BY
JEFFREY FORD
IN THE AFTERLIFE, AMID THE rolling green meadows of Asphodel, a grass sea of prodigious mounds and mere hillocks dotted with ghostly flowers stretching out in all directions, a solitary figure stood at the base of the tallest rise, the crest hidden in clouds.
Thunder rumbled in the distance as Sisyphus slapped his hands together to clear the dust and grit, and then spitting into each palm, he placed them upon an enormous green boulder three times his size, smooth as glass. An eon ago, he’d named the rock Acrocorinthus, as it reminded him of the mountain that overlooked the city where he’d squandered his humanity.
He dug into the summer dirt with the balls of his feet and curling toes. He leaned into the stone’s mass. His shoulder found the right spot, the muscles of his calves flexed, his thighs tightened, and his strength ran up from his legs into his back and arms.
There was a grunt that echoed over the meadow. The boulder, ever so slightly, broke its deal with gravity, inching forward, barely any distance at all, and rolling back from the incline. Sisyphus rocked his burden to and fro ten times, slowly building momentum. He screamed like a wounded animal, and then drooling, legs quivering, sweat upon his brow, he slowly ascended.
The condition of the ground was good, but rain was coming, lurking somewhere just over the next few crests. He challenged himself to make it to the top before the grass got slick and the ground turned to mud. Every iota of distance he won was an enormous strain. With muscles and joints burning, in intimate contact with the smooth surface of his personal tribulation, he needed to concentrate.
For the past millennium, at this juncture, he always returned to the same episode in his life. He’d thought through it seventy-two million different ways and would certainly think through it again. It took over his mind, letting his chest and biceps contend with the agony.
The time he’d cheated death happened back in the city of Ephyra where he had ruled, neither wisely nor well. He was a shrewd and conniving character, and the gods took a disliking to him. Treachery was afoot in his court; it was no secret to him. Zeus worked his cosmic will against the king of Ephyra to little avail. Sisyphus had outsmarted the gods more than once, and once was unforgiveable.
Before he was assassinated, he told his wife, Merope, that when he died, she was to throw his naked body into the street at the center of town. She complied with his wishes, as he knew she would, and because he’d not been buried, he was cast away onto the shores of the River Styx, forever unable to cross over into the afterlife.
Upon those sorrowful shores, he sought out Persephone, goddess of spring, on her yearly, contractual visit to Hades. When he tracked her down, just as she was stepping upon Charon’s boat to make the trip across the wild water, he laid out his case to her that he should be sent back to the world above in order to reprimand his wife and arrange for a burial for himself. With these tasks accomplished, he swore he would return to be judged.
The fair goddess, innocent as the season she represented, granted his wish. Of course, once he regained life, he didn’t return to the realm of the dead, but resumed his role as monarch of Ephyra and was soon up to his old tricks, betraying the secrets of Athena and plotting his brother’s murder by poison. Eventually the gods had to send Hermes to fetch him back to the afterlife.
He stumbled in a rut, and in an instant the boulder turned on him. It took him to the limits of his strength to wrestle the green globe into submission. His success cheered him, and he pushed on, breathing harder now. The rock grew heavier with every step. He whispered his queen’s name, Merope, repeating it like a prayer, struggling to remember her affection and a time he was worthy of it. There were moments he’d look up and see his reflection in the glassy surface of his work, and it often spoke to him of things he dared not tell himself.
The rains came and went, the scorching heat of summer, snow and ice, circling for a hundred years. Then one day he was there at the crest of the hill, and he was no longer pushing the boulder but leaning against it to prop himself up. His body made haunted noises as the muscles and tendons relaxed. He took a deep breath, and staggered away from his charge.
A minute, think of it as a century, passed, and as always, the enormous rock somehow rolled to the edge of the hill. A moment later it tipped forward and then was off, galloping down the slope like a charging beast and quickly disappearing into the cloud cover. In his imagination, he saw Acrocorinthus already waiting for him at the bottom.
He descended along the path the boulder had made. During journeys to be reunited with the rock, his mind wandered, and he wondered how his life and death might have been different. He often thought of one summer day out behind their cottage, in a clearing in the tall grass—yellow butterflies, white clouds, blue sky—as the young Merope, copper hair and green eyes, discovered his future in the palm of his hand. She promised to follow him in his ascent to the throne of Corinth.
It had taken mere centuries of pushing the stone before he realized that only the intangible things in life had been worthy of pursuit—love, friends, laughter, hope. Instead, during his years above, he’d chosen to value wealth and contracted greed, which swept him up into its tempest. Soon murder made sense, treachery was second nature, and lies were the meat of his meal. The boulder was a strict teacher, though, and through the torrent of hours, he reversed all his burning compulsions for material wealth, grew calm with his work, and saw he’d been a fool in his life.
