Hetaera--Suspense in Ancient Athens

BOOK: Hetaera--Suspense in Ancient Athens
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A
gathon’s
D
aughter
Book One: Hetaera

by

Suzanne Tyrpak

for

My Favorite Beekeeper

Contents

Foreword by Tess Gerritsen

Author’s Note

Cast of Characters

A
ct
O
ne

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

A
ct
T
wo

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

A
ct
T
hree

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

CHAPTER TWENTY ONE

CHAPTER TWENTY TWO

CHAPTER TWENTY THREE

CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR

CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE

CHAPTER TWENTY SIX

CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN

CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT

CHAPTER TWENTY NINE

CHAPTER THIRTY

Glossary

Acknowledgements

Other Books by Suzanne Tyrpak

Contact Suzanne

Copyright

Foreword

“Powerful writing makes itself known within a few paragraphs. That’s how quickly I realized that Suzanne Tyrpak is a writer of extraordinary talent, when I read the first chapters of AGATHON’S DAUGHTER during a writing workshop in Maui. I was the instructor, Suzanne was a student, yet I knew immediately that this was not a student’s writing. This was polished, riveting work, lushly descriptive and fraught with tension. I wanted to read the rest of this story. I wanted this to be a book.

Now that book is here, I’m delighted that other readers can savor the story that I’ve awaited so eagerly over the past few years. AGATHON’S DAUGHTER is a tale told by a writer who deserves your attention, a writer who certainly captured mine.”

Tess Gerritsen

New York Times Bestselling Author

Rizzoli and Isles

December, 2011

Note: Agathon’s Daughter: Hetaera,
book one of the
Agathon’s Daughter
trilogy, takes place in Athens, Greece, in 443 B.C.E. During the period known as “Classic Athens” (508 B.C.E. — 332 B.C.E.), Athens was a cultural center for art, philosophy and learning, the birthplace of Sophocles, Pericles, Socrates, and many others who changed history. At this time, rivalry existed between conservative oligarchs, who favored the old aristocracy, and forward-thinking politicians like Pericles who promoted democracy.

Women lived cloistered lives, could not own property, and received little education. The hetaerae (courtesans or consorts) were the exception. These highly educated women attended symposiums with men and could become extremely influential. Aspasia of Miletus, consort of Pericles, was known as the “first woman of Athens,” and she played a vocal role in Athenian society and politics.

Agathon’s Daughter
is populated by real and fictitious characters. Any similarity to persons living in the past two thousand years is coincidental.

Cast of Characters

Agathon of Athens
(fictitious) a wealthy statesman

Aspasia of Miletus
hetaera to Pericles (470-400 B.C.E.)

Calonice
(fictitious) a slave in the House of Agathon

Diodorus of Athens
(fictitious) Melaina’s son

Galenos
(fictitious) a slave, steward to Lycurgus

Georgios
(fictitious) a slave, Foreman of the silver mines

Hestia
(fictitious) a slave in the House of Agathon

Lycurgus of Athens
(fictitious) a wealthy statesman, Agathon’s business partner

Melaina of Athens
(fictitious) wife of Agathon, mother of Diodorus

Odysseus
(fictitious) a cat

Pericles of Athens
influential statesman, orator, strategos, (495-429 B.C.E.)

Socrates
a famous Athenian philosopher (469-399 B.C.E.)

Therapon
(fictitious) a slave, steward to Agathon

Thucydides, son of Melesius
a conservative statesman, Classic Athens

Zosime
(fictitious) a slave in the House of Lycurgus

A
ct
O
ne

True friend and follower,

beyond question you prove your loyalty to our house!

As a thoroughbred of the highest quality, though old,

does not lose courage in danger, but pricks his ear,

you urge us forward, our greatest supporter.

I will tell you, then, what I have determined;

listen closely to my words, and correct me,

if I miss the mark.

—Sophocles,
Orestes

CHAPTER ONE

W
ind swept down from the acropolis, driving dust along the narrow lanes past sleeping houses, slipping through bolted doors into the Master’s bedchamber. On this dismal night, even the House of Agathon offered no barrier against the winged god of death.

Hestia drew her shawl close around her shoulders, gazed across the chamber. The oil lamp sputtered, casting shadows on the ceiling, and darkness crept across the old man’s face.

“Come closer,” he called out, clutching at the bedcovers, struggling to lift his head. A rasping cough strangled his voice. He stared at her as if witnessing an apparition.

“Rest,” she said.

“I have wronged you.”

“Never.”

Hestia dipped a cloth into a bowl of water infused with thyme to stem the fever and mopped her Master’s brow. Since the onset of his illness, the furrows in Agathon’s forehead had grown more pronounced, and lines wrought by years of laughter sagged into a frown. The battle-worn face she loved so well, craggy as the hills of Athens, seemed possessed by a secret grief.

He regarded her with stark intensity. “If I should die this night—”

“Don’t speak of death.”

Groaning, he rolled onto his side. “Do you hear them howling?”

“Who?”

“The hounds of Hades. I hear the splash of Charon’s oars; the icy waters of the Styx lap at my feet.”

