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Authors: Steven Pressfield

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“It will be my privilege to stand up for the child,” Medon spoke. “We will present him tomorrow. His name as the lady wishes shall be Idotychides, as was her brother's.”

Harmonia wept with relief.

Rooster glared at the assembly with helpless rage.

“Then it is settled,” said Arete. “The child will be raised by his mother within the walls of my husband's home. At seven years he will enter the Upbringing as a
mothax
and be trained as any other blood issue of a citizen. If he proves worthy in virtue and discipline, he will when he reaches manhood receive his initiation and take his place as a warrior and defender of Lakedaemon.”

“So be it,” assented Medon, and the others of the mess, however reluctantly, agreed.

It was not yet over.

“This one,” Polynikes indicated Rooster. “This one dies.”

The warriors of the
krypteia
now hauled Rooster to his feet. None of the mess raised a hand in his defense. The assassins commenced to drag their captive toward the shadows. In five minutes he would be dead. His body would never be found.

“May I speak?”

This from Alexandros, advancing to intercept the executioners. “May I address the Peers of the mess?”

Medon, the eldest, nodded his assent.

Alexandros indicated Rooster. “There is another way to deal with this renegade which may, I suggest, prove of greater utility to the city than summarily to dispatch him. Consider: Many among the helots honor this man. His death by assassination will make him in their eyes a martyr. Those who call him friend may for the moment be cowed by the terror of his execution but later, in the field against the Persian, their sense of injustice may find an outlet opposed to the interests of Hellas and of Lakedaemon. They may prove traitor under fire, or work harm to our warriors when they are most vulnerable.”

Polynikes interrupted with anger. “Why do you defend this scum, son of Olympieus?”

“He is nothing to me,” Alexandros replied. “You know he holds me in contempt and considers himself a braver man than I. In this judgment he is doubtless correct.”

The Peers were abashed by this candor, expressed so openly by the young man. Alexandros continued.

“Here is what I propose: Let this helot live, but go over to the Persian. Have him escorted to the frontier and cut loose. Nothing could suit his seditious purposes more; he will embrace the prospect of dealing harm to us whom he hates. The enemy will welcome a runaway slave. Them he will provide with all the intelligence he wishes about the Spartans; they may even arm him and allow him to march beneath their banner against us. But nothing he says can injure our cause, since Xerxes already has among his courtiers Demaratos, and who can give better intelligence of the Lakedaemonians than their own deposed king?

“The defection of this youth will work no harm to us, but it will accomplish something of inestimable value: it will prevent him from being viewed by his fellows in our midst as a martyr and a hero. He will be seen by them for what he is, an ingrate who was offered a chance to wear the scarlet of Lakedaemon and who spurned it out of pride and vainglory.

“Let him go, Polynikes, and I promise you this: if the gods grant that this villain come before us again on the field of battle, then you will have no need to slay him, for I will do it myself.”

Alexandros finished. He stepped back. I glanced to Olympieus; his eyes glistened with pride at the case so concisely and emphatically put forward by his son.

The
polemarch
addressed Polynikes. “See to it.”

The
krypteis
hauled Rooster away.

Medon broke up the assembly with orders to the Peers to disperse at once to their berths or homes and repeat nothing of what had transpired here, until tomorrow at the proper hour before the ephors. He upbraided the lady Arete sternly, admonishing her that she had tempted the gods sorely this evening. Arete, now chastened and beginning to experience that quaking of the limbs which all warriors know in the aftermath of battle, accepted the elder's chastisement without protest. As she turned her path toward home, her knees failed. She stumbled, faint, and had to be braced up by her husband, who stood at her side.

Dienekes wrapped his cloak about his wife's shoulders. I could see him regard her keenly while she struggled to reclaim her self-command. A portion of him still burned, furious at her for what she had forced him to do tonight. But another part stood in awe of her, at her compassion and audacity and even, if the word may be applied, her generalship.

The lady's equilibrium returned; she glanced up to discover her husband studying her. She smiled for him. “Whatever deeds of virtue you have performed or may yet perform, my husband, none will exceed that which you have done this night.”

Dienekes appeared less than convinced.

“I hope you're right,” he said.

The Peers had now departed, leaving Dienekes beneath the oaks with the babe still in the crook of his arm, about to hand it back to its mother.