The work of the boulder was simple, impossible work. When he strained beneath its weight, grappling for purchase against the incline, time disappeared. He was lost to the task at hand. At first, he considered his sentence a crushing labor, but on and on through the eons he’d come to realize it was hardly work at all, and more a necessary form of meditation. His wildest dream from deep in those contemplations was that if he continued on with his work into infinity, somewhere along that misty track, he would, himself, become a god through the mere process of repetition.
The planets swung in their arcs, and before too many years, he reached a spot on the hill where he could look out across the meadow, and also down to where the boulder sat like a flyspeck amidst the green grass and white flowers. Suspended from the rock ceiling of the underworld was an iron gray cloud that stretched above everything. First the rain came, falling cool and soft on the hillside. Then, a tearing sound, like a shriek, and a sizzling bolt of lightning streaked down from above.
As if the dart had been hurled by an accurate hand, it pinpointed and struck the flyspeck below. The boulder shattered into pebbles, and green dust flew everywhere. He blinked and looked again, and it was still vanished. The air rushed out of him and he fell to his knees. He looked over each shoulder for angry gods, and tried to swallow the agony of having his work obliterated.
Fighting through a great fear, of what he wasn’t sure, he got to his feet and staggered down the path. For the longest time, he waited there at the base of the hill where the boulder had nestled, expecting his tormentors to provide a new one. Nothing arrived. Eventually, he could sit still no longer and his memory of exertion demanded he move. He walked the meadow, up and down hills, pretending to push an invisible boulder. The enterprise was all unsatisfactory and disturbing.
Time scattered like dust, and he finally settled into the routine. He came to realize that the vistas were astonishing on the rare days the sun showed itself underground. Slowly, the absence of work soaked in, and he even began to remember how to sleep. On the night that he realized there wouldn’t be another boulder, he made a tea of the roots of the white flowers and drank it. He was now on his own, and although he missed the embrace of the smooth rock, the next morning, he set out walking toward the west. Having tried all four directions, it was the one he favored.
Think of the years like leaves in autumn, and that’s how many he traveled. He’d learned to sleep on his feet, and it allowed him to walk through the long nights and deep into the heart of the west. He suffered loneliness, a longing not only for Acrocorinthus but for those unseen gods who had overseen his punishment. After many a summer, the light from an oasis in the distance woke him from a dream of Merope singing an enchantment to their first child, and he found himself upon a long thoroughfare leading to its gates.
Those gates were unguarded, and he entered onto the shaded path that cut beneath tall ancient trees hung with moss. The peacocks scurried before him, and goldfinches swooped and darted. He found a pond along the path with a crude wooden bench placed before it. Sisyphus sat and stared into the water, watching the orange fishes swim. A young girl ran by. He called to her, “Where is this?” and she replied without slowing, “Elysium.”
The place was enchanted with apparitions and alluring scents. It was a land of Whim. If he desired a drink, a drink would appear in his hand; along with it a keg of wine and an entire party of friendly revelers to help him celebrate. The women he conjured were beautiful, unique. There were books in the libraries of Elysium recorded from Homer’s memory that had never been born into the world.
Sisyphus shook off the peculiarities of death in the color, music, and swirling laughter of Elysium. Within its confines, he could adjust the pace of time from a dizzying rush to a crawl. The evenings lasted all season long and were filled with parties and assignations, games of hide-and-seek down long columned halls of an ancient architecture. Every moment brimmed with wonder.
For a brief respite from that charmed life, he returned to the pond he’d first encountered the day he arrived, and let the spirit of the place seep into him. There was something in the air and water of Elysium that made him forget for whole minutes at a time the hill and the rock and the struggle.
One afternoon, as he approached his sacred spot, he found someone sitting on the bench. It appeared to be a woman, wrapped in pale blue material, her head dimly glowing, her scent the very same as the advent of winter across the meadow. At first, he was going to fly away to the wine garden (yes, in Elysium he could fly), but instead he stayed and approached her. She looked up at him, and he felt for a moment an agony greater than the boulder had ever offered.
“Merope,” he whispered.
She put her finger to her lips, and when he lunged to take her in his arms, she backed away, wearing a scared expression.
“No, no,” he said. “I’ve changed.”
Still she shrunk from him. “How?”
“The stone has changed me. I pushed the weight of my misdeeds up a tall hill. Again and again.”
“It must have been a gigantic boulder,” she said.
“One’s deeds are the only thing heavier than one’s heart in the underworld.”
“Trust me, I know,” said Merope.
“You loved me in our early years together, didn’t you?”
