Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Jason and Medeia

    Page 2
    Prev Next


      the king—

      his eyes were mortal now—appeared at the columned

      door.

      “Amekhenos,” the old man called. The fair-haired slave looked down, drew back his hand. Whatever smoldered

      in his mind

      was cooled, for the time. He turned, waiting, to the

      old man.

      Take more wine to the king’s guests, Amekhenos.” The young man bowed, withdrew. The old man watched

      him go,

      then turned to his business, supervision of the kitchen

      slaves

      at work on the evening meal. Wherever the old man

      walked,

      slave girls scrubbed or swept more busily, their

      whispering ceased,

      laments and curses—silenced not by fear, it seemed, but as if all the household were quickened by something

      in the old man’s face,

      as if his character carried some wordless meaning in it To a boy he said, “Go help Amekhenos with the wine.”

      Without

      a word, quiet as an owl in the hall, the boy ran off.

      Travellers were gathered in the dark-beamed central

      room of the palace,

      men from farther away than the realm of Avalon, men who brought gold from Mesopotamia, silks from

      Troy,

      jewels from India, iron from the foot of the Caucasus. They sat in their fine apparel, kings and the minions

      of kings,

      drinking from golden bowls and exchanging noble tales of storms, strange creatures, islands enveloped in

      eternal night;

      they told of beasts half bird, half horse, of talking trees, ships that could fly, and ladies whose arms turned men

      to fish.

      They told of the spirits and men and gods in the war

      now raging

      on the plains of Ilium. The kings and Corinthian nobles

      laughed,

      admired the tales and treasures, awaiting their host’s

      return.

      The time for exchange was near. The strangers itched

      for canvas,

      sea-salt spray in their beards, the song of the halcyon, sweeter to sea-kings’ ears than all but the shoals of

      home.

      Kreon would hardly have slighted such men in the old

      days,

      they said. They’d burned men’s towns for less.

      The lords of Corinth

      smiled. The king was old, and the wealthiest Akhaian

      alive.

      It gave him a certain latitude, as one of the strangers saw more clearly than the rest. He spoke to his

      neighbors—a fat man,

      womanish-voiced, sow-slack monster of abdomens and

      chins—

      a prominent lord out of Asia known as Koprophoros. His slanted eyes were large and strangely luminous, eyes like a Buddha’s, an Egyptian king’s. His turban was gold, and a blood-red ruby was set on

      his forehead.

      I heard from one who claimed to know, that if he

      stamped his foot

      the ground would open like a magic door and carry him

      at once

      to his palace of coal-black marble. He wore a scimitar so sharp, men said, that if he laid the edge on a tabletop of solid oak, the blade would part it by its own weight. I laughed in my hand when I heard these things, yet

      this was sure:

      he was vast—so fat he was frightening—and painted

      like a harlot,

      and his eyes were chilling, like a ghost’s.

      He said:

      “Be patient, friends, with a good man’s eccentricity. We all, poor humble traders, have got our pressing

      affairs—

      accounts to settle, business mounting while we sit here cross-legged, stuffing our bellies like Egypt’s pet baboons, or fat old queens with no use left but ceremony. And yet we remain.” He smiled. “I ask myself, “Why?’

      And with

      a sly wink I respond: ‘His majesty’s daughter, you’ve

      noticed,

      is of marrying age. He’s not so addled in his wits, I hope, as not to have seen it himself.’” The young man

      chuckled, squinted.

      “I’ll speak what I think. He’s displayed her to us twice

      at meals,

      leading her in on his arm with only a mump or two by way of introduction. Her robe was bridal white impleached with gold, and resting in her golden hair, a

      crown

      of gold, garnets, and fine-wrought milleflori work. Perhaps he deems it enough to merely—venditate’— not plink out his thought in words. These things are delicate, friends. They require some measure of

      dignity!”

      They laughed. The creature expressed what had come

      into all their minds

      at the first glimpse of Pyripta. What he hinted might

      be so:

      some man whose treasures outweighed other men’s,

      whose thought

      sparkled more keen, or whose gentility stood out white as the moon in a kingdom of feebly blinking stars, might land him a lovelier fish than he’d come here

      baited for—

      the throne of Corinth. Even to the poorest of the foreign

      kings,

      even to the humblest second son of a Corinthian lord, the wait seemed worth it. For what man knows what his

      fate may bring?

      But the winner would not be Koprophoros, I could pretty

      well see,

      whatever his cunning or wealth. Not a man in the hall

      could be sure

      if the monster was female or male—smooth-faced as a

      mushroom, an alto;

      by all indications (despite his pretense) transvestite, or

      gelded.

      And yet he had come to contend for the princess’ hand—

      came filled

      with sinister confidence. I shuddered, looked down at my

      shoes, waiting.

