Plato was logically forced to move his Atlantis beyond the Pillars of Hercules. The Mediterranean didn’t have room for it.
But take away the obviously invented hinterland. Shrink the city plan by one order of magnitude. The outline became not too
different from that of Santorini. Change years to months. The date of Atlantis’ death shifted to between 1500 and 1300 B.C.
And this bestrode the 1400 B.C. – give or take a few decades – that archeologists assigned to the destruction of Knossos,
the fall of the Thalassocracy.
Reid thought: I cannot tell her that I found what I read interesting, but not interesting enough to make me go there or even
to read further.
‘What are you talking about?’ Uldin barked.
‘We know the island will founder,’ Reid told him. ‘That will be the most terrible thing ever to happen in this part of the
world. A mountain will burst, stones and ashes rain from heaven, the darkness spread as far as Egypt. The waves that are raised
will sink the Cretan fleet; and Crete has no other defenses. Earthquakes will shake its cities apart. The Achaeans will be
free to enter as conquerors.’
They pondered it, there in the curious peace of the sanctuary.
Wind lulled, bees buzzed. Finally Oleg, eyes almost hidden beneath contracted yellow brows, asked, ‘Why won’t the Achaean
ships be sunk too?’
‘They’re further off,’ Uldin guessed.
‘No,’ Erissa said. ‘Over the years I heard accounts. Vessels were swamped, flung ashore and smashed, and coasts flooded beneath
a wall of water, along the whole Peloponnesus and the west coast of Asia. Not the Athenian fleet, though. It was at sea and
suffered little. Theseus boasted to the end of his life how Poseidon had fought for him.’
Reid nodded. He knew something about tsunamis. ‘The water rose beneath the hulls, but bore them while it did,’ he said. ‘A
wave like that is actually quite gentle at sea. I imagine the Cretans were in harbor, or near the shores they were supposed
to defend. Caught on the incoming billow, they were borne to land.’
‘Like being in heavy surf.’ Oleg shivered beneath the sun.
‘A thousand times worse,’ Reid said.
‘When is this to happen?’ Uldin asked.
‘Early next year,’ Erissa told him.
‘She means in the springtime,’ Reid explained, since Russia would use a different calendar from hers and the Huns, perhaps,
none.
‘Well,’ Oleg said after a silence. ‘Well.’
He lumbered to the woman and awkwardly patted her shoulder. ‘I’m sorry for your folk,’ he said. ‘Can nothing be done?’
‘Who can stay the demons?’ Uldin responded. Erissa was staring past them all.
‘The Powers have been kind to us,’ the Hun continued. ‘Here we are on the side that’ll win.’
‘No!’ flared Erissa. Fists clenched, she brought her eyes back to the men; the gaze burned. ‘It will not be. We can warn the
Minos and the Ariadne. Let Atlantis and the coastal cities on Crete be evacuated. Let the fleet stand out to sea. And … contrive
to keep the cursed Athenian ships home. Then the realm will live.’
‘Who’ll believe us?’ Reid breathed.
‘Can what is foredoomed be changed?’ Oleg asked as softly and shakenly. His fingers flew, tracing crosses.
Uldin hunched his shoulders.
‘Should
it be?’ he demanded.
‘What?’ Reid asked in shock.
‘What’s wrong with the Achaeans winning?’ Uldin said. ‘They’re a healthy folk. And the Powers favor them. Who but a madman
would fight against that?’
‘Hold on,’ Oleg said, deep in his throat. ‘You speak what could be dangerous.’
Erissa said, unperturbed, like embodied destiny, ‘We must try. We will try. I know.’ To Reid: ‘Before long, you will know
too.’
‘Anyhow,’ the architect added, ‘Atlantis holds our only chance of ever getting home.’
Rain came that evening, racing before a gale. It hammered on walls, hissed down off roofs, gurgled among cobblestones. The
wind hooted and rattled doors and shutters. Clay braziers within the hall could not drive out a dank chill, nor could lamps,
torches, and hearthfire hold night far off. Shadows crouched on the rafters and jumped misshapen across the warriors who sat
along the benches, mutedly talking, casting uneasy glances at the group around the thrones.
Aegeus huddled in a bearskin and hardly spoke. The royal word was given by Theseus, massive on his right, and Diores who stood
on his left. Of those who confronted them, standing, Oleg and Uldin likewise kept silence.
