Read Alexander: Child of a Dream Online
Authors: Valerio Massimo Manfredi
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #General
of Orpheus she had eaten human flesh. He looked into her enormous eyes, full of darkness now, full of such desperate violence that he would have believed her capable of anything.
‘Don’t curse him, Mother,’ he repeated. ‘Perhaps it is a good thing that I should suffer solitude and exile, cold and hunger. This is a lesson that I have never had before, one that my father never taught me. Perhaps he wants me to learn this as well. Perhaps it is the ultimate lesson, a lesson that only he can give me.’
With some difficulty he pulled himself from her embrace, leaped onto Bucephalas and dug his heels vigorously into the horse’s flanks.
The charger rose up onto his hind legs with a neigh, thrashed his front hooves in the air and then set off at a gallop blowing steamy vapour from his nostrils. Hephaestion lifted an arm in salute and then he too spurred his mount on, keeping hold of the bridle of the third horse as he rode off in pursuit.
Olympias stood there watching as they disappeared, her eyes brimming with tears. Soon all that was left before her was the empty northern road.
The letter from the King of Epirus reached Callisthenes in Pella a few days later and Aristotle’s nephew opened it impatiently and began reading.
Alexander, King of the Molossians, hails Callisthenes!
I trust this finds you well. My nephew Alexander is enjoying a quiet life here in Epirus, far from the turmoil of military life and the daily pressures of government. He spends his days reading, especially Euripides, and of course Homer, in the boxed edition he received as a present from his teacher and your uncle, Aristotle. Sometimes he amuses himself by playing the lyre a little.
On other occasions he takes part in hunting expeditions …
As he read the missive Callisthenes found himself increasingly surprised by its ordinariness and complete irrelevance. There was nothing important and nothing personal in the King’s communication. The letter seemed to be a completely futile exercise. But why?
Deeply disappointed, he put the papyrus down on his desk and started pacing the room, trying to understand what the King of Epirus had had in mind when suddenly, as his eyes fell on the sheet, he saw that there were cuts all along its edges, and on looking more closely he saw that these had been made deliberately, with scissors.
He brought the heel of his left hand up to smack his forehead. ‘Why on earth didn’t I think of it before! It’s the intersecting polygon code.’
This was a code that Aristotle had once taught him and he, in his turn, had taught it to Alexander of Epirus, thinking that it might just be useful one day if the young sovereign ever found himself leading a military campaign.
He got a ruler and a set square and started joining all the cuts in order and then all the intersecting points. He then traced perpendicular lines on each side of the internal polygon, thus obtaining further intersections.
Each intersection highlighted a word in the text and Callisthenes rewrote them all following a sequence of numbers that Aristotle had taught him. A simple yet ingenious way of sending secret messages.
When he had finished he burned the letter and ran to Eumenes. He found the secretary up to his eyes in paperwork, reckoning taxes and expenditure forecasts for equipping four more phalanx battalions.
‘I need to ask you something,’ he said, and he whispered in Eumenes’ ear.
‘They left ten days ago,’ replied Eumenes, lifting his head from the papers.
‘Yes, but where did they go?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘You know perfectly well where they are.’
‘Who’s asking?’
‘I am.’
‘In that case I don’t know.’
Callisthenes moved closer once more and again whispered ; something in Eumenes’ ear, then he added, ‘Can you get a : message to them?’
‘How much time do I have?’
‘Two days at the most.’
‘Impossible.’
‘I’ll do it myself then.’
Eumenes shook his head. ‘Come on, give it to me then. You reckon you could manage a job like this?’
Alexander and Hephaestion wound their way up the Argirinian Mountains, the peaks already dusted with snow, and then descended towards the valley of the River Aoos which shone like a golden ribbon way down below in the depths of the green slopes. The mountainsides, bedecked with forests, were beginning to change colour with the approach of autumn and across the sky flew flocks of cranes, crying as they left their nests on their long migratory journey towards the lands of the pygmies.
They travelled along the Aoos valley for two days, following the river as it flowed northward until reaching the intersection with the Apsos. They started up the river, thus leaving behind them the dominion of Alexander of Epirus and entering Illyna.
