The Hittite (28 page)

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Authors: Ben Bova

Tags: #Historical

BOOK: The Hittite
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12

Feeling more than a little uncertain, I scratched at the smooth wooden planks of Helen’s door.

“Who is there?” came her muffled voice.

“Lukka,” I said, feeling slightly foolish.

“You may enter.”

I pushed the door open. Helen stood in the center of the shabby room, resplendent as the sun. She had put on the same robes and jewels she had worn that first time I had seen her alone, in her chamber in Troy. I hadn’t realized until this moment that she had brought them with her all this way. She’d probably hidden them under Apet’s black cloak that night when she asked me to take her away from Menalaos. In Troy she had looked incredibly beautiful. Here, in this rough inn with its crudely plastered walls and uncurtained windows she seemed like a goddess come to Earth.

I closed the door behind me and leaned my back against it, almost weak with the beauty of her. No one else was in the room; she had dismissed the girls who’d been waiting on her.

“Lukka,” she said softly, “you’ve saved my life.”

Somehow I managed to say, “You’re not safe yet, my lady. We’re still a long way from Egypt.”

“Menalaos must be back in Sparta by now, telling everyone how he
killed his unfaithful wife with his own hands and burned her body as a sacrifice to his gods.”

“Or he could be following our trail, trying to find you.”

She shook her head hard enough to make her golden curls tumble about her slim shoulders. “Don’t say that, Lukka! You’re frightening me.”

I stepped toward her. “That’s the last thing in the world I want to do, my lady.”

“My name is Helen.”

My voice caught in my throat, but I managed to half-whisper, “ Helen.”

She stood before me, warm, alive, breathing, her clear blue eyes searching mine.

“I owe you my life, Lukka,” she said.

Like a fool, I replied, “Apet told me about Prince Hector.”

Helen sighed. “Hector.”

“She told me that you loved him.”

“I still love his memory. But he’s dead now, in Hades with the rest of the House of Ilios.” She slid her arms around my neck. “And we’re alive.”

I looked down into her eyes and grasped her slim waist in both my hands. Our lips met.

And then I heard my two boys shouting to one another out in the hall. They pounded on the barred door to my room, calling out, “Daddy! Daddy!”

I twitched with surprise.

“Daddy! Open the door!”

Swallowing hard, I released Helen. “They’ll get frightened,” I said, apologetically.

A strange expression came over her face. She appeared puzzled, then angry, then amused— all in the span of a heartbeat.

Helen broke into laughter. “Go, tend to your little boys,” she said, giggling at me. “I can see that my charms are nothing compared to a father’s love for his sons.”

I felt my face reddening. “My lady . . . they’re only children.”

“Go, Lukka,” said Helen, her laughter tinkling like silver bells. “Do your fatherly duty.”

Shamefaced, I opened her door and stepped out into the hall just as Poletes opened the door to our room. The boys turned, saw me, and ran into my arms. And I was happy to hold them— even with Helen standing alone in her room, laughing. At me.

13

I hardly slept at all that night. Poletes snored beside me on the featherbed, Lukkawi and Uhri slept peacefully on the cots that the innkeeper’s sons had set up for them. I knew that Helen was on the other side of the wall that separated our rooms. Was she sleeping? Dreaming?

Strange thoughts filled my mind. I desired her, of course I did. What man wouldn’t? But did she truly desire me, or was she simply using her charms to keep me bound to her? She knew I could leave her here in Ephesus if I chose to. Leave her alone, defenseless, friendless and helpless in a strange land.

Do I love her? I asked myself. The idea struck me like a thunderbolt. Love her? A princess of Troy? The Queen of Sparta? Then an even wilder question rose before me: does Helen love me?

I lay there on the sagging feather mattress and wondered what love truly is. Women are for men’s plea sure. A wife takes care of a man’s home, bears him children, rears his family. But love? I never knew Aniti well enough to love her, nor could she have loved me. But Helen . . . Helen was different. What is love? I’ve put my life at risk, the lives of my men and my sons as well, for her. Is that love? Could she possibly love me? I knew it was impossible. Yet I lay there in the darkness, wondering.

Time and again I thought about tiptoeing out to her room. Time and again I could not work up the courage to do it. Yes, courage. I ‘d faced armed soldiery and never turned my back. I’d followed the emperor’s orders
even when they sent me far from my home. But facing Helen was a different matter.

A thousand thoughts raced through my mind. I saw Aniti’s face, sad-eyed, watching me from the gray mists of Hades. I had failed her, and now Helen had offered herself to me. The most beautiful woman in the world. What would happen if I bedded her? We still had months of travel ahead of us, through strange and unknown territory. How could I maintain discipline if we were lovers? The men would want women of their own, surely, and our little troop would bog down into a caravan of women. And my sons. It was difficult enough traveling with them. If the men took women we’d soon enough have pregnancies to deal with. And then babies.

