by Nick Brown
After being led through a series of ill-lit chambers and asked to wait, Themistocles had had enough; he demanded to see the Phythia. On being told this was not possible by the hooded acolyte he raised his voice.
“When you tell her who it is that you are keeping waiting she won’t thank you. I am …”
He was cut off by a sharp female voice.
“I know who you are and why you’re here. You are false dealing Themistocles, son of Neocles, and leader of the Athenians who the God has cursed.”
A tall thin-faced woman in an enveloping robe of fine cloth had entered the chamber and I knew we were in the presence of Aristonice, Phythia of Delphi, seer of Apollo. Themistocles made as if to prostrate himself saying,
“I thank you for receiving us, gracious lady, we come to hear the voice of the God.”
“You have already heard the voice of the God. I myself bestowed it on your fellow Athenians. This is not an Athenian market where you exchange goods you don’t want.”
I’m sure I saw the ghost of a smile round her lips as she said this. Themistocles replied,
“I understand, Lady Priestess. We bring fresh offerings.”
“You have already had the only answer you will get.”
Her manner and the acerbic tone in which she spoke indicated our audience was at an end. But this had little effect on Themistocles.
“All the same, Lady, I think the God would be angered were he not to receive our offering, and more offended if this holiest shrine of the Greeks were to be left undefended and thus ravaged by the barbarian horde.”
“That sounds like a threat to me, son of Neocles.”
As she said this I felt reassured: she too was in some way a politician.
“Never would a true Athenian dare threaten the most holy shrine of Apollo. We seek to enrich and protect it. But if we are not granted a second and more favourable oracle, then never will we return to Athens, but remain here till the end of our lives.”
But it wasn’t the end of the speech, with its implication of a threat, she picked up on. It was the promise.
“To enrich it?”
“Greatly, my Lady.”
She dismissed her servants then said to Themistocles,
“The ways of the God are strange indeed, son of Neocles, I feel him moving through me as we speak. Dismiss your followers; we will converse with the God in private.”
A servant outside the door escorted us out and led us to some simple lodgings where supplicants spent the night. I wandered round the shrine precincts, visited the temple the Athenians had built to give thanks for Marathon. The closeness had departed with the thunder and the air was chill and damp, moisture dripping from the leaves of the strange pale trees surrounding the shrine. Themistocles didn’t return.
After eating a meal that would have disgraced a Spartan household we spent an uneasy night. There are wolves and bears in those mountains. We could hear them growling and howling in the dark. Heard other things too; things that survive only in ancient places remote and charmed by the Deities. Or maybe we dreamt it, for all of us were visited by strange and unsettling visions that night: forests and centaurs and gods of the night which never the sun shone on.
Next morning still no sign of Themistocles, we tried to elicit his whereabouts from the strange creatures that served the shrine but got nothing. There was a mist early morning so we sat lost in the sightless grey, waiting for release. Then, as the sun began to burn it off, he appeared. Not the tortured apparition we’d expected, more like a man who’d had a good night and plenty of wine. The latter we could smell on his breath.
He told us nothing, merely crawled into the rough booth that was our lodgings and went to sleep: a state he remained in till next day, condemning us to another night of nocturnal disturbance. But next morning, Themistocles was up early and took especial pains over his appearance and bade us do the same. Then, laden with fresh olive branches, we returned to the oracle. This time we weren’t kept waiting but shown straight through and into the presence of the oracle. Aristonice greeted us in far better humour; her pinched and mean spirited face even wore the hint of a smile. She came straight to the business in hand.
“Your piety has been rewarded with a second oracle.”
Themistocles bowed in gratitude and we stood waiting for what would follow. Her voice changed to that of the God’s and she began to chant. Let me tell you, reader: even if you are one of those who foolishly laughs at the Gods, that change in the Oracle’s voice would strike fear in you. As with all oracles, the message began with a preamble about the Gods and the past. But within a few lines we realised what Themistocles had accomplished during his twenty four hours with the priestess.
You know the prophecy as well as I do, reader, but I was there when it was first uttered by the mouthpiece of the God so imagine how we felt when we heard the lines,
“… Far seeing Zeus grants a wooden wall.
Only this will stand firm as a bastion
to you and your children.
Do not rely on your cavalry, neither rely on your hoplites,
Rather in the face of this overwhelming host you must retreat instead.
Turn your backs. Yet still shall you meet them face to face.
At divine Salamis the sons of women
will be destroyed by you
When the grain is scattered or
when the harvest is gathered in.”
I still get a tingle when I hear those lines and find myself transported back in time to Delphi. Aristonice handed Themistocles a parchment and uttered one last sentence directed only towards Themistocles.
“I will wait with pleasurable anticipation for what you have promised on behalf of the Athenians to the servant of the God, son of Neocles.”
Then she turned her back and walked out, swinging her stringy buttocks, and I’m pleased to say I never saw her again. It took some time for it all to sink in, not that we needed to work it out for ourselves. Themistocles was in great high spirits over what he’d achieved and talked all the way down the mountain towards the sea sparkling below us in the sun.