She nodded. “They’re the most distant memories of all.”
“I’ll find you,” he said.
She held out her arms and they embraced. As he pressed himself to her, she faded to smoke and drifted out over the water. He rose, went to the edge of the pond, and looked for her in its depth. The fish swam through his reflection, bobbing up with open mouths to catch and swallow his tears.
Later that afternoon, he did fly to the wine garden and stayed there for a long time into the night, imbibing to excess and beyond in the presence of Cronus, the Titan King of Elysium. The old man was fierce, with a lot of teeth, and wore an expression of dangerous stupidity. It was said he’d eaten his children to save himself. Before being made king of Elysium, his son Zeus had thrown him into Tartarus, the bleakest region of the afterlife, for many many years. “The gods have instructed me to keep an eye on you,” said the king.
* * *
The only aspect of himself Sisyphus could remember as he flitted here and there was a vague sensation of the weight of the rock against his palms. He missed the heft of it, the strategy of steering its colossal mass up the treacherous hill. It had been an anchor for him, a center to the startling afterlife that was all drift and nightmare. His ascent and descent were a ritual that brought order to the infinite. In an afternoon’s conversation with the apparition of Sophocles, he discussed the frantic spinning sleep of Paradise. Think of the minutes swarming like gnats on a long, hot day. At the sudden end of the conversation, as Sisyphus fell toward sleep, the philosopher suggested, “In Elysium you can live your own story.”
When he woke, he turned his back on the whirlwind, the endless drinking, the flying here and there. Instead he used all his imagination and powers of concentration, all his desire, to conjure an image of Merope and a cottage in the country for them to live in. It was remarkable how near to the woman in life his apparition came. Her copper hair and green eyes were so perfect they startled him with his own power of memory.
She was lovely, dressed in flowing gowns and bedecked with emeralds. She drifted through the days in calm, silence. And when he spoke to her, he could tell she was really listening to his every word. He spoke at length about his dreams in Elysium, all his personal philosophy he’d accrued in his centuries pushing the rock. He went on and on, and she never blinked. In bed, her every move intuited his desire.
His constant attention on himself left the charade of love somewhat threadbare. So, he asked her what had happened to her after Hermes had come and spirited him away and he died a second time. She seemed taken aback by the question, stuttering to speak but unable to get anything out. “Tell me anything you can remember,” he said to comfort her. Still she couldn’t produce a single word. Eventually he blurted out, “Then tell me how you died.”
“How?” she asked.
In the same moment he wondered if she’d been assassinated by his brother, she spoke the words, “I was assassinated by your brother.” The story poured forth from her in all its expected intrigue. It was in those moments, while she told of her poor fate, that Sisyphus realized that the Merope he’d conjured could never be anything other or more than the product of his imagination.
* * *
He felt as though he was slipping more surely than if he’d hit an ice patch on the slope, and the boulder was quick to teach him a lesson. Then there was a knocking, and someone was calling from outside. Merope had huddled into herself, eyes closed, and said nothing. Sisyphus opened the door. It was the Titan Cronus, king of Elysium. He had to bend low in order to enter the cottage.
“She’ll torment you no more,” said the king. He pushed past Sisyphus, walked straight to Merope, and took her wrist in his hand. From the moment he touched her, she became increasingly vague and began drifting away at the edges.
“What are you doing to her?”
“I’m erasing her memory from you. Orders from the gods. You’re to think of her no more. If you forget her, you can stay in Elysium.”
The disintegrating Merope suddenly reached toward Sisyphus with her free hand, and he heard her cry out as if from a nightmare. The sound of it moved him, and he ran at Cronus, engaging him in a struggle. He wrapped his rock-callused hands around the king’s throat and squeezed. The old man punched his cheek with a fist like a mace, and a tooth flew from his mouth. It was followed by another hammer blow from the opposite side. Still, Sisyphus leaned into the battle and used his great strength to force Cronus back. He shouted for Merope to escape.
The brawl moved on, inching uphill, a trading of blows, a choking session, a wrestling match to end all matches. The cottage disappeared from around them in a strong wind, flying away piece by piece. The grass was covered with frost, and sleet fell across the hill. Cronus had the upper hand for a time, and then Sisyphus would counter and be in charge until the day it became clear that the old god had at some point become the boulder, Acrocorinthus.
As he strained beneath the weight of his task, Sisyphus happened to see his reflection in the sheen of the boulder. The likeness opened its mouth and said, “You never cared about Merope. She didn’t even have copper hair and green eyes. All you knew of her love was to take it and throw it away. She despised you and planned your assassination.” With these words, his conjured image of Merope, his false knowledge of Merope, fell back into the dark recesses of his memory. Pushing the boulder with all his might, he scrabbled to leave the cold, empty loss of her.