Medon spoke. “Let's have a look at this little bundle.”

In the starlight the elder advanced to my master's shoulder. He took the infant and passed it gently across to Harmonia. Medon examined the little fellow, extending a war-scarred forefinger, which the boy clasped in his strong infant's fist and tugged upon with vigor and pleasure. The elder nodded, approving. He caressed the babe's crown once in tender benediction, then turned back with satisfaction toward the lady Arete and her husband.

“You have a son now, Dienekes,” he said. “Now you may be chosen.”

My master regarded the elder quizzically, uncertain of his meaning.

“For the Three Hundred,” Medon said. “For Thermopylae.”

EIGHTEEN

H
is Majesty read with great interest these words of the Greek Xeones which I, His historian, placed before Him in their transcribed form. The army of Persia had advanced by this date deep into Attika and made camp at that crossroads called by the Hellenes the Three-Cornered Way, two hours' march northwest of Athens. There His Majesty made sacrifice to God Ahura Mazda and distributed decorations for valor to the leading men among the Empire's forces. His Majesty had not for the preceding several days summoned into His presence the captive Xeones to hear from him in person the continuance of his tale, so consumed was He with the myriad affairs of the army and navy in the advance. Yet did His Majesty not fail to follow the narrative in His spare hours, studying it in this, the transcribed form in which His historian daily submitted it.

In fact His Majesty had not been well for the previous several nights. His sleep had been troubled; the attendance of the Royal Surgeon had been summoned. His Majesty's rest was disturbed by untoward dreams whose content He divulged to no one, save the Magi and the circle of His most trusted counselors: the general Hydarnes, commander of the Immortals and victor at Thermopylae; Mardonius, field marshal of His Majesty's land forces; Demaratos, the deposed Spartan king and now guest-friend; and the warrioress Artemisia, queen of Halicarnassus, whose wisdom in counsel His Majesty esteemed beyond all others'.

The incubus of these troublous dreams, His Majesty now confided, appeared to be His own remorse over the desecration, following the victory at the Hot Gates, of the body of the Spartan Leonidas. His Majesty reiterated his regret at the defilement of the corpse of this warrior who was, before all, a king.

The general Mardonius beseeched His Majesty to recall that He had scrupulously observed all sacred ritual prescribed to expiate the lingering vapors of blood guilt, if in fact any such had been incurred. Had not His
Majesty subsequently ordered the execution of all those of the royal party, including His own son, the prince Rheodones, who had participated in the event? What more needed doing? Yet despite all this, His Majesty declared, the royal slumber remained restless and unsound. His Majesty in wistful tone expressed the fancy that He, perhaps in induced visions or seantic trance, might acquaint Himself personally with the shade of the man Leonidas and share with him a cup of wine.

A silence of no short duration followed. “This fever,” the general Hydarnes ventured at last, “has dulled Your Majesty's edge of command and compromised its keenness. I beg Your Majesty speak no more in this manner.”

“Yes, yes, you're right, my friend,” His Majesty replied. “As you are always.”

The commanders turned their attention to matters military and diplomatic. Reports were delivered. The advance force of Persian infantry and cavalry, fifty thousand strong, had entered Athens and taken possession of the city. The Athenian citizenry had abandoned the place utterly, betaking themselves, with only those goods which they could bear upon their persons, by sail across the strait to Troezen and the island of Salamis, where they now held themselves as refugees, huddling about fires upon the hillsides and bewailing their sorrows.

The city itself had offered no resistance, save that of a small band of fanatics who occupied the High City, the Acropolis, whose precincts in ancient times had been bounded by a wooden palisade. These desperate defenders had fortified themselves in this site, placing, it seems, their faith in the oracle of Apollo which some weeks previous had declared,

         

“…the wooden wall alone shall not fail you.”

         

These lamentable remnants were routed easily by imperial archers, who slew them at a distance. So much, Mardonius decreed, for the prophecy. The bivouac fires of the Empire now burned upon the Athenian acropolis. Tomorrow His Majesty Himself would enter the city. Plans were approved for the razing of all temples and sanctuaries of the Hellenic gods and the torching of the remainder of the city. The smoke and flames, it was reported by the intelligence officer, would be visible across the strait to the
Athenian populace now cowering in the high goat pastures upon the island of Salamis. “They will have a front-row seat,” the lieutenant said with a smile, “at the annihilation of their universe.”