Reid and Gathon had had no beforehand conference; they had barely met, when protocol demanded that the remarkable newcomers
be presented to the Voice of the Minos; but the instant he trod through the door and took off his drenched cloak, the Cretan’s
glance had met the American’s and they were allies.
‘What business with me was too urgent to wait until morning?’ Gathon inquired after the formalities.
He spoke politely but gave no deference, for he represented Aegeus’ overlord. Less than a viceroy, more than an ambassador,
he observed, he reported to Knossos, he saw to it that the terms of Athenian vassalage were carried out. In looks he was purely
Cretan: fine-featured, with large dark eyes, still slender in middle age. His curly black hair was banged across the forehead;
two braids in front of the ears and carefully combed tresses behind fell halfway to his waist. As well as tweezers and a sickle-shaped
bronze razor permitted, he was clean-shaven. More out of consideration for the weather than for mainland sensibilities, he
had left the plain kilt of his people for an ankle-length pleated robe. The garment looked Egyptian; the lands of Pharaoh
and Minos had long been closely tied.
Theseus leaned forward. Firelight played across his sinewy countenance and in
the
carnivore eyes. ‘Our guests wished to
see you as soon as might be,’ he stated, rough-toned. ‘They told us of an oracle.’
‘The Goddess’ business does not wait,’ Reid declared. Erissa had described the formulas and explained how haste would lend
conviction. He bowed to Gathon. ‘Lord Voice, you have heard how we were borne from our different countries. We did not know
if this was by an accident of sorcery, or the caprice of a Being, or a divine will. In the last case, Whose, and what is required
of us?
‘Today we went forth, looking for a secluded place where we might talk. The king’s man who guided us suggested the Grove of
Periboea. There the lady Erissa made oblation according to the Keftiu rite of the Goddess she serves. Presently a sleep came
upon us that lasted for hours, and a dream. Awakening, we found we had all had the same dream – yes, even our guide.’
Oleg shifted his stance, folded and unfolded his arms. He had watched Erissa plant that vision in Peneleos. Uldin sneered
faintly, or was it a trick of the light wavering over his scars? A gust of rain blew down the smokehole; the hearthfire sputtered,
steamed, and coughed forth gray billows.
Gathon signed himself. However, his gaze, resting on Reid, showed probing intelligence rather than the unease which alloyed
Aegeus’ pain and exhaustion, Theseus’ throttled fury, Diores’ poised alertness. ‘Surely this is the work of a Being,’ he said
levelly. ‘What was the dream?’
‘As we have told my lords here,’ Reid answered, ‘a woman came, dressed like a high-born Keftiu lady. We did not see her face,
or else we cannot recall it. In either hand she carried a snake that twined back along the arm. She said, whispering rather
than speaking, so that her tone became one with the hissing of the snakes: “Only strangers out of strangeness have power to
carry this word, that houses sundered shall be bound together and the sea shall be pierced and made fruitful by the lightning
in that hour when the Bull shall wed the Owl; but woe betide if they hear not!”’
There followed a stillness within the storm. In an age when everyone believed the gods or the dead spoke prophecies to men,
none were surprised that a revelation had come to these who were already charged with fate. But the meaning must be anxiously
sought.
Reid and Erissa hadn’t dared be more explicit. Oracles weren’t. Diores would probably have accused them of lying if
his man hadn’t backed them; and he might well be skeptical regardless.
‘How would you read this, Voice?’ Theseus asked.
‘What do those think who were given it?’ the Minoan responded.
‘We believe we are commanded to go to your country,’ Reid stated. ‘In fact – no disrespect to our hosts – we think ourselves
bound to offer what service we can to him who is their sovereign.’
‘Had the gods intended that,’ Theseus said, ‘they could better have sent a Cretan ship to Egypt for you.’
‘But then the strangers would never have come to Athens,’ Gathon pointed out. ‘And the message does sound as if somehow they’re
destined to … bring sundered houses together. … Ill will has flourished between our countries, and the passage of time has
not much bettered things. These men come from so far away that their motives are less suspect than might otherwise be the
case. Hence they may be the go-betweens who make it possible that the will of the gods be done. If the Bull of Keft shall
wed the Owl of Athens – if the lightning of Zeus shall make fruitful the waters of Our Lady – that suggests an alliance. Perhaps
a royal marriage between Labyrinth and Acropolis, from which a most glorious king will be born? Yes, these people must certainly
go to Knossos for further talks. At once. The season’s not too advanced for a good ship and crew to take them.’
