The states of Asia Minor nursed their wounds, sullenly crouching back against the vast mountains which belonged to the Hittites. They were frightened to move to Troy and frightened to band together in any one place because they had no idea whereabouts we Greeks would strike next. Actually we defeated them before we so much as sailed on our first campaign; all the advantages lay with us, cruising down the coast just too far out to be spied from land, mobile beyond any move they could make, for there were no easy roads between the various foci of settlement in that land of river valleys between rugged ranges. The Asia Minor nations communicated by sea, and we ruled the sea.
During the first year we intercepted many ships bearing arms and food for Troy, but these convoys ceased after they realised that we Greeks benefited, not Troy. We were too many for them; none of the cities dotted up and down that very long coast could hope to marshal resistance strong enough to defeat us in battle, nor were their city walls able to keep us out. Thus we sacked ten cities in two years, far down past Rhodos to Tarses in Kilikia, as close to Troy as Mysia and Lesbos.
When we ranged the seas Phoinix always gave charge of the feeder line between Assos and Troy to his second-in-command, and sailed with us in command of two hundred empty ships to accommodate the spoils. Their bellies rode low in the water when we shook our sails free of the smoke of a burning city, our troop vessels creaking with extra plunder. Achilles was ruthless. Few were left behind to breed future resistance. Those we could not carry into slavery or sell to Egypt and Babylon were slain – old crones and withered men, those no one had any use for. His was a hated name along that shoreline, and I could not find it in my heart to condemn them for hating Achilles.
As we entered our third year Assos stirred and came to life sluggishly; the snow was melting, the trees in bud. We knew no quarrels or differences, for we had long forgotten any loyalties save those we owed to Achilles and the Second Army.
Sixty-five thousand men were quartered at Assos: a core of twenty thousand veterans who never left for Troy, thirty thousand more who stayed with us for the duration of the campaign season, and fifteen thousand tradesmen and artificers of all kinds, some of whom remained in Assos year round. One of the permanent leaders always garrisoned Assos in case of attack from Dardania while the fleet was away; even Ajax took his turn at this, though Achilles always sailed. As I would not be parted from Achilles, I always sailed too. He was a fierce commander, one who never gave quarter or listened to pleas for surrender. Once he donned armour he was as cold as the North Wind, implacable. The object of our existence, he would say to us, was to ensure Greek supremacy and leave no opposition against the day the Greek nations would begin to send their surplus citizens to colonise Asia Minor.
When we sailed into Assos harbour after a late winter campaign in Lykia (Achilles seemed to have some sort of pact with the Gods of the sea, for we sailed as safely in winter as in summer), Ajax was waiting on the beach to greet us, waving gaily to signal that he hadn’t been threatened in our absence, and was spoiling to go back to war. Spring had come in full measure, the grass ankle high; early flowers dotted the meadows, the camp horses leaped and frolicked in their pastures, the air was soft and heady as undiluted wine. Filling our chests with the scent of home, we scrambled to jump down onto the shingle.
We split up then to meet later, Ajax going off with Little Ajax and Teukros, his great arms about them, while Meriones stalked ahead in Cretan superiority. I strolled with Achilles, delighted to be back in Assos. The women had been busy in our absence; pale green shoots in their garden beds promised herbs and vegetables for the cooking pots, garlands of flowers for our heads. A pretty place, Assos, not at all like the dour war camp Agamemnon had built at Troy. The barracks were scattered randomly through groves of trees and the streets wandered the way streets did in an ordinary town. Of course we were secure. A wall, palisade and ditch twenty cubits high surrounded us, fully guarded even through the coldest moons of winter. Not that our closest enemy, Dardania, seemed interested in us; rumour had it that its King, Anchises, was always at loggerheads with Priam.