The hour had now grown late, and His Majesty had begun to display indications of fatigue. The Magus, observing, suggested that the evening might now profitably be brought to a close. All rose from their couches, prostrated themselves and made their exit, save the general Mardonius and Artemisia, whom by subtle gesture of His Majesty's hand were bade to stay. His Majesty indicated that His historian would remain as well, to record the proceedings. Clearly His Majesty's peace was troubled.

Now alone in the tent with His two closest confidants, He spoke, relaying a dream.

“I was on a battlefield, which seemed to extend to infinity, and over which the corpses of the slain spread beyond sight. Cries of victory filled the air; generals and men were vaunting triumphantly. Abruptly I espied the corpse of Leonidas, decapitated, with its head impaled upon a spike, as we had done at Thermopylae, the body itself nailed as a trophy to a single barren tree in the midst of the plain. I was seized with grief and shame. I raced toward the tree, shouting to my men to cut the Spartan down. In the dream it seemed that, if I could only reaffix the king's head, all would be well. He would revive, and even befriend me, which outcome I dearly desired. I reached to the spike, upon which the severed head sat impaled…”

“And the head was His Majesty's own,” the lady Artemisia broke in.

“Is the dream that transparent?” His Majesty inquired.

“It is nothing and signifies nothing,” the warrioress declared emphatically, continuing in a tone that deliberately made light of the matter and urged His Majesty with all speed to put it from his mind. “It means only that His Majesty, who is a king, recognizes the mortality of all kings, Himself included. This is wisdom, as Cyrus the Great Himself expressed when he spared the life of Croesus of Lydia.”

His Majesty considered Artemisia's words for long moments. He wished by them to be convinced, yet, it was apparent, they had not succeeded entirely in stanching His concern.

“Victory is yours, Your Majesty, and nothing can take it from you,” the general Mardonius now spoke. “Tomorrow we will burn Athens,
which was the goal of your father, Darius, and your own and the reason you have assembled this magnificent army and navy and have toiled and struggled for so long and overcome so many obstacles. Rejoice, my lord! All Greece lies prostrate before you. You have defeated the Spartans and slain their king. The Athenians you have driven before you like cattle, compelling them to abandon the temples of their gods and all their lands and possessions. You stand triumphant, Sire, with the sole of your slipper upon the throat of Greece.”

So complete was His Majesty's victory, Mardonius declared, that the Royal Person need detain Itself not one hour longer here in these hellish precincts at the antipodes of the earth. “Leave the dirty work to me, Your Majesty. You yourself take ship home for Susa, tomorrow, there to receive the worship and adulation of your subjects, and to attend to the far more pressing matters of the Empire, which have been in favor of this Hellenic nuisance too long neglected. I will mop up for you. What your forces do in your name is done by you.”

“And the Peloponnese?” the warrioress Artemisia put in, citing the southern peninsula of Greece, which alone of the whole country remained unsubdued. “What would you do with it, Mardonius?”

“The Peloponnese is a goat pasture,” the general responded. “A desert of rocks and sheep dung, with neither riches nor spoil, nor a single port possessed of haven for more than a dozen garbage scows. It is nothing and contains nothing which His Majesty needs.”

“Except Sparta.”

“Sparta?” Mardonius replied contemptuously, and not without heat. “Sparta is a village. The whole stinking place would fit, with room to spare, within His Majesty's strolling garden at Persepolis. It is an up-country burg, a pile of stones. It contains no temples or treasures of note, no gold; it is a barnyard of leeks and onions, with soil so thin a man may kick through it with one strike of his foot.”

“It contains the Spartans,” the lady Artemisia spoke.

“Whom we have crushed,” Mardonius replied, “and whose king His Majesty's forces have slain.”

“We slew three hundred of them,” replied Artemisia, “and it took two million of us to do it.”

These words so incensed Mardonius that he seemed upon the point of rising from his couch to confront Artemisia physically.

“My friends, my friends.” His Majesty's conciliating tone made to quell the momentary upset. “We are here to take counsel, not brawl with each other like schoolchildren.”

