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Authors: Valerio Massimo Manfredi

BOOK: Spartan
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‘I think I can help you,’ he said. ‘And if what I believe is true, you will be able to guide the Helots against Sparta, without remorse.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Think about it,’ continued Karas. ‘If it is true that the scroll was blank, as I too have heard, it’s clear that the original message was replaced with another.’
Kleidemos shuddered, thinking of that night on the gulf, of the shadow slipping furtively into their camp, bending over Brithos and then vanishing. ‘And if that is the case, only the
krypteia
could have managed such a trick. And the
krypteia
must have reported to the ephors. Now, one of them, Episthenes, was a friend to King Pausanias, and was privy to his plans.
It may have been him; he may have carved that phrase on your mother’s tomb so you would see it and seek the truth. The earthquake has sown many victims among the Spartans, and if Episthenes
has died, he has certainly carried the secret to his tomb. But if he’s alive . . . you know where he lives. I will accompany you.’

‘No, it’s too dangerous. I’ll go alone. This very night.’ He opened the door and looked up at the sky. ‘There are still a couple of hours of darkness before the
dawn,’ he said. ‘They will suffice.’

‘I wish this weren’t necessary, my boy,’ said Karas, getting up and following him to the threshold.

‘As do I. But I cannot act otherwise. The thought has been tormenting me for days, since my return road brought me to . . . the ruins of Ithome.’

‘You’ve been to the dead city? Why?’

‘I don’t know. I saw it standing before me, suddenly, as the sun was setting and I knew I had to enter those walls. Go now, Karas, and stay on your guard.’

‘Be on your guard as well. And when you find your answer, you know where to look for me.’

‘At the cabin near the high spring.’

‘No,’ replied Karas. ‘You will find me at the entrance to the underground chamber, near the clearing of the holm oaks. The time has come for the sword of King Aristodemus to be
taken from under the earth. His people shall be delivered.’ He wrapped himself in his cloak and left, as Kleidemos followed him with his eyes. A few steps, and he was nothing more than one of
the many shadows in the night.

*

Kleidemos took the grey hooded cape from the wall and went out beyond the courtyard in the direction of the city. He reached the Eurotas and descended into its gravelly banks so
as to escape the notice of the guards patrolling the countryside around Sparta. He approached the House of Bronze, slipping among the crumbling houses of the Mesoa district, still wrapped in
darkness. The city seemed deserted; the aftershocks had scattered any survivors far from the precarious structures. Certain areas of the city were dimly lit, here and there, by fires that had been
kept burning in the public squares and the
agora
. Kleidemos slunk along the walls trying to get his bearings as best he could. The pitch darkness protected him but also made it very
difficult to recognize the sites around him. He would often find his path blocked by rubble and be forced to turn back and search for another way through.

All at once, he made out a little shrine with an image of Artemis and he realized that the entrance to the Council House square was just a couple of blocks away. As he had feared, the square was
being guarded by a group of soldiers sitting on the ground around a fire. Kleidemos stayed flush to the portico wall which stretched along the building’s south side; slipping from one column
to another, he succeeded in avoiding the illuminated area without bring seen. He soon found himself in front of the house of ephor Episthenes; it was half in ruins. He drew up to the shattered door
and placed his ear against it but heard nothing. He plucked up his courage and entered. Most of the roof had fallen in and the floor was full of beams and debris, but part of the ceiling had been
propped up to make the house inhabitable and a lamp burned before an image of Hermes – Episthenes must have survived the quake and was perhaps still living there. Footsteps sounded in the
road – the hobnailed boots of hoplite soldiers: two of them, maybe three.

He slipped into a corner, hoping that they would continue past the door but they stopped right at the threshold. He heard the men exchanging a few words, after which they resumed their marching;
they must be a patrol squad. He leaned forward to make sure they’d passed, and saw a man with an oil lamp in hand entering the atrium and closing the door behind him. When he turned and the
lamp light illuminated his face, he recognized him: it was Episthenes, dressed in a ragged chiton. His fatigue was evident in his face. He took a stool and sat down, setting his lamp on the
floor.

Kleidemos came out into the open and announced himself. ‘Hail, O Episthenes. May the gods protect you.’ The man was startled, and raised his lamp to the intruder’s face.

‘By Hercules, the son of Aristarkhos! We’d given you up for dead.’

‘The gods have spared me, as you see, but I have run terrible risks. Forgive me if I have entered your house in secret, but the reasons which have impelled me to make such an unusual visit
are pressing, and serious.’