There were women everywhere through the camp, some bulging in late pregnancy, and over the winter a landslide of babies had arrived. The sight of them and their mothers pleased me, for they soothed away the ache of war, the emptiness of killing. There were none of mine among those babies, nor any from Achilles. I find women interesting creatures, despite the fact that I am not attracted to them. All of ours were captives of our swords, yet once the initial shock and disorientation had worn off, they seemed able to forget whatever past lives they had known, whatever men they had loved then; they settled down to love again, to have new families and espouse Greek ways. Well, they are not warriors. They are the prizes of warriors. I daresay feminine realities are taught to them by their mothers while they’re still little girls. Women are nest makers, so the nest is of first importance. Of course there were always a few who couldn’t forget, who wept and mourned; they didn’t last at Assos, were sent to toil in the greasy, muddy fields where the Euphrates almost marries the Tigris, there, I imagine, to die still grieving.
The hall was the biggest room in our house, serving both as a sitting room and as a council chamber. Achilles and I entered together, our shoulders combined just clearing the frame on either side of the doorway. Noting that always gave me a pang of pleasure, as if it spoke in some way of who and what we had become. Leaders, masters.
I took off my own armour, whereas Achilles let the women strip his gear from him, standing like a tower with half a dozen women tugging at straps and knots, clucking when they saw the long black ribbon of a half-healed wound on his thigh. I could never bring myself to permit slaves to disarm me; I had seen their faces when we chose them from the spoils as part of our share. But Achilles worried not one bit. He let them remove his sword and dagger without seeming to realise that one of them could turn with the weapon in her hand and slay him as he stood defenceless. I looked them over dubiously, but had to admit that the danger of such an occurrence was very slight. From youngest to oldest, they were all in love with him. Our baths were already filled with warm water, fresh kilts and blouses laid out.
Afterwards, when the wine was poured and the remains of our meal cleared away, Achilles dismissed the women and lay back with a sigh. Both of us were tired, yet it was no use trying to sleep; broad daylight poured through the windows, we were still likely to be invaded by friends.
Achilles had been very quiet all day – not unusual, save that today’s silence hinted at withdrawal. I disliked these moods in him. It was as if he went somewhere I couldn’t follow, into a world his alone, leaving me to cry fruitlessly at its gates. So I leaned across to touch him on the arm, more strength in my fingers than I had intended.
‘Achilles, you’ve hardly touched the wine.’
‘I’ve no appetite for it.’
‘Are you off colour?’
The question surprised him. ‘No. Is it a sign of illness in me when I refuse the wine?’
‘No. More your mood, I think.’
He sighed deeply, gazed about the hall. ‘I love this room more than any other room I’ve ever known. It belongs to me. Because not one thing in it wasn’t won with my sword. It tells me that I’m Achilles, not the son of Peleus.’
‘Yes, it’s a beautiful room,’ I said.
He frowned. ‘Beauty is an indulgence of the senses, I despise it as an infirmity. No, I love this room because it’s my trophy.’
‘A splendid trophy,’ I floundered.
He ignored this banality, went somewhere else again; I tried again to bring him back.
‘Even after so many years, you say things I don’t begin to understand. Surely you love beauty in some guises? To live deeming it an infirmity is no life, Achilles.’
He grunted. ‘It matters little to me how I live or how long I live, provided that I’ve ensured my fame. Men must never forget me when I’m in my grave.’ His mood swung anew. ‘Do you think I’ve gone about the getting of fame the wrong way?’
‘That lies between you and the Gods,’ I answered. ‘You haven’t sinned against them – you haven’t slain fertile women or children too young to bear arms. It’s no sin to give them over into bondage. Nor have you starved a place out. If your hand’s been heavy, it’s never been criminally so. I’m softer, is all.’
A smile dawned. ‘You underestimate yourself, Patrokles. Put a sword in your hand and you’re as hard as any of us.’
‘Battle is different. I can kill without mercy in battle. But sometimes my dreams are dark and heavy.’
‘As are mine. Iphigenia cursed me before she died.’