Then there was Poletes. He wanted to stay in Ephesus, but I couldn’t risk allowing him to tell the tale of Troy to these people. They would soon realize that the Hatti soldiers in their midst were harboring Helen, Queen of Sparta, princess of Troy.

Helen. Was she really offering herself to me? A common soldier? A man with two young sons clinging to him? If I told her that I loved her, would she be pleased? Or would she scorn me? Then I realized that she must be lonely. After the mortal peril she’d been through, after seeing the man she loved spitted on Achilles’ spear, after watching Troy and its entire royal family destroyed, she was alone in the world, without a love, without a friend, without even the servant she had known since childhood.

She didn’t love me, of that I was certain. She couldn’t. It was impossible. But she needed me, and she knew that the best way to keep me loyal to her was through her body. Poletes had been right: she’ll snare me in her web of allurements. Or try to.

I watched the nearly full moon sink behind the darkened temple roofs before I closed my eyes in troubled sleep. It seemed merely a moment later when I felt Poletes get out of the bed, coughing and groaning.

“Are you all right?” I asked.

“No,” he said. “I’m old.” And he reached under the bed for the chamber pot.

Morning came bright and clear, the sky an almost cloudless blue. We
were all up early and trooped down to the inn’s tavern for a breakfast of yogurt and honey, followed by hot barley cakes. Magro and the men came dragging in, bleary-eyed but grinning and joking to one another about their night’s adventures. They joined us for breakfast and ate heartily. Helen stayed in her room and had one of the innkeeper’s daughters bring breakfast to her.

I sent Magro and two of the men back into the city to trade our worn horses and donkeys for fresh mounts.

“These old swaybacks won’t fetch much,” Magro said, as the men walked the animals out of the stable. I couldn’t tell which looked the worse for wear, the animals or my men.

“Probably not,” I agreed, nodding, “but get what you can for them and buy new ones.” I handed him a small sack that held some of the baubles from Troy.

As Magro and the two others left, with the string of animals plodding slowly behind them, the innkeeper came bustling up to me.

“My lord,” he said grandly, “may I ask how do you intend to settle your account?”

He’d seen me hand the sack to Magro and now he wanted his own payoff.

I clasped him by the shoulder and walked him back toward the tavern. “I have little coin,” I explained, “but this should cover our debt to you, don’t you think?” And I pulled from the purse on my belt one of the jeweled rings I’d been carrying.

His eyes flashed wide momentarily, but he quickly covered his delight. Holding the ring up to the sunlight, where its emeralds flashed brightly, he couldn’t help but smile.

“This will do very nicely, my lord,” he said. “It will fetch a fine price at the agora.”

I thought for a moment about going down to the marketplace and converting a few more of our baubles into coin.

“And how long do you plan to stay with us, sir?” asked the landlord.

I made myself shrug. “A few days, perhaps less, perhaps longer.”

He bobbed his head up and down. “My inn is at your disposal, sir.
Would you like to have one of my daughters tend to your children this day?”

“I think not. I want to see the city, and I know they’ll be curious about it also.”

“As you wish, my lord.”

I could see the thoughts running through his greedy mind. If I could pull a precious emerald ring out of my purse, what other treasures might I have in those boxes that we had carried up to my room? I realized that I couldn’t leave my room unguarded.

I detailed Hartu and Drako to stay at the inn and protect our goods. “Wear your swords,” I commanded them. “Let these busybodies see that you’re armed.”

They nodded blearily, their eyes bloodshot. I had to make an effort not to laugh at them. “You can stay in my room with the baggage and take turns napping. But wear your swords when you come out here.”

Then Helen came down, muffled in her royal-blue cloak. As if nothing had happened between us the previous day, she asked me, “Are we going to see the city?”

“We are,” I replied.

14

We made an odd pro cession as we walked through the streets of Ephesus: Helen, Poletes, my two children and I— plus Sukku, one of the Hatti soldiers we had picked up along our route from Troy.

Still muffled in her hooded cloak, Helen walked at my side. On my other side Poletes, strong enough now to walk, had tied a scarf of white silk across his useless eyes. He carried a walking stick, and was learning to tap out the ground ahead of him so that he could walk by himself. Still, he never strayed more than an arm’s length from me.

Lukkawi and Uhri ran ahead along the narrow, crooked streets, poking their heads into every doorway, chasing after every alley cat they saw, laughing and happy to be able to give free rein to their childish high spirits. Sukku plodded along behind them and never let them out of his sight.