“Couldn’t believe she’d give us all of it, Wooden Wall; real divine inspiration that was. How much more clearly can you say ships without using the words?”
He laughed so hard at this he almost slipped off his mule but recovered himself in time to continue.
“How can we lose now that the God has spelled out our battle plan for us? How can any of the allies, including those Spartan bastards, question how we use the fleet?”
And he was right; the Oracle interpreted correctly presented the essence of Themistoclean strategy and he wasn’t about to let us forget it. I think he considered this his finest moment but I only fully understood the genius of it later that day as we sat in a tavern on the harbour front. We were killing time, waiting for the ship that would take us to the isthmus and the road home. Listening to him in that tavern even the dimmest of us realised the full magnitude of the God’s message.
“Not only the ships but where we’ll deploy them.”
He raised his hands in the air and chanted solemnly.
“At divine Salamis.”
He lowered his arms, took a huge slurp from his wine cup, ineffectually wiped at the stain from the spillage on his tunic and belched loudly.
“And the best of it, the best of it: it gives us a free hand, no time limit, you understand me?”
More wine spilled then he was quoting again.
“When the grain is scattered or when the harvest is gathered in.”
He waited for a response scanning our faces. We weren’t going to interrupt his flow.
“What other time is there. Everything is either before or after. We can act when we decide the time’s right. The God thinks of everything.”
Now we were laughing with him. We could see what this oracle had delivered to Athens and to him in particular. We should have stopped drinking but it was a special day. We had a couple of hours before the ship w
as ready so he ordered another chou of the finest the tavern could find. Maybe we should have quit then, maybe the God was listening: nemesis follows hubris.
Later, as we were flicking the lees from the dregs in our cups in a game of Kottabos, Themistocles muttered,
“Problem with oracles is they’re subject to a range of interpretations.”
We waited for what he was going to follow up with.
“So the great thing about this one came in the first line before all that waffle about Cecrop’s land and holy Cithaeron.”
Even through the clouds of drunkenness he must have noted our blank expressions.
“The first line, didn’t you get the first line.”
We said nothing.
“All right, listen, I’ll quote it for you.”
He raised his hands above his head.
“I shall tell you in words that can bear no distortion.”
He dropped his hands.
“See, see, ‘Bear no distortion’, the Gods telling them that there’s only one way to understand this, it isn’t ambiguous, the real meaning is nailed on.”
He favoured us with a pathetically pleased-with-himself smile, like a child, said,
“So no one can argue with it, see.”
Then went outside to be sick.
Shows just how wrong you can be, doesn’t it, reader?
Chapter Twenty-Six
The news and the exiles arrived at about the same time. The news eclipsed the return of the exiles. Mardonius was on the march, moving quicker than anyone could have predicted. With him marched the uncountable Persian host led by the immortals. An army three times larger than anything a united Greece could ever raise, and it would be faced by a disunited Greece. An army that marched towards us lusting for blood and revenge for Marathon.
Mardonius was headed for the high pass over the mountains of Thessaly. The pass, once traversed, descended into the soft underbelly of Greece. From that pass the road led straight south to Athens. Between them and us were a few vacillating states, like Thebes who we couldn’t trust. These bastards would betray us and within months Athens would burn.
Two days after the panic had taken hold we sailed back from Delphi into Athens, into a city racked with fear. A city preparing for the type of war it had never previously faced. A crowded city packed with refugees and riven by rumour.
There was a little comfort; we’d been reinforced by the returned exiles, Xanthippus, Aristides. Most of them had returned to stand with us, but not Hipparchus. There were many political fences to be mended.
I tasted the flavour of this in the New Year at a gathering in the house of Themistocles. A large group of his faction mingled with Xanthippus’s, Aristides’s and Megacles’s followers. But it wasn’t city rivalry on the agenda; there was something more serious to occupy the gathering. News had come that morning from Sparta that Mardonius scouts and skirmishers had crossed the border into Thessaly.
Old resentments were buried; the men of Marathon needed to stand together. There’s nothing like an external threat for promoting alliances. The erstwhile rivals hid any grievances; these could wait for the end of the war, if any of us lived to see the end. Most of us doubted we would, so what we promised today didn’t really matter. Aeschylus and I weren’t needed; we wandered off to find somewhere to drink, as there wouldn’t be many more chances – the fleet was to be mobilised.
That morning a message had been sent to the Spartans enquiring of their intentions. But events bypassed it. Along with their warning of the advance of the Persian skirmishers they’d sent a message direct from Leonidas to Themistocles: short, like all Spartan messages, and thus easy to quote.
“From Leonidas, King of the Spartans, to Themistocles, son Of Neocles Athenian.
Greetings,
I go direct with such men as are available to Tempe to hold the mountain pass against The Great King in obedience to my word. Do you the same. Gather your fleet to support us.”