Not able to sustain the talk, he drifted away; I fell to watching him, as there was nothing I liked better to do. Many of his qualities were beyond my comprehension, yet if any man knew Achilles, that man was I. He possessed the ability to make people love him, be they his Myrmidons or his captive women – or me, for that matter. But the cause didn’t lie in his physical attractiveness; it was a facet of his spirit, a vastness other men always seemed to lack.
Since we had sailed from Aulis three years ago he had become extremely self-contained; I sometimes wondered if his wife would even recognise him when they met again. Of course his troubles were rooted in the death of Iphigenia, and that I shared as well as understood. But not where his thoughts led, nor the deepest layers of his mind.
A sudden breath of cold wind stirred the drapes at either side of the window. I shivered. Achilles still lay on his side, his head propped on one hand, but his expression had changed. I spoke his name sharply. He did not answer.
Suddenly alarmed, I sprang from my couch to drop down on the edge of his. I put my hand on his bare shoulder, but he didn’t seem to know it. My heart singing, I looked down at the skin beneath my palm and bent my head until my lips rested against it; tears leaped under my lids so swiftly that one fell upon his arm. Appalled, I snatched my mouth away as he shuddered and turned his head to look at me, something in his eyes only half formed – as if in this moment he saw the real Patrokles for the first time.
He opened that poor lipless gash to speak, but whatever he might have said was never said. His eyes went to the open door and he said, ‘Mother.’
Horrified, I saw that he drooled, that his left hand was jerking, that the left side of his face twitched. Then he fell from couch to floor and stiffened, his spine arched, his eyes so blind and white that I thought he was going to die. Down on the floor I collapsed to hold him, to wait for the blackened face to fade to a mottled grey, for the jerking to stop, for him to live. When it was over I wiped the saliva from his jaw, cradled him more easily and stroked his sweat-matted hair.
‘What was it, Achilles?’
He gazed at me cloudily, recognition dawning slowly. Then he sighed like an exhausted child. ‘Mother came bearing her Spell. I think I’ve been feeling her coming all day.’
The Spell! Was this the Spell? It looked to me like an epileptic seizure, though the people I had known who suffered them always wasted away in mind until imbecility negated them; soon after, they died. Whatever afflicted Achilles had not attacked his mind, nor had the Spell become more frequent. I thought this was the first Spell since that one in Skyros.
‘Why did she come, Achilles?’
‘To remind me that I will die.’
‘You can’t say that! How do you know?’ I helped him to his feet, put him on his couch and sat down beside him. ‘I saw you in this Spell, Achilles, and what it looked like to me was an epilepsy.’
‘Perhaps it is an epilepsy. If so, then my mother sends it to remind me of my mortality. And she’s right. I must die before Troy falls. The Spell is a taste of death, existence as a shade, uncaring and unfeeling.’ His mouth drew in. ‘Long and ignominious or short and glorious. There is no choice, which is what she will not see. Her visitations as the Spell can change nothing. My choice was made in Skyros.’
I turned away and rested my head on my arm.
‘Don’t weep for me, Patrokles. I’ve chosen the fate I want.’
I dashed my hand across my eyes. ‘I don’t weep for you. I weep for myself.’
Though I wasn’t looking at him, I felt him change.
‘We share the same blood,’ he said then. ‘Just before the Spell descended, I saw something in you I’ve never seen before.’
‘My love for you,’ I said, throat constricted.
‘Yes. I’m sorry. I must have hurt you many times, not understanding. But why are you weeping?’
‘When love isn’t returned, we weep.’
He got up from the couch and held out both hands to me. ‘I return your love, Patrokles,’ he said. ‘I always have.’
‘But you’re not a man for men, and that’s the love I want.’
‘Perhaps that would be so if I’d chosen a long and ignominious life. As it is, and for what it’s worth, I’m not averse to love with you. We’re in exile together, and it seems very sweet to me to share that exile in the flesh as well as in the spirit,’ said Achilles.