      And so the strangers continued to eat, drank Kreon’s

      wine,

      and talked, observing in the backs of their minds the

      muffled boom

      of thunder, the whisper of rain. Below the city wall, the thistle-whiskered guardians watching the sea-kings’

      ships

      cursed the delay, huddled in tents of sail, and cursed their fellow seamen, hours late in arriving to stand their stint—slack whoresmen swilling down wine like

      the hopeful captains

      packed into Kreon’s hall. The sea-kings knew their

      grumbling—

      talked of that nuisance from time to time, among

      themselves,

      with grim smiles. They sent men down, from time to

      time,

      to quiet the sailors’ mutterings; but they kept their seats. The stakes were high, though what game Kreon meant

      to play

      was not yet clear.

      The Northern slave, Amekhenos, moved

      with the boy from table to table, pouring Cretan wine to the riveted rims of the bowls, his eyes averted, masked in submissiveness. The boy, head bent, returned the

      bowls

      to the trestle-tables, where the strangers seized them

      with jewelled hands

      and drank, never glancing at the slaves—no more aware

      of them

      than they would have been of ghosts or the whispering

      gods.

      The sun

      fell fire-wheeled to the rim of the sea. King Kreon’s

      herds,

      dwindling day by day for the sea-kings’ feasts, lay still in the shade of elms. The storm had passed; in its

      green wake

      songbirds warbled the sweetness of former times, the age when gods and goddesses walked the world on feet so

      light

      they snapped no flower stem. The air was ripe with the

      scent

      of olives, apples heavy
    on the bough, and autumn honey. Already the broadleafed oaks of every coppice and hurst had turned, pyretic, sealing their poisons away for the

      time

      of cold; soon the leaves would fall like abandoned

      wealth. Below,

      the coriander on the cantles of walls and bandied posts of hayricks flamed its retreat. The very air was medlar, sweet with the juice of decay. The palace of Kreon,

      rising

      tier on tier, as gleaming white as a giant’s skull, hove dreamlike into the clouds, the sea-blue eagles’

      roads,

      like a god musing on the world. As far as the eye could

      see—

      mountains, valleys, slanting shore, bright parapets— the world belonged to Kreon.

      The smells of cooking came,

      meat-scented smoke, to the portico where Kreon stood, his hand on his faithful servant’s arm, his bald head

      tipped,

      listening to sounds from the house. The meal was served.

      The guests

      talked with their neighbors, voices merging as the sea’s

      welmings

      close to a gray unintelligible roar on barren shoals, the clink of their spoons like the click of far-off rocks

      shifting.

      “Old friend,” the king said thoughtfully, looking at

      the river with eyes

      sharpened to the piercing edge of an evening songbird’s

      note,

      “all will be well, I think.” He patted the slave’s hard arm. “We’ll be all right. The fortunes of our troubled house

      are at last

      on the upswing. Trust me! We’ve nothing more to do

      now but wait,

      observe with an icy, calculating eye as tension mounts—churns up like an oracle’s voice. We’ll see,

      my friend,

      what abditories of weakness, secret guile they keep, what signs of virtue hidden to the casual glance.

      Remember:

      No prejudgments! Cold and objective as gods we’ll

      watch,

      so far as possible. The man we finally choose we’ll choose not from our own admiration, but of simple necessity. Not the best there, necessarily—the mightiest fist, the smoothest tongue. Our line’s unlucky. The man we

      need

      is the man who’ll make it survive. Pray god we recognize

      him!”

      He smiled, though his brow was troubled. It seemed

      more strain than he needed,

      this last effort of his reign, choice of a successor. He

      stood

      the weight of it only by will. He opened his hands like a

      merchant

      robbed of all hope save one gray galleon, far out at sea, listing a little, but ploughing precariously home. “What

      more

      can a man do?” he said, and forced a chuckle. “Some may well be surprised when we’ve come to the end of

      these wedding games.

      We two know better than to lay our bets on wealth alone, honor like poor Jokasta’s, or obstinate holiness, genius like that of King Oidipus—the godly brain he squanders now on gulls and winds and crawling

      things.

      Yet some man here in this house …” The king fell

      silent, brooding.

      “And yet there’s one man more I wish were here,” he

      said.

      He pulled at his nose and squeezed one eye tight shut.

      “A man

      with contacts worth a fortune, a man who’s talked or

      fought

      his way past sirens, centaurs, ghosts, past angry seas … a slippery devil, honest, not overly scrupulous, flexible, supple, cautious without being cowardly, a proven leader of men … ‘the man who brought

      help,’ as they call him,

      for such is the meaning of his name.” The slave at his

      elbow nodded,

      smiling. His eyes were caves. King Kreon wrinkled

      his forehead

      and picked at his silvery beard like a man aware, dimly, of danger crouching at his back.

      Just then, from an upper room,

      a girlish voice came down—Pyripta, daughter of the

      king,

      singing, not guessing that anyone heard. Wan, giant

      Kreon

      raised one finger to his lips, tipped up his head. His

      servant

      leered, nodding, wringing his fingers as if the voice were sunlight falling on his ears. She sang an ancient

      song,

      the song Persephone sang before her ravishment.

      Artemis, Artemis, hear my prayer, grant my spirit the path of the eagle; in high rocks where only the stars sing, there let me keep my residence.