Episthenes lowered his reddened eyes. ‘I was hoping you would come to visit me one day,’ he said, ‘but events have prostrated us, and we can no longer speak with
serenity.’

‘There’s a phrase,’ said Kleidemos, ‘carved on the tomb of my mother. I think you can explain it to me.’

‘You have a quick mind, as I thought, but I’m afraid that what I have to tell you no longer has much meaning. I had those words carved in the name of justice, hoping that when you
returned home you would wonder about their meaning and seek out the truth. I was too old and too tired to do any more than that. But now . . . nothing is important any more. The city has been
struck by the wrath of the gods in punishment for our terrible deeds.’

‘I do not know to what you are alluding, Episthenes. You know the secrets of this city. But you cannot imagine how important it is for me to know the truth about myself and my family. And
I must learn the truth now, before the dawn of this day breaks.’

The ephor stood with difficulty, and drew very close. ‘You knew Pausanias’ plans, didn’t you?’ Kleidemos remained silent. ‘You can speak freely, no one is listening
to us and the man you see before you tried to save the king from death – unsuccessfully, as you know.’

‘It is as you say.’

‘And you would have helped him to achieve them?’

‘I would have, yes. But why are you asking me this? Pausanias is dead and my hopes with him. The only thing which has kept me tied to this city is the memory of my parents and my brother
Brithos. I want to know if there is any reason why I should remain bound to Sparta.

‘Episthenes, I served this city for ten years, I killed people I did not even know for her. My parents were forced to abide by her cruel laws and to abandon me. My mother died of grief; my
father and my brother died in combat. I need to know what mystery lies beneath this whole horrible story. I know that custom has it that all the men of a given family are never sent into combat
together: why was this law broken for my father and my brother Brithos . . . and for me as well? Because I’m sure that you knew who Talos the cripple really was.’

‘You are right. But if I tell you what I know, I fear that your only desire will be revenge.’

‘You are mistaken, noble Episthenes. At this point, I feel pity for this city that the gods have cursed. I need to know, because I am tired of living in uncertainty and anguish. It is time
for me to find my own road, once and for all.’ He neared the swinging door, looking through the cracks. ‘Dawn is not far off.’

‘That’s true,’ replied the ephor. ‘Sit down and listen.’

He offered Kleidemos a stool and both men sat down.

‘For many years in this city, the kings and the ephors and elders have been at odds, and the battle for control has been merciless. It was the ephors who provoked the death of King
Cleomenes, poisoning his foods with a drug that made him slowly go mad, day by day. Your father Aristarkhos and your brother Brithos were very close to the king and many believed that they may have
suspected something. And so when Leonidas was sent to the Thermopylae, my colleagues arranged for both of them to leave with the king, naming Aristarkhos his aide-de-camp and making your brother
one of the royal guard. It seemed an extraordinary honour rendered on the family; in truth, everyone knew that those men would never come back. The king must have realized all this, and before the
last battle he sent a message to Sparta, through the two sons of Aristarkhos, adding another warrior to make sure they arrived.’

‘Do you mean that Leonidas knew that I was the brother of Brithos?’

‘We all knew. As you were returning across Thespiae, a
krypteia
spy noticed you, and he saw the scroll with the royal seal at Brithos’ neck. He imagined that it must have
contained something important . . . something that perhaps should not reach the public domain. That man followed you on your entire journey and when you had set up camp at the gulf and had all
fallen asleep, he saw his chance and stole the king’s message.’

‘But then what did Brithos deliver to the ephors?’

‘A different scroll. A blank one. The spy, who today is an officer of the
krypteia
, falsified the royal seal but did not dare compose another message, because he did not know what
to write, and he could not forge the king’s signature.’

Kleidemos punched his knee in anger. ‘By Hercules! I saw the whole thing, but I was so overcome by weariness and fatigue that I thought I had dreamt it all . . . if only I had realized . .
.’

‘It was I who opened the scroll in front of the assembled elders and I was shocked to see that it was blank. I did not know the truth then, nor did any of those present at the assembly.
And so the rumour spread that Brithos and Aghias had plotted to escape death at the pass of the Thermopylae. It is even possible that this rumour was started by those who knew the truth and wanted
Brithos out of the way, fearful that one day he might discover what had happened. And so Aghias hanged himself and your brother disappeared. We all thought he was dead, until news spread that in
Phocis and Boeotia a warrior bearing the shield of the dragon was fighting against the Persians.
Krypteia
spies were dispatched everywhere to discover who this warrior really was. When
Brithos appeared at Plataea and died in battle my colleagues were greatly relieved. Brithos could be celebrated as a hero and no one would ever probe into the story of the king’s
message—’

‘But I was still in the picture,’ interrupted Kleidemos. ‘I was at the Thermopylae and I had returned with Brithos, accompanying him in all his exploits in Phocis and
Boeotia.’