The solitary journey ahead took forever. The hill he now ascended was steeper and more difficult than the one before he’d gone to Elysium. There were forests and lakes and a decade of loose scree, ten centuries of rain, an indefinite duration of wavering concentration. The story of how he’d cheated death no longer did the trick. The merest inkling of a false Merope made him shudder. Her absence was a ghost in the cottage that was his head, a current of cold air between his ears that nearly froze his effort.
It came on slowly. With the awareness of a child in the dark, he felt the sodden spirit creeping through his limbs, and the rock became more insistent. He summoned his strength, found it asleep, and wondered if he was vanishing into the infinite. At that moment his knees buckled, his biceps failed, his Achilles tendons screamed. His work slipped from his hands and dashed away down the hill, splintering tall pines in its fierce descent.
It had never happened before that he hadn’t gotten the rock to the top of the hill. He feared Zeus’s thunderbolts as punishment for his failure. There was nothing, though—complete silence, total stillness. It was a mild night on the meadow of Asphodel, halfway up the tallest hill within sight. He spat and fought his lethargy in order to follow the trail of the boulder down into the forest and beyond.
It wasn’t long before he realized that the woods around him had gone completely black. He couldn’t see, and kept his hands out in front of him to avoid tree trunks. More than once, he smashed his shins against a fallen log, or twisted an ankle in a rut. There were no stars in the underworld, only a moon. When he pictured Acrocorinthus, sitting alone wherever it was, he pictured it gleaming in the moonlight.
He was on the verge of collapse from his exertions. The only thing that kept him from falling to the ground was the feel of a small hand in the center of his palm. He closed his fingers around it. It gently but confidently pulled him forward into the darkness. He could see nothing. A soft voice spoke to him from just below his ear.
“Tell me, stranger, what is your punishment in the underworld?”
“I am the murderous, thieving king of Ephyra and am forced to push the weight of my earthly transgressions up a steep hill for eternity. I’m looking for a green rock, smooth and enormous. Can you help me find it?”
“Follow me and I’ll explain,” she said.
Her presence next to him brought him energy and excitement. He’d not felt another’s touch in half the age of the cosmos, and it caused him to realize that it was what he’d wanted all along. His greed during life, his sick will, and even, in the afterlife, his work pushing the rock—none of it compared to that touch. His mind reeled at all the years it had taken him to learn it, the simplest truth.
“You are Sisyphus, bane of the gods,” she said.
“My name precedes me.” He noticed that they now seemed to be floating along above the ground rather than walking. It made for an uneasy feeling in the total dark, not knowing what’s up or down.
“I was unaware when I took your hand, since I can never see those I lead, but I’m your wife, Merope. It was so long ago. Do you remember?”
“Yes.” He shuddered at the answer, and though he was delighted, he knew the gods were behind this meeting.
She spoke, and he listened to her voice and saw in his imagination for the first time since death the true face of Merope—wide eyes and short black hair. “I too have been serving out my punishment in the underworld. I led many people to their doom in life, and have been treated to a taste of eternity. I throw spirits away in the manner you threw our love away.”
“After all these millennia, I finally have found my way back to you. For the longest time, I couldn’t remember you but only the memory of not remembering. Your touch,” he said, and reached around to embrace her with his free arm. He encountered nothing, as if dancing with a ghost, although he still felt her hand in his. They continued on through the darkness. He didn’t sense the forest around him any longer.
She told him of a dim, distant memory from when they had lived together. A night outside in the field next to their place, drinking wine and dancing around a fire. “I asked you if you loved me, and you said, ‘More than anything.’ ”
The memory came back to him with the speed of a boulder descending. “Yes, I see it,” he said. “It was from before I was king and you were queen.”
“When did that feeling end?” she wondered.
They discussed it. He apologized; she considered it. They could feel the current of time flowing around them, and she told him of all she’d accomplished acquiring wealth and power in his absence, back in Ephyra, while still alive. “As I cheated others for their wealth, I never realized I was cheating myself.” He laughed and told her about Elysium.
“I’ve heard of it,” she said.
The farther they descended into nothing, the simpler the memories became. He told her that somewhere in eternity he’d realized he’d loved her. “Did you ever have any feelings for me?” he asked.
“I did,” she said. She told him that her punishment had been assigned by Zeus, and it was to lure men and women into the deep heart of Tartarus, where even spirits of the afterlife are obliterated. He felt a twinge of panic at his destination, but didn’t give into it. He knew she must do her work. Instead, he clutched her hand more firmly. “Stay with me till then,” he said, and she promised she would. He was thankful to have someone to hold in the dark. Not even the gods could begrudge him that.