      When the song ended, tears had gathered in the old

      king’s eyes.

      He said, “Ah, yes”—rubbing his cheeks with the back

      of his hand.

      “Such beauty, the innocent voice of a child! Such

      radiance!

      —Forgive me. Sentimental old fool.” He tried to laugh,

      embarrassed.

      The god feigned mournful sympathy, touching an ash-gray cheek with fingers gnarled like

      roots.

      Kreon patted his servant’s arm, still rubbing his

      streaming

      eyes and struggling for control. He smiled, a soft

      grimace.

      “Such beauty! You’d think it would last forever, a

      thing like that!

      She thinks it will, poor innocent! So do they all, children blind to the ravaging forces so commonplace to us. They live in a world of summer sunlight, showers, squirrels at play on the lawn. They know of nothing

      worse,

      and innocently they think the gods must cherish them exactly as they do themselves. And so they should!

      you’d say.

      But they don’t. No no.” He rolled up his eyes.

      “We’re dust, Ipnolebes. Withering leaves. It’s not a thing to break too soon to the young, but facts are facts.

      Depend

      on nothing, ask for nothing; do your best with the time you’ve got, whatever small gifts you’ve got, and leave

      the world

      a better place than you found it. Pass to the next

      generation

      a city fit for learning, loving, dying in.

      It’s the world that lasts—a glorious green mosaic built of tiles that one by one must be replaced. It’s that— the world, their holy art—that the gods love. Not us. We who are old, beyond the innocent pride of youth, must bend to that, and gradually bend our offspring

      to it.”

      He sighed, head tipped. “She asks for freedom, lordless, childless, playing out life like a fawn in the

      groves.

      A dream, I’m sorry to say. This humble world below demands the return of the seed. Such is our duty to it. The oldest oak on the hillside, even the towering plane

      tree,

      shatters, sooner or later, hammered by thunderbolts or torn-up roots and all by a wind from Zeus. On the

      shore,

      we see how the very rocks are honed away, in time. Accept the inevitable, then. Accept your place in the

      march

      of seasons, blood’s successions. —In the end she’ll find,

      I hope,

      that marriage too, for all its pangs, has benefits.”

      He smiled, turned sadly to his slave. “It’s true, you

      know. The song

      that moved us, there—bubbled up feelings we’d half

      forgotten—

      I wouldn’t trade it for a hundred years of childhood play. The gods are kinder than we think!” The servant nodded,

      solemn.

      Kreon turned away, still sniffling, clearing his throat.

      “Carry a message for me, good Ipnolebes. Seek out Jason—somewhere off by himself, if that proves feasible—and ask him, with all your skill and

      tact

    &
    nbsp; —with no unwarranted flattery, you understand (he’s nobody’s fool, that Jason)—ask, with my

      compliments,

      that he dine in the palace tomorrow night. Mention our

      friends,

      some few of whom he may know from the famous days

      when he sailed

      the Argo. Tell him—” He paused, reflecting, his

      eyebrows raised.

      “No, that’s enough. —But this, yes!” His crafty grin came back, a grin like a peddler’s, harmless guile. ‘Tell

      him,

      as if between you and himself—tell him I seem a trifle ‘miffed’ at his staying away, after all I’ve done for him. Expand on that as you like—his house, et cetera.” The king laughed, delighted by his wit, and added, “Remind him of his promise to tell more

      tales sometime.

      Mention, between the two of you, that poor old Kreon’s hopelessly, sottishly caught when it comes to adventure

      stories—

      usual lot of a fellow who’s never been away, worn out his whole long life on record keeping, or sitting in

      judgment,

      struggling to unsnarl tortuous tangles of law with

      further

      law.” He chortled, seeing it all in his mind, and beamed, clapping his plump dry hands and laughing in wheezes.

      It was

      delicious to him that he, great Kreon, could be seen by

      men

      as a fat old quop, poor drudge, queer childish lunatic. The river shone like a brass mirror. The sky was bright “Go,” said Kreon, and patted his slave’s humped back.

      “Be persuasive!

      Tomorrow night!”

      He turned, still laughing, lifting his foot

      to move inside, when out of the corner of his eye the

      king

      saw—sudden, terrible—a silent shadow, some creature

      in the grass,

      glide down the lawn and vanish. He clutched at his

      chest in alarm

      and reached for Ipnolebes. The stones were bare.

      “Dear gods,

      dear precious holy gods!” he whispered. He frowned,

      blinked,

      touched his chin with his fingertips. The evening was

      clear,

      as green as a jewel, in the darkening sky above, no life. “I must sacrifice,” he whispered, “—pray and sacrifice.” He rubbed his hands. “All honor to the blessed gods,”

      he said.

      His red-webbed eyes rolled up. The sky was hollow,

      empty,

      deep as the whole world’s grave.

      King Kreon frowned, went in,

      and stood for a long time lost in thought, blinking,

      watching

      the frail shadows of trembling leaves. His fingertips

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026