‘Pausanias took you away with him at my suggestion and so you remained safe and under surveillance for years. When Pausanias was killed . . .’ the ephor’s voice quavered and he
pulled his cloak tight around his shoulders as if shaken by a sudden chill, ‘the ephors tried in every way possible to uncover whether you were involved in his plans, but your conduct was
very prudent. They captured a Helot shepherd, a giant of a man with incredible strength, because they knew he was your friend and that he had met with Pausanias. They turned him over to the
krypteia
and he was brutally tortured. But he evidently never said a word because they let him go, planning perhaps to follow him and trace him back to you. But he must have been very
prudent, as well. Perhaps he realized that his cabin was being watched, because he has never been seen since, not even yesterday, when the Helots attacked the city. No one has seen him.’

‘I’ve seen him,’ said Kleidemos. ‘It was he who told me to come here, convinced that you might be able to answer my questions.’ The ephor fell silent and Kleidemos
could hear a cock crowing: it would soon be dawn.

‘His intuition was correct,’ admitted Episthenes. ‘I saw the message of King Leonidas and I copied it before it was destroyed. I never had the courage to tell you of its
contents, so I had those words carved on your mother’s tomb. If the blood of great Aristarkhos flows through your veins, I knew that one day you would seek out the truth, wherever it was
hidden.’

He stood and pointed at the statue of Hermes in its niche on the wall behind Kleidemos. ‘It’s there,’ he said. ‘Inside the statue.’

Kleidemos lifted the figurine, his hands shaking. He turned it over and extracted a leather scroll.

‘Go now,’ said the ephor. ‘Flee; the sun is rising. May the gods accompany you.’ Kleidemos hid the scroll in the folds of his cloak and walked to the door. The road
appeared to be deserted.

‘May the gods protect you, noble Episthenes,’ he said, turning back, ‘for they have cursed this city.’

He pulled his cape tight and raised the hood as he walked swiftly down the road. He skirted the Council House square and penetrated into a maze of dark narrow little lanes in the Mesoa quarter
until he had reached the Eurotas valley. He ran at breakneck speed alongside the river, sheltered by the bank, until he was close enough to his own home. A thick fog had risen, so that he was able
to walk in the open without fear of being seen. He could see the tops of the cypress trees surrounding Ismene’s tomb in the distance, waving over the white blanket of fog, and he was able to
direct himself with a sure step to the Kleomenid house. He entered, checked that the place was empty, and then closed the door behind him. The sun, just over the horizon, spread its faint milky
light into the room. Kleidemos pulled out the leather scroll and unwound it with shaking hands. The words of King Leonidas appeared before his eyes, the words that the king had wanted to send his
city in the anguish of his final hour, words that had remained secret for thirteen long years:

Leonidas, son of Anaxandridas, king of the Spartans, Panhellenic leader, hails King Leotychidas, the honourable ephors and venerable elders.

When you read these words I will be no longer among the living, nor shall the valorous sons of Sparta here with me, who have met the dreadful force of the barbarians head-on. It is only
right that he who pays with his own blood make his voice heard. I have desired, in this my final act, to save from destruction a great family of valorous men, and to prevent them from being
unjustly sacrificed. These men are Brithos and Kleidemos, sons of Aristarkhos, Kleomenid – the first would be destined to die here, in violation of the laws of his city, while the other
lives as a servant, having escaped the death that the laws of his city had prescribed for him. They are the living image of the condition of Sparta: among these very rocks, the Helots will
spill their blood as surely as the warriors. These two sons of Sparta come from the same stock, and it is my desire that a new order be founded so that the two races who live on this same land
and who equally give their blood for her, may live in peace in the future under the same laws. I ask you that the memory of my brother Cleomenes, your king, be redeemed, as he was pushed into
the darkness of folly and death by no divine hand, I believe, but by human will. If all this does not come about in the city for which I am about to give my life, the gods will one day curse
her, for all of those who have suffered her injustice and abuse without reason, if it is true that the deities send truthful premonitions to those who are about to die.

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