Tyrant: Force of Kings (25 page)

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Authors: Christian Cameron

Tags: #Historical Fiction

BOOK: Tyrant: Force of Kings
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Satyrus started. He got up from the carpet, where he had been raising his legs, and he sat on the edge of his couch, winded from a very minor exercise. ‘But … that means he sent them away before I even reached here.’

Jason nodded. ‘Oh, yes. I remember the order coming to us. It was more than a week before you arrived. Perhaps two weeks.’

Satyrus cursed. ‘Then he never intended to keep the treaty.’ The rage threatened to overwhelm him. If he had stayed on Delos, he’d be free now, and he’d have learned this. He had come to Athens for nothing. And almost died for it. Truly, the gods knew all, and men were fools.

He thought of Cassander ordering his death, and Demetrios casually ordering the hostages to Ephesus.

There was no side that he wanted any part of, unless it was Ptolemy.

‘I’ve been had,’ he said.

 

Night, and Achilles’ travelling brothel was hard at work. Satyrus walked out of his tent, careful in case the doctor was wandering about but eager to have a breath of air, and discovered that the storage tent had a plank across two bales of sheepskins and on this makeshift table four different knucklebones games were going on. Four large pithoi of wine were half buried in the soil behind another temporary counter, and men sat on bales of sheepskins or benches, drinking, while Memnon measured wine with a ladle.

Aella appeared from the darkness. ‘Cup of wine, sir?’ she asked. ‘Oh,’ she laughed. ‘It’s you.’

Satyrus nodded. ‘I’ll take the cup of wine,’ he allowed.

She nodded. ‘And there’s the games, of course – are you a gambling gent? And Alex and me have got some boys and girls – local talent, really.’

‘How old are you, Aella?’ Satyrus asked.

She swayed, gave him a hard look, her eyes cold as ice. ‘Seventeen, I think.’

‘Is this the life you want?’ he asked.

She met his eye easily. ‘No. This is the life I have. If you pay me what you said you would, I’ll never play another flute as long as I live.’ She shrugged. ‘Otherwise, this is my trade until my purse fills with a baby.’ She stalked away.

Alex sat down with him on the bench. ‘She’s just angry. We know you don’t have any money right now.’ He shrugged. ‘Besides, this is way better than Athens. Achilles put us in charge. I’m keeping more’n half of what I make.’ He nodded at a young boy. ‘And a quarter what they make.’

Satyrus swallowed bile. ‘Send Achilles here,’ he said.

The wine was not very good. Satyrus shook his head in disgust. He’d been wrong, he’d been taken, and now he was the master of a travelling brothel.

The weight of the bench shifted, and Satyrus made room for Achilles.

The man sitting next to him was
not
Achilles.

‘Stratokles,’ he breathed.

‘Satyrus,’ said his old enemy. He raised his empty hands so that Satyrus could see them in the firelight. ‘I’m here for your sister.’

Satyrus started. ‘What?’

Stratokles laughed. ‘It’s odd for all of us. But Melitta sent me, and I’ve brought several of your friends. It’s been the deuce of a time finding you, and there’s men out to kill you even now. Remember the doctor? Sophokles?’ Stratokles was watching the hypaspists.

‘I’m unlikely to forget him,’ Satyrus said.

‘He’s close,’ Stratokles said. ‘I saw him in Athens. He’s after you.’

Satyrus took a deep breath.

‘Apollodorus has the cream of your fleet at Aegina,’ he said. ‘And I have Anaxagoras and Charmides with me.’

Suddenly Stratokles straightened.

There was a sword at his throat.

‘Best explain yourself,’ Achilles said.

 

It took an hour to explain it all, and another hour to make their plans.

 

Another day, and the brothel closed up, counted its profits and paid off its staff. The Macedonians watched them go with mixed emotions – most of them had lost every obol they had to one vice or another.

The golden king’s doctor had pronounced Satyrus fit, and Satyrus agreed to go by palanquin to rejoin Demetrios at Achaea. He paused at the moment of departure to borrow cash – half a talent – from the doctor, and he used the money to pay off his four bodyguards, who added the money to their takings from four days of fleecing the Macedonians. Then, after a last visit to the tree line to relieve himself, Satyrus was seen to climb into the palanquin, his Tyrian purple chlamys visible through the silk curtains on the travelling kline.

The four mercenaries and a handful of former brothel employees watched the strong guard march away with the King of the Bosporus as their prisoner. When they had climbed the hill behind the Acrocorinth on the road to Achaea, Achilles shook his head.