Yet the lady's fervor still burned. “What is that between your legs, Mardonius, a turnip? You speak like a man with balls the size of chickpeas.”

She addressed Mardonius directly, controlling her anger and speaking with precision and clarity. “His Majesty's forces have not even sighted, let alone confronted or defeated, the main force of the Spartan army, which remains intact within the Peloponnese and no doubt in full preparedness, and eagerness, for war. Yes, we have killed a Spartan king. But they, as you know, have two; Leotychides now reigns, and Leonidas' son, the boy Pleistarchus; his uncle and regent, Pausanias, who will lead the army and whom I know, is every inch the equal of Leonidas in courage and sagacity. So the loss of a king means nothing to them, other than to harden their resolve and inspire them to yet greater prodigies of valor as they seek to emulate his glory.

“Now consider their numbers. The Spartiate Peers alone comprise eight thousand heavy infantry. Add the Gentleman-Rankers and the
perioikoi
and the tally multiplies by five. Arm their helots, which they most certainly will do, and the total swells by another forty thousand. To this stew toss in the Corinthians, Tegeates, Eleans, Mantineans, Plataeans and Megarians, and the Argives, whom these others will compel into alliance if they have not done so already, not to mention the Athenians, whose backs we have driven to the wall and whose hearts are primed with the valor of desperation.”

“The Athenians are ashes,” Mardonius broke in. “As will be their city before tomorrow's sun sets.”

His Majesty appeared of two minds, torn between the prudence of his general's counsel and the passion of the warrioress's advice. He turned to Artemisia. “Tell me, my lady, is Mardonius right? Ought I to settle myself upon pillows and take ship for home?”

“Nothing could be more disgraceful, Your Majesty,” the lady replied
without hesitation, “nor more unworthy of your own greatness.” She rose to her feet now and spoke, pacing before His Majesty beneath the arcing linen of His pavilion.

“Mardonius has recited the names of the Hellenic cities which have offered tokens of submission, and these I admit are not inconsiderable. But the flower of Hellas remains unplucked. The Spartans' nose we have barely bloodied, and the Athenians, though we have driven them from their lands, remain an intact
polis
and a formidable one. Their navy is two hundred warships, by far the greatest in Hellas, and every vessel is manned by crack citizen crews. These may bear the Athenians anywhere in the world, where they may reestablish themselves undiminished, as potent a threat to Your Majesty's peace as ever. Nor have we depleted their manpower. Their hoplite army remains untouched, and their leaders enjoy the full respect and support of the city. We delude ourselves to underestimate these men, whom His Majesty may not know but whom I do. Themistokles, Aristides, Xanthippus the son of Ariphron; these are names of proven greatness, fired and ardent to earn more.

“As for the poverty of Greece, what Mardonius says cannot be controverted. There is neither gold nor treasure upon these hardscrabble shores, no rich lands nor fat flocks to plunder. But are these why we came? Are these the reason Your Majesty levied and marshaled this army, the mightiest the world has ever seen? No! Your Majesty came to bring these Greeks to their knees, to compel them to offer earth and water, and this, these last defiant cities have refused and yet refuse to do.

“Put this fatigue-spawned dream from your mind, Your Majesty. It is a false dream, a phantasm. Let the Greeks degrade themselves by resort to superstition. We must be men and commanders, exploiting oracles and portents when they suit the purposes of reason and dismissing them when they do not.

“Consider the oracle which the Spartans were given, which all Hellas knows, and which they know we know. That either Sparta would lose a king in battle, which calamity had never in six hundred years befallen them, or the city herself would fall.

“Well, they have lost a king. What will their seers make of this, Your Majesty? Clearly that the city now cannot fall.

“If you retire now, Lord, the Greeks will say it was because you feared a dream and an oracle.”

She drew up then, before His Majesty, and addressed these words directly to Him. “Contrary to what our friend Mardonius says, His Majesty has not yet claimed His victory. It dangles before Him, a ripe fruit waiting to be plucked. If His Majesty retires now to palaced luxury and leaves this prize to be taken by others, even those whom He most honors and holds dearest to Him, the glory of this triumph is tarnished and defamed. Victory cannot simply be declared, it must be won. And won, if I may say so, in person.

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