Despite the late hour, despite the impending rain, Hestia considered sending for the physician; the remedy Doctor Baraz had prescribed didn’t seem to be working. She moved quickly to the doorway, waking the injury she’d received as an infant. Pain shot through her ankle.

“Where are you going?”

“To get the Despoina.”

“Don’t wake my wife. Melaina needs her beauty sleep.” Agathon struggled to sit, his breath shallow and rapid.

In truth, Hestia felt relief. The prospect of waking the Despoina held all the charm of opening Pandora’s box—except no hope lay hidden at the bottom. Only wrath. Yet, the feverish glitter of Agathon’s eyes made her uneasy. She walked back to the bed and touched his forehead. Heat rushed through her fingers, the pulse of life escaping him.

“You’re burning up.”

“If only I could sleep.” Agathon closed his eyes, but he looked far from peaceful.

Hestia wiped her eyes, warding off her tears.

Melaina claimed it was disrespectful for a slave to show emotion. Slaves, Melaina said, were meant to blend into the furnishings, stay hidden in corners, like a chamber pot. Despite her effort to stop them, tears escaped her eyes. How could she prevent herself from crying for the one person in this world who had shown her kindness? The person who had saved her life.

Agathon’s eyelids fluttered open, and the soul she loved peered out. “Get some sleep,” he said.

“If I sleep who will care for you?”

“You’re a good girl, Hestia. A bit strong-willed, but intelligent.”

His words brought more tears.

“When the rains are over,” she said, attempting to compose herself. “And as soon as you regain your strength, we’ll visit the acropolis; make an offering at the Pantheon.”

“Pour me some wine.”

“Perhaps you need another dose of the physician’s medicine.”

“No more. It tastes bitter.”

“The Despoina opened an amphora of your favorite wine. I’ll add some honey to the wine and you won’t notice the medicine.”

“Don’t treat me like a woman—”

Hestia knew better than to argue.

Pain bit her ankle; it always did at this late hour. Favoring her left foot, she reached the sideboard. She poured wine from an earthen pitcher into a drinking cup then added water and a dollop of honey—the last of the supply she had gathered in the autumn. Soon it would be time to reopen the hives and discover if the bees had survived the winter—but now that Diodorus had returned from military service the bees would be his chore. Hestia admired Agathon’s son; Diodorus care about important things like the natural world, philosophy and mathematics. She glanced at Agathon to make certain he wasn’t watching before reaching for the vial of tincture. She dosed the wine liberally. Limping toward the bed, she offered him the cup.

“Your ankle pains you,” he said. She busied herself straightening the bedcovers. “Hestia, look at me.”

His face was blotchy, ravaged by fever. Though the physician insisted his illness wasn’t plague, the servants whispered otherwise. Day and night they lit fires and made offerings to the household gods, mumbling excuses why they couldn’t sit with him. Laundry needed to be done, bread had to be baked, spring cleaning was past due. Even the Master’s wife kept her distance. Hestia saw no lesions, no swollen glands, no sign of plague—yet Agathon’s condition worsened.

“Drink,” she said, “and you’ll feel better.”

“Stop fussing. Sit.”

She drew a goatskin stool close to the bed and sat, hands folded in her lap.

Agathon sipped the wine, made a sour face, then set the cup on the bedside table. He reached for her hand, small within his sturdy paw, and squeezed her fingers. “Remember the day we climbed the Hill of Nymphs?”

Not long ago, after another stormy night, she and Agathon had ventured out to wander through the sacred olive grove. Sunlight danced through rain-drenched leaves.

“I remember,” she said. “I asked you what Socrates says of love.”

“And I said you’re too young to ponder that subject.”

“Seventeen is hardly young, Master.”

“Time passes swiftly.” A frown tugged at Agathon’s mouth. He reached for the cup of wine, but didn’t drink. “According to Socrates, there are two varieties of love—the higher leads to harmony, the lower to destruction.”

“How can you tell the difference?”

“If you can answer that, my darling girl, you’re wiser than Socrates.” His eyes appeared troubled. “Can you find it in your heart to love an old warhorse like me?”

Hestia stared at her lap, unsure of what he wanted. Unsure of how to answer.

“My question upsets you.” He grabbed the cup of wine and drank. His eyes peered at her above the cup’s rim. “Give me your honest opinion—at this late hour of my life, can my soul be purified?”

“Your soul is pure. Your life has been exemplary—”

“No.”

She interlocked her fingers, observing their redness and how the knuckles blanched. Weighing her words, she said, “I believe all souls to be eternal. Therefore, the hour can never be too late for a soul’s redemption.”

“By the gods,” he said softly, “you’re a match for any man, any philosopher, even Socrates.”

“You flatter me.”

“I speak the truth. You take after your mother, golden curls, and eyes as blue as the Aegean.”

“My mother preferred me dead.”

“Who told you that?”

“The Despoina.”

“Melaina?” Agathon shook his head.

“Your wife says my mother chained me to a hill—left me, as an infant, to die of exposure.”

Agathon took a gulp of wine, his hand shaking. A cough took hold, deep and guttural. He tried to hand the cup to Hestia, but the wine spilled. A crimson stain crept across the bedcover—not only wine, but blood.

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