‘That was too easy,’ he said.

‘Mmm,’ Memnon said. ‘Guard captain owed me more than a talent of silver.’ He shrugged. ‘He won’t be with ’em in the morning, either.’

Stratokles looked over the four. ‘Gentlemen, I consider myself among the wiliest men in the world today, and I profess myself to be a mere student before your mastery.’

Odysseus laughed. ‘Aye, like enough, there’s always someone to put one over on ye, no matter how swift ye may be,’ he said.

Satyrus rubbed his chin. ‘I still fear for Jason,’ he said. ‘The Theban boy was wearing his clothes. When they find out …’

‘That’s the beauty of it,’ Achilles laughed. ‘When the guard captain deserts tonight, he’ll take Jason with him. And those fuck heads will chase
him
.’ The mercenary laughed. ‘Never you fret for Jason, lord. He was playing this game when he was in nappies.’

A day’s ride over the mountains brought them to Megara, where Charmides and Anaxagoras waited. They were delighted – and so was Satyrus, who feared he might weep, he was so happy to see his friends.

‘Practised your lyre?’ Anaxagoras asked.

‘Not as much as I should have, no doubt,’ Satyrus said. He was choked with emotion.

Anaxagoras embraced him hard. ‘Let me be the first to tell you: I told you so, you fool.’

Stratokles laughed aloud.

‘We have a boat for Aegina,’ Charmides said.

At the pier, Aella paused. ‘Lord?’ she asked in a small voice.

‘Despoina?’ Satyrus asked her.

‘What happens now?’ she asked.

Satyrus scratched his chin under his new beard. ‘For you?’

She nodded. ‘Me and Alex.’

‘You can’t stay here. So you come with us, and I pay you each a talent of gold, and then you settle down – in Tanais, or Olbia.’

She nodded. ‘I don’t believe it,’ she said. ‘You’ll just cut our throats and dump us.’

Alex shook his head. ‘No, no he won’t.’

Aella was trembling. ‘We’re not even human to the likes of him. Here, give me something now, and I’m away. You, too, if you have any sense.’ She looked at Alex.

‘You cannot go back to Athens,’ Satyrus said. ‘Phiale will kill you.’

‘So you say,’ she spat. ‘I am not sailing away on that ship – away from—’

Satyrus narrowed his eyes, suddenly angry. ‘Listen to me, young lady. Away from Athens? Where you can sell your body until you get pregnant – and if you are lucky, keep a quarter of the proceeds? What will you have left of yourself in five years? Eh?’

‘As if you care,’ she said.

‘I do care. You two saved my life. I pay my debts.’ Satyrus regretted the words as soon as they were out.

She turned. ‘Fuck you and your debts,’ she said.

She crumpled to the ground when Memnon clipped her on the head. ‘For her own good,’ he said apologetically. ‘She’s got it for you bad, lord.’

‘Huh?’ Satyrus said, and felt foolish.

‘Let’s get to sea,’ Charmides suggested. He smiled.

As he jumped into the longboat, Achilles grunted. ‘Where to now?’ he asked.

Satyrus was still chewing over his encounter with Aella. But he managed a smile.

‘Ephesus,’ he said.

 

A hundred stades away, the captain of the guards who were supposed to be escorting Satyrus back to Demetrios cut open the back of the tent where Jason was waiting, wide eyed. The two of them slipped out through the slit in the tent wall and sprinted for the waiting horses.

‘Better get a good wage out of this,’ the Macedonian said.

They got on their horses and walked them carefully, quietly, clear of the ring of sentries, and then back across the hills towards Corinth.

 

Sophokles watched his target escape the dense ring of guards with well-concealed delight, and led his group of hired men to the south, up across the old pass with its deep chariot ruts in the rock and back down above the main Achaean–Corinthian road just as the sun was rising. The men at his back were Thessalian mercenaries – good horsemen, and tough as old leather. They got to the top of the pass long before their quarry.

Satyrus and his saviour rode into the trap without any god intervening to save them, and Sophokles had the immense pleasure of seeing his own black-fletched arrow finally go into Satyrus’s throat under the cowl of his chlamys. The King of the Bosporus fell from his horse and did not move, and the guard captain died a moment later with a pair of javelins in his back.

‘Phiale won’t like that you killed him,’ Isokles said.

Sophokles couldn’t stand the man, so he didn’t bother to respond.

‘Phiale won’t like that you killed him,’ the man said again in his annoying voice.

‘I don’t work for Phiale,’ Sophokles said.

‘But you said—’ the man began.

