpse greets his slaves, covered in puke and shit and piss, cold as yesterday’s roast.
For nine long days, the arrows fall from the sky. Greeks are dying so fast that all the slaves are busy collecting driftwood along the beach for the funeral pyres. Nobody knows who’ll be next. And they can just about hear Apollo’s chuckle.
Everybody knows whose fault it is: Agamemnon, showing off as usual. A bad king, everybody knows it. But nobody wants to say it out loud, because Agamemnon isn’t just mean, he’s also got a long memory and never forgets a grudge.
What they need is a certified expert to say what they all know. Enter the shaman, Kalkys. A scientist who can look at the intestines of a dying goat as they spool out into the dust then figure out what note the gods are writing in gut-cursive.
They drag Kalkys along to an emergency assembly. Kalkys is terrified. He knows Agamemnon’s nasty reputation. And now that he’s staring into Agamemnon’s mean little eyes, and he can see Agamemnon thinking how easy it’ll be to have this pedant’s throat slit.