So we had, at most, a couple of nights of freedom in Athens and then we’d be off to war. A war we’d fight at sea, packed into triremes, living on top of each other. That night we avoided the bars where we’d be likely to find the crew of the Athene Nike. We headed for the part of the Ceramicus furthest from the whores. These days of course the seamen drink and live in Piraeus, but then it was different – although the first signs of that shift were beginning to appear.
We wanted a quiet bar but there weren’t any: war leads men to congregate in places where they can both drink and share their fear.
Not that Aeschylus was interested in sharing his fear, he didn’t fear the type of things the rest of us do. We found a place near the old shrine of the Goddess on the road leading to the wall. The shrine wasn’t much used now and exuded an air of neglect. But someone had left flowers at the feet of the ancient and worn figure of the Goddess. I remember that after a dry spell there had recently fallen a sharp shower, and the little square smelt of damp earth.
Aeschylus wanted to learn about what it was like to be a supplicant. Go see his play of that name, reader; it’s still performed in some of the rural demes. Because in that play you’ll see what we talked about that night. In many ways it’s a women’s play ending with the appeal to the gods to ‘grant victory to the women’s cause’ but, as in all things, he had another purpose. After one small jug, when he’d extracted from me as much as I could remember from my time with the oracle, he said,
“Not much time left, Mandrocles, you need to make things right.”
Must have been obvious from my expression I had no idea what he was talking about.
“She’s back, Mandrocles, you should go to her.”
“Where, when?”
“Back about a month. Living in her old place for now. Things have happened.”
He wouldn’t specify, thought it should be left for her to tell me. I wish he’d spelt it out. If he had, things might have been different. Don’t know how I felt, only that I wanted to see her.
It was almost like the old days: Demetrius favoured me with an evil squint as he let me in, his face had acquired another scar; there was a comforting sameness about that. There was another girl in her room and they were sitting on the bed together playing with an infant. She looked confused to see me and hastily handed the child back to its mother.
The mother must have been confused too; she looked surprised to be handed her own baby, which began to cry as she carried it out. I’ve never been good in situations like this. I knew there was something I was missing, something I needed to say but couldn’t think of; instead I remember mumbling something like,
“All right, Lyra? You look nice.”
She started to cry. She did look nice but she was different, life changes us all. Later, when we’d overcome the strange diffidence and I undressed her, I felt it. She was heavier, her breasts and belly particularly. But I liked that and when I entered her it was like coming back home. When we’d finished, she had Demetrius bring a flask of wine and we lay back to talk. I’d always liked to lie holding her and hear her talk after the act that men call ‘the little death’.
Her tale of having to go to the Megara to look after family didn’t quite make sense to me. Every time I questioned her about it she became distressed and then started to cry then said to me,
“Do you want the real truth?”
I didn’t, well I did really but I was trying to be kind. Everyone knows a whore has to make things up as she slips from one situation to another. I didn’t want to put her in that position. I just said,
“No, love, let’s just sleep.”
She looked disappointed: strange that. But settled her head onto my shoulder, I was tired, happy I drifted straight off. Looking back I …
I don’t want to write any more about that, I won’t.
Next day Cimon made his entrance into the legends of our city. It is a story still told to the young to encourage them in their duties. It has many versions and is set at different times. I’ll tell y
ou how it really happened and when you’ve read this you will feel, deep in your soul, that this was how it was. Cimon was wild, his friends were wild, aristocratic roaring boys drinking, whoring and fighting. But like all of us back then we understood our duty to the Gods and to the city.
What we needed in those desperate days was to heal our divisions and fight as one. Something we’d only done once: at Marathon. There we’d fought on foot like gentlemen hoplites. Now that wasn’t our role. Greece needed our ships.
But there was bad blood between hoplites and seamen between the young aristos who served in the cavalry and the sons of the Demos. Remember Theodorus had been exiled for gutting a young aristo. There was resistance from the landed classes towards fighting from ships like low born pirates.
People believe the idea came from Themistocles, but for once I disagree. I think it was pure Cimon; it was an example of nobleness of spirit, and no one would accuse Themistocles of that. Those two days when we mobilised our fleet there was the atmosphere of a festival.
The public ways leading down from the city to the Piraeus were packed with all of Athens. Athenians love a crowd and no one was going to miss waving our new fleet off. It was before the traditional sailing season but we knew that whatever was going to happen would happen quickly.
We were provisioning for the expedition, triremes haven’t space to carry much and whereas a few ships may be able to survive by living off what they can find along the coast, that’s not possible for a whole fleet. So we were to be supplied from a fleet of merchant craft, mainly pentecontors. Ariston was threatening the captain of the ship which would supply our squadron. There was a standard belief among trireme crews that the merchants adulterated the food and watered down the wine in order to increase profits.
The merchant captain was protesting his honesty while Ariston prodded his well-padded belly with a knife when there was shouting from higher up towards the city. Then a voice directed at me,