So it was that he and I became lovers, though I didn’t find the ecstasy I had dreamed of. Do we ever? Achilles burned for many things, but the satisfaction of his body was never one of them. No matter. I had more of him than any woman, and found a kind of contentment at least. Love isn’t truly the body. Love is freedom to roam the heart and mind of the beloved.
It was five years before we visited Troy and Agamemnon. I went with Achilles, of course; he also took Ajax and Meriones. I was aware that this visit was long overdue, but I thought that even then he wouldn’t have gone were it not that he needed to confer with Odysseus. The Asia Minor states had grown wary, devised stratagems to anticipate our attacks.
The long, bristling beach between Simois and Skamander was nothing like the place we had left over four years earlier. Its ramshackle, makeshift air had vanished; permanence and purpose were self-evident. The fortifications were businesslike and well designed. There were two entrances to the camp, one at Skamander and one at Simois, where stone bridges had been thrown across the trench and big gates yawned in the wall.
Ajax and Meriones disembarked at the Simois end of the beach while Achilles and I came in up Skamander, to find that barracks had been built to house the Myrmidons on their return. We walked along the main road which traversed the camp, seeking Agamemnon’s new house, which, we had been informed, was very grand.
Men nursed wounds as they sat in the sun, others whistled cheerfully as they oiled leather armour or polished bronze, some of them engaged in stripping purple plumes from Trojan helmets so that they could wear them into battle themselves. A busy, happy place telling us that the troops left at Troy were far from idle.
Odysseus was emerging from Agamemnon’s house just as we arrived. When he saw us he leaned his spear against the portico and opened his arms, grinning. There were two or three fresh scars on his sturdy body – had he got them in open combat or during one of those night excursions? He is the only devious man I have ever met who isn’t afraid to risk life and limb in a good fight. Perhaps that was the red man in him, or perhaps he was convinced he led a charmed life, thanks to Pallas Athene.
‘About time!’ he exclaimed, embracing us. And, to Achilles, ‘The conquering hero!’
‘Hardly apt. The coastal cities have learned to anticipate my coming.’
‘We can talk about that later.’ He turned to accompany us inside. ‘I must thank you for your consideration, Achilles. You send us generous spoils and some very fine women.’
‘We’re not greedy in Assos. But it looks as if you’ve been busy here too. Much fighting?’
‘Enough to keep everybody fit. Hektor leads a nasty attack.’
Achilles looked suddenly alert. ‘Hektor?’
‘Priam’s heir and the leader of the Trojans.’
Agamemnon was graciously pleased to welcome us to his half of our army, though he offered us no incentives to stay and spend the morning with him. Nor would Achilles have liked it if he had; ever since Hektor’s name was mentioned he was itching to find out more, and knew Agamemnon wasn’t the right person to ask.
None of them had really changed or aged, give or take a new battle scar or two. If anything, Nestor looked younger than of yore. He was in his element, I suppose, occupied and constantly stimulated. Idomeneus had become less indolent, which was good for his figure. Only Menelaos seemed not to have benefited from life in a campaign camp; he still missed Helen, poor man.
We stayed as the guests of Odysseus and Diomedes, who had also become lovers. Part expedience, part sheer liking for each other. Women were a complication when men led our kind of life, and Odysseus I think never noticed any woman other than Penelope, though his stories revealed that he was not above seducing some Trojan woman to obtain information. Achilles and I were told about the existence of the spy colony, an amazing tale in itself. Word of it had never got out.
‘And that’s astonishing,’ said Achilles. ‘Ye Gods, if they only knew! But I didn’t, nor anyone else I mix with.’
‘Not even Agamemnon knows,’ said Odysseus.
‘Because of Kalchas?’ I asked.
‘Shrewd guess, Patrokles. I don’t trust the man.’
‘Well, neither he nor Agamemnon will know of it from us,’ said Achilles.