Soon the streets widened into broad avenues paved with marble, which opened onto grand plazas flanked by gracious houses and shops bearing wares from Crete, Egypt, Babylon, even fabled India.

I saw only a few beggars on those avenues, although there were mimes and acrobats and other performers in each of the plazas, entertaining the people who, from their dress, seemed to come from the four corners of the world.

Ephesus was truly a city of culture and comfort, rich with marble temples and centers for healers to ply their craft and even a library that stored
scrolls of knowledge. We walked slowly through the plazas and the growing throngs of people crowding into them. Then we came to the city’s central marketplace, and passed a knot of people gathered around an old man who was squatting on the marble paving blocks, weaving a spell of words, while his listeners tossed an occasional coin his way.

“A storyteller!” Poletes yelped.

“Not here,” I whispered to him.

“Let me stay and listen, Master Lukka,” he begged. “Please! I swear that I won’t speak a word.”

Reluctantly I allowed it. I thought I could trust Poletes’ word; it was his heart that I worried about. He was a storyteller, it was in his blood. How long could he remain silent when he had the grandest story of all time to tell to the crowd?

I decided to give him an hour to himself while Helen and I browsed through the shops and stalls of the marketplace. Even with Sukku watching after them, I kept an eye on little Uhri and Lukkawi; they kept disappearing into the crowds and then popping into sight again. Helen seemed delightedly happy to be fingering fine cloth and examining decorated pottery, bargaining with the shopkeepers and then walking on, buying nothing. I shrugged and followed her at a distance, my eyes always searching out my two boys.

The ground rumbled. A great gasping cry went up from the crowd in the marketplace. A few pots tottered off their shelves and smashed to the ground. The world seemed to sway giddily, sickeningly. In a few heartbeats the rumbling ceased and all returned to normal. For a moment the people were absolutely silent. Then a bird chirped and everyone began talking at once, with the kind of light fast banter that comes with a surge of relief from sudden terror.

My sons came running up to me, with Sukku trotting behind them, but by the time they were close enough to grasp my legs the tremor had ended. I assured them everything was all right.

Helen stared at me, her face white with apprehension.

“An earth tremor,” I said, trying to make my voice light, unafraid. “Natural enough in these parts.”

“Poseidon makes the earth shake,” she said in a near-whisper. But the color returned to her cheeks.

The marketplace quickly returned to normal. The crowd resumed its chatter. People bargained with merchants. My boys ran off to watch a puppet show. I could see Poletes across the great square of the market, standing at the edge of the crowd gathered around the squatting storyteller. His gnarled legs were almost as skinny as the stick he leaned upon.

“Lukka.”

I turned toward Helen. She was half-frowning at me the way a mother shows displeasure with a naughty son. “You haven’t heard a word I’ve said,” she scolded.

“I’m sorry. My mind was elsewhere.”

“Watching over your boys.”

Nodding, I added, “And Poletes.”

Very patiently, Helen repeated, “I said that we could live here in Ephesus very nicely. This is a civilized city, Lukka. With the wealth we’ve brought we could buy a comfortable villa and live splendidly.”

“What about Egypt?”

She sighed. “It’s
so
far away. And traveling has been much more difficult than I thought it would be.”

“Perhaps we could get a boat and sail to Egypt,” I suggested. “That would be much swifter than travel overland.”

Her eyes brightened. “Of course! There are hundreds of boats in the harbor.”

I pulled Poletes away from the storyteller and we made our way to the harbor. Heavily laden boats lined the piers while bare-chested gangs of slaves unloaded their cargoes. The breeze off the sea carried the tang of salt air, although Poletes complained of the smell of fish. The boys ran up and down the piers, goggling at the boats, with their high masts and furled sails.

I saw that these merchant ships were different from the black-hulled boats the Achaians had used to cross the Aegean and reach Troy. They were broader in the beam and deeper of draft, built to carry cargo, not warriors; designed for commerce, not for war.

I began to ask about boats that carried passengers and talked with two different captains. Neither of them wanted to travel to Egypt.

“Too far,” said one of the grizzled seamasters. “And those Egyptian dogs make you pay a prince’s ransom just for the privilege of tying up at one of their stone docks.”

Disappointed, I was walking with Helen along one of the piers, searching for a willing captain, when suddenly Helen clutched at my arm.

“Look!” she cried, her eyes staring fearfully out to the water.

Gliding into the harbor were six war galleys, their paddles stroking the water in perfect rhythm. Each of them bore a red eagle’s silhouette on their sails.

“Menalaos!” Helen gasped.

“Or his men,” I said. “Either way, we can’t stay here. They’re searching for you.”

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