‘I lied,’ Sophokles said. He made a gesture, and his men emerged from their ambush positions.

Isokles went to the corpses, but Sophokles stopped him with a gesture.

‘No. Leave them for the ravens. No spoils. Let Demetrios wonder. And this way, Cassander can blame Demetrios – look how he was shot trying to escape? Perfect. I couldn’t have planned it better myself, and I must give thanks to the gods, who have played some odd tricks on me with this man and his sister. At last it is my turn.’

‘I don’t like you,’ Isokles said in his odd voice.

‘Alas. But I shall learn to bear it. Get on your horse, eh? There’s a good fellow.’

‘You ain’t as smart as you think,’ Isokles said. ‘And Phiale—’

‘No one is as smart as I think I am, young man. And Phiale isn’t even on the board.’ Sophokles reined in his horse and looked down at the King of the Bosporus. ‘How I shall enjoy telling this story,’ he said, and rode away.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part III

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘And he escaped?’ Demetrios asked. His tone was mild, and the hypaspist phylarch was obviously terrified.

The phylarch mumbled some sort of an answer.

‘Say that again?’ Demetrios said. A slave handed him pomegranate juice; Neron, his spymaster, stood close by him. He was wearing helmet and bronze thorax, that both had recent dents – Demetrios had fought, hand to hand, at the height of the pike push, and he’d been roaring in the front rank when they broke Cassander’s Macedonians with their own.

‘He might be dead?’ the phylarch attempted, although most men would have taken his voice for a whisper.

Demetrios sprang off his stool, unclipped his cheek-plates, and tossed his helmet to a slave. ‘I’m sorry, did you say dead?’

One of his strategoi was trying to get his attention. Demetrios swung his slightly mad gaze clear of the terrified hypaspist and inclined his head to Philip, son of Alexander. ‘Well fought, sir.’

The strategos flushed at the praise. ‘Thank you, lord. We have prisoners – thousands. Prepalaus’s whole army must be collapsing.’

Demetrios’s face lit with satisfaction. ‘This is it!’ he said, and thumped the other man on the back. ‘By Herakles, Philip, if Prepalaus collapses we’ve won. We push our sarissas into Asia and save Pater. By the gods – I never thought this moment would happen.’ He turned back to the phylarch. ‘Lad, you’re leaving something out. Speak. I’m in a benevolent frame of mind.’

The man stammered, mumbled. Paused.

‘We found the guard captain,’ he said, quite clearly. ‘Dead.’

Demetrios felt his guts clench. ‘And?’ he asked. It seemed to him that the gods had traded his Satyrus for this victory. What a foolish way for a hero to die.
Poor Satyrus.
The man deserved better, even if he chose the wrong side – perhaps
because
he chose the wrong side. Demetrios wanted him – as a contestant.

‘And Lord Satyrus?’ he asked patiently. As the master of Greece, he suddenly had time to be patient.

The man began to babble, and Neron smacked him.

Later, when Neron came back bearing a cup of wine, the spymaster shook his head wearily.

‘I honestly can’t tell what’s the truth and what’s fiction,’ he said. He sat on Demetrios’s ivory stool without asking permission. Neron was one of the few – very few – who had such rights.

‘Tell me all,’ Demetrios said.

‘It sounds as if Satyrus’s escape was itself a trap – an ambush to kill him.’ Neron shrugged. ‘I have one niggling thought – one cavil, if you like. That phylarch is holding something back, something he’s too scared to impart. I’m going to guess that the body he found was
not
Satyrus’s.’

Demetrios sat up on his kline. ‘You … by Herakles! That would be wonderful!’

Neron shook his hands, rubbed his eyes with his palms, shook his head as if trying to shake off fatigue. ‘I’m pleased for you, lord. You like him. But he’s a cunning opponent and if he has got clear, it is a master stroke.’

‘Nonsense,’ Demetrios said. ‘What can he do? We’ve the fleet, we’ve the army, Cassander’s at my mercy and I can push my pikes in Asia – tomorrow, if I want.’

‘If he’s dead …’ Neron took a deep breath. ‘If he’s dead, his sister will fight you for the Propontus.’

Demetrios was dismissive. ‘Let her. We’ll summon the Ephesian squadrons – sixty hulls there – and move our troops straight across to Asia, and bypass the Propontus. She can watch there all summer – the war will be passing her by.’

Neron nodded. ‘Your pater is hard pressed,’ he said. ‘We have to move fast. But you know all that.’

Demetrios drank off his juice. ‘I fought well today.’

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