For the duration of the moon we remained at Troy, Achilles thought of one thing only – meeting Hektor.
‘Best forget it, lad,’ said Nestor at the end of a dinner Agamemnon gave in our honour. ‘You might dally here all summer and not see Hektor. His sorties are random. They can’t be predicted despite Odysseus’s uncanny knowledge of what goes on in Troy. And at the moment we don’t plan any sorties ourselves.’
‘Sorties?’ asked Achilles, looking alarmed. ‘Are you going to take the city in my absence?’
‘No, no!’ cried Nestor. ‘We’re in no position to assault Troy, even if the Western Curtain came down in ruins tomorrow. You have the better part of our army in Assos, and well you know it. Go back there! Don’t wait here hoping for Hektor.’
‘There’s no hope of Troy’s falling in your absence, Prince Achilles,’ said a soft voice behind us: the priest Kalchas.
‘What do you mean?’ asked Achilles, obviously discomposed by those crossed and rosy eyes.
‘Troy cannot fall in your absence. The oracles say so.’ He moved away, his purple robe shimmering with gold and gems. Odysseus was right to keep some of his activities secret. Our High King esteemed the man greatly; his residence (right next door) was sumptuous, and he had his pick of all the women we sent up from Assos. Diomedes told me that on one such occasion Idomeneus was so enraged when Kalchas snatched the woman he fancied that he took his case to the council and forced Agamemnon to take her off Kalchas, give her to his co-commander.
Thus Achilles left Troy a disappointed man. So too, it turned out, did Ajax. Both of them had wandered all over the windy Trojan plain hoping to tempt Hektor out, but there had been no sign of him, or of Trojan attack troops.
The years ground on inexorably, always the same. The Asia Minor nations toppled slowly into ashes while the slave markets of the world overflowed with Lykians, Karians, Kilikians and a dozen other nationalities. Nebuchadrezzar took all we cared to send to Babylon, while Tiglath-Pileser of Assyria forgot his Trojan-Hittite ties sufficiently to take thousands more. No land, I discovered, ever seemed to have enough slaves, and it had been a long time since any war had provided the fount Achilles did.
Apart from our raids, life was not always peaceful. There were times when the mother of Achilles plagued him with her wretched Spell day after day; then she would make off for some other place and leave him undisturbed for moons on end. But I had learned how to make the Spell periods easier for him; he had grown to depend upon me for all his needs. And is there anything more comforting than knowing that one’s beloved is a dependant?
A ship came once from Iolkos bearing messages from Peleus, Lykomedes and Deidamia. Thanks to the steady flow of bronze and goods across the Aegaean from our spoils, things at home were prospering greatly. While Asia Minor bled to death, Greece was waxing fat. The first colonists were being assembled at Athens and Korinthos, Peleus said.
For Achilles the most important item of news concerned his son, Neoptolemos. Rapidly attaining manhood already! Where did the years go? Deidamia told him that the boy was almost as tall as his father, and displayed the same aptitude for combat and arms. Though he was wilder, had a roving disposition and a thousand female conquests. Not to mention a quick temper and a tendency to drink too much unwatered wine. Soon, said Deidamia, he would be sixteen.
‘I’ll instruct Deidamia and Lykomedes to send the boy to my father,’ Achilles said after the messenger had been dismissed. ‘He needs a man’s hand on his neck.’ His face twisted. ‘Oh, Patrokles, what sons Iphigenia and I would have had!’
Yes, that continued to eat at him – even more, I thought, than his mother and her Spell did.
It took us nine years to kill Asia Minor. By the end of the ninth summer there was nothing left to be done. The shiploads of Greek colonists were arriving in places like Kolophon and Appasas, everyone eager to begin a new life in a new place. Some would farm, some would trade, some would probably wander eastwards and northwards. Of no moment to us who formed the nucleus of the Second Army in Assos. Our task was over, save for an autumn attack on Lyrnessos, hub of the kingdom of Dardania.