The population of this country lived spread out in small villages fortified with dry stone walls and they subsisted on livestock breeding and, occasionally, brigandry. But Alexander and Hephaestion had arrived well prepared wearing
trousers in the barbarian style and rough woollen cloaks. They were hardly a sight for sore eyes, but it was good wet-weather clothing and ensured they fitted in with the people from the area without being noticed.
When they started moving towards the interior mountain chains, snow began to fall and the temperature dropped considerably The horses blew clouds of vapour from their nostrils and they struggled and slipped on their way up the steep paths, so much so that Alexander and Hephaestion had to dismount and continue on foot, coaxing their animals along the way
Now and then, on reaching the high point of a mountain pass, they would turn to look backwards and the white sameness and vastness of the snow with only their own tracks spoiling it would send a shiver through their bodies, and not just because of the cold
At night they had to find shelter where they could light a fire to dry their sodden clothes, spread out their cloaks and rest a while Often, before falling asleep, they would sit and contemplate in the light of the flames the large white snowflakes as they fell dancing to earth, or they would listen rapt to the call of the wolves echoing through the lonely valleys
They were just boys, still fresh from their adolescence, and such moments filled them with a deep and harrowing melancholy. Sometimes they would pull the same cloak around their shoulders and hold each other tightly in the dark In the midst of the boundless fields of snow they remembered their childhood and the nights in which they would climb into each other’s beds, frightened by a nightmare or by the lament of a condemned prisoner crying out h
is torment
And it was
the frozen darkness and the apparent hopelessness of the future that led them to seek warmth in each other, to lose themselves in their nudity which was both fragile and powerful at one and the same time Their own proud and desolate solitude left them amazed
The cold, livid light of dawn called them back to reality and the pangs of hunger drove them to set about finding food
There were traces of some animals in the snow, so they went to look at the traps they had set and found they had managed to catch a few things a rabbit or a mountain grouse which they would eat still warm after having first drunk its
blood. On other occasions they had to set off with nothing but hunger in their bellies, frozen stiff by the biting cold of those inhospitable lands. And their horses suffered this ordeal as well, eating only the old grass they managed to find by scraping the snow with their hooves.
Finally, after days and days of difficult progress, exhausted by the cold and the hunger, they saw the frozen surface of Lake Lychnidos shining before them like a mirror in the pale light of the winter sky. They proceeded at a walk along the northern shore, hoping to reach the village of the same name before darkness fell. Perhaps they would be able to spend a night indoors, in the warmth, next to a blazing fire.
‘See that smoke on the horizon?’ Alexander asked his friend. “I was right … there must be a village down there. There’ll be hay for the horses and food and a straw mattress for us.’
Too good to be true, I must be dreaming,’ replied Hephaestion. ‘Do you really believe we’ll have all these things?’
‘Oh yes. And there might even be women. I once heard my father say that the barbarians from the interior sometimes offer them to strangers as a mark of hospitality.’
It had started snowing again and it was drifting, so that the horses struggled now through the whiteness. The cold air penetrated through their clothes to the very bone. Suddenly Hephaestion pulled the reins of his horse. ‘Oh, by the gods… look!’
Alexander threw his hood back and looked into the thick blizzard: there was a group of men blocking the way forward, motionless on their horses, their shoulders and their hoods covered in snow, all of them armed with javelins.
‘Do you think they’re waiting for us?’ asked the Prince, putting his hand to his sword.
“I think so. And in any case we will soon know,’ replied Hephaestion, drawing his own sword and spurring his horse into a walk again. ‘I’m afraid we’re going to have to clear a way through,’ Alexander said.
‘I’m afraid so too,’ replied Hephaestion quietly.
‘I was so looking forward to a plate of warm soup, a bed and a fire. And maybe even a fine wench. And you?’
The too.’
‘On my signal?’
‘All right.’
But just as they were about to launch into their charge, a shout rang out in the great silence of the valley.
‘Alexander’s troop salutes its leader!’
‘Ptolemy!’
‘Sire!’
‘Perdiccas!’
‘Sire!’
‘Leonnatus!’
‘Sire!’
‘Craterus!’
‘Sire!’
‘Lysimachus!’
‘Sire!’
‘Seleucus!’
‘Sire!’
The last echo faded away over the icebound lake and Alexander looked at the six men on horseback, motionless in the snow, and his eyes filled with tears. Then he turned towards Hephaestion and shook his head in amazement. ‘By Zeus!’ he said. ‘It’s my lads!’