Abruptly Uldin snapped, ‘I think not! ’
You son of a bitch, flashed through Reid.
His anger died. The Hun knew they were faking, knew they were trying to reach a land whose downfall was prophesied. He had
argued bitterly in the grove that to take the losing side – a race of sailors at that! – was lunatic enough, but to add blasphemy
suggested demonic possession. He had only been won over to the extent of pledging silence when Reid explained about contact
with Atlantis being essential to winning home. Now his fears must have convinced him that that chance wasn’t worth the risk.
Oleg glowered at him. ‘Why not?’
‘I – well—’ Uldin straightened. ‘Well, I promised Diores I’d undertake certain matters. Do the gods want broken promises?’
‘Do we indeed know what their will is?’ Theseus put in. ‘The oracle could mean the very opposite of what my lord Voice
suggests. A warning of disaster if, once more, an unnatural union is made.’ The teeth flashed in his beard.
Gathon stiffened at the hardly veiled reference to a dirty story the Achaeans told about how the first Minotaur was begotten.
‘My sovereign will not be pleased if he learns that a word intended for him has been withheld like a pair of helmets,’ he
said.
Impasse. Neither side wanted the other to have the castaways, their possibly revolutionary skills and their surely enormous
mana.
Nor did either want an open quarrel, yet.
Diores stepped forward. He raised his arm. A smile creased his leathery visage. ‘My lords,’ he said. ‘My friends. Will you
hear me?’ The prince nodded. Tm just an old skipper and horsebreeder,’ Diores continued. ‘I don’t have your wise heads nor
your deep learning. Still, sometimes a clever man stands by the steering oar trying to figure out what’s ahead of him and
gets nowhere till his dolt of a shipmate swarms up the mast and takes a look. Right?’
He beamed and gestured, playing to his audience. ‘Well, now,’ he drawled through seething rain, yammering wind, spitting flames,
‘what have we got here? On the one hand, we have that the gods have naught against these good folk dwelling amongst us Athenians,
seeing as how nothing bad has happened because of that. Right? On the other hand, we have that the Minos is entitled to see
them too – if it’s not dangerous – and we think maybe the gods gave ’em their sailing orders today. We
think.’
He laid a finger alongside his nose. ‘Do we
know?
These be shoal waters, mates, and a lee shore. I say row slow and take soundings … also for the sake of the Keftiu, Voice
Gathon.’
‘What do you propose?’ the Cretan asked impatiently.
‘Why, I’ll say it straight out, like a blunt-spoken old wooden-head does. Let’s first learn what those think who know more
about the gods, and especial-like the Keftiu gods, than we do here. I mean the Ariadne and her council on Atlantis—’
Theseus sat bolt upright. His hand cracked down on his knee. The breath rushed between his lips. Reid wondered why he was
thus immediately kindled to enthusiasm.
‘– and I mean further that we shouldn’t risk sending the lot of ’em, the more so when stormy season is on us. Why not just
one who’ll speak for his friends, which friends I hope include everybody here tonight? And – m-m-m, wouldn’t y’ say Duncan
would be best to go? I mean, he’s the wisest of ’em, no offense to Uldin and Oleg. Nor to lady Erissa when she hears about
my remarks. Thing is, she don’t know anything the Ariadne don’t. But Duncan comes from the farthest country; he was the man
who could understand what the dying wizard had to tell; he can make fire spurt in his fingers; I don’t know what all else,
except that they look to him for advice about mysteries, and rightly, I’m sure. Let him go talk to the Ariadne on Atlantis.
Between ’em they’re bound to heave clear this fouled anchor we’ve got. Right?’
‘Right, by Ares!’ Theseus exploded.
Gathon nodded thoughtfully. He could doubtless see the plan was a compromise which allowed the Athenians to keep hostages
and exploit their knowledge, more useful than Reid’s. However, this was a portentous, ambiguous affair; caution was advisable;
and the Ariadne did have the Keftiu in her spiritual keeping.
This is what was foreordained, Reid knew. The sense of fate took him again, as it had done beneath the moon on Kythera; but
now it felt as if he were a raindrop hurled along on the night wind.
They left a lamp burning. The glow caressed Erissa like his hand. ‘Does it make me look young?’ she whispered through tears.
Reid kissed her lips and the hollow beneath her throat. She was warm in the cold room. Her muscles moved silkily across his
skin where they touched each other on the bed; the odor of her was sweet as the meadow of the nymph. ‘You’re beautiful’ was
the single poor thing he could find to say.