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Authors: Glyn Iliffe

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The first came dashing in from Eperitus’s left, levelling the head of his weapon at his liver. Eperitus quickly changed direction, cutting across the front of his attacker’s horse and switching his sword into his left hand. A moment later, the Trojan’s head had been swept from his shoulders and his body fell heavily to the ground, where it landed with a puff of dust. At once, his comrades spurred their horses towards Eperitus, one on either side to prevent his escape. They were confident that they were the better horsemen, and that the reach of their spears would carry the lone Greek to his death long before he could bring his sword to bear. Then one of them jerked back, a momentary look of surprise on his face before the darkness of death took him and he fell from his horse, a feathered arrow protruding from his chest. The other ignored the demise of his comrade and leaned forward with gritted teeth, spurring his horse ever faster towards his quarry. Eperitus dug his heels into the flanks of his own horse, leaning close to her neck and extending his sword at arm’s length before him. Squinting against the dust and bright sunlight, he heard the rapid tramp of approaching hooves on the dry turf and the snorting of his opponent’s mount. There was a glint of armour as the Trojan cavalryman came sweeping towards him, then Eperitus’s arm was torn violently aside as his sword was ripped from his hand. He heard a heavy thud behind him and, reining his horse about, he saw the body of his rival lying on the ground, surrounded by a cloud of dust. Eperitus’s sword was still quivering as it stuck up from his chest.

‘Eperitus!’ Odysseus shouted, running towards him with Antiphus at his side, bow in hand. Polites, Arceisius and a score more Ithacans were coming up behind them. ‘Give me your horse! There’s still time to keep the gates from shutting before Agamemnon arrives.’

Eperitus looked urgently back towards the plain, where he had last seen his father. Horsemen were pouring back through the Scaean Gate, their task of screening the Trojan retreat complete. The only other living soldiers outside the walls of Troy now were Greek – Agamemnon’s unblooded force marching up from the fords, and the battle-wearied survivors under Menelaus’s command regrouping at the top of the slope, out of bowshot of the city walls. The bodies of men and horses were strewn all across the plain, from the sandy beaches where the Greeks had landed up to the slopes around the walls of Troy. Of Apheidas there was no sign.

Eperitus backed his whinnying horse away from Odysseus’s outstretched hand and shook his head.

‘No, my lord. You’ll be shot down before you get anywhere near them. I can’t let you ride to your death.’

‘It’s an order, Eperitus, not a request!’ the king snapped angrily.

Eperitus stared down at him for a moment, then dismounted smartly. But before Odysseus could reach for the reins, he slapped his hand down hard on the mare’s flank and sent her galloping towards the gates of Troy.

‘The plan has failed, Odysseus,’ he said. ‘Penelope will have to wait a little longer.’

Odysseus watched the last of the Trojan cavalry crowding back into the city and nodded slowly, a hint of despair in his usually confident eyes.

‘You’re right, Eperitus,’ he sighed. ‘But for how much longer?’

As he spoke, the Scaean Gate slammed shut with a heavy thud.

The siege of Troy had begun.

A
UTHOR

S
N
OTE

The events that take place in
The Gates of Troy
are based, for the most part, on original myths. There are several versions of the events that led up to the Trojan War – many of them contradictory – so I’ve chosen the accounts I enjoy most or feel contribute best to the story. For example, some have it that Helen was kidnapped by Paris and taken to Troy against her will, while others say she went readily, having fallen in love with the Trojan prince. I’ve opted for the latter, as there’s nothing like love for starting a fight.

The other events in the book that I’ve taken direct from myth include Odysseus’s failed attempt to feign madness and avoid the war, the embassy to Troy, the gathering of the Greek fleet at Aulis, and the sacrifice of Iphigenia. There was never any question in Greek mythology that Iphigenia was Agamemnon’s daughter, but the tales do differ widely on her fate. Aeschylus, for example, makes it clear in the
Oresteia
that Agamemnon sacrificed his daughter to appease the wrath of Artemis. While Homer is silent on the matter, Euripides in
Iphigenia at Aulis
has Artemis replace the girl with a deer at the last moment. Unfortunately for Iphigenia, I haven’t been quite so merciful in my retelling of the story.

Moving on, according to ancient tales Achilles killed King Tenes after he hurled a rock at the Greek fleet. He then murdered his manservant, Mnemon, for failing to remind him not to kill any son of Apollo! Shortly afterwards, Philoctetes was bitten on the foot by a snake and, because of his constant groaning and the stench of his wound, was then marooned on Lemnos by Odysseus. And Protesilaus was the first man to hit the beach at Troy, and consequently the first casualty of the war.

Eperitus, on the other hand, comes from my imagination. When retelling a series of popular and well-known tales, it’s often useful to have an unknown element to skew events a little. I also hope the straightforward and honourable Eperitus acts as a foil to Odysseus’s often unscrupulous cunning. Certainly both men will need all these qualities and the strength of their unique friendship if they are to survive the long and bloody war with Troy, of which we’ve seen only the opening skirmish in
The Gates of Troy
. They have another ten years of fighting ahead of them before Zeus tips his golden scales in favour of one side or the other.

But that’s a different story.

Praise for Glyn Iliffe

King of Ithaca
is a great read which embodies the finest elements of war, friendship and betrayal that can be found in Homer’s great works . . . This is a must read for those who enjoy good old epic battles, chilling death scenes and the extravagance of ancient Greece’

Lifestyle Magazine

‘The world of this novel appears as many scholars see that of Homer: a rich melange of different eras . . . It has suspense, treachery and bone-crunching action . . . It will leave fans of the genre eagerly awaiting the rest of the series’

Harry Sidebottom,
author of the bestselling Warrior of Rome series ‘This daring debut is a stirring retelling of classic Greek mythology complete with all its adventure, passion, battles and, of course, the characters who have remained fascinating over thousands of years.
King of Ithaca
proves to be a voyage of discovery – both for Odysseus and the readers. It’s an epic tale told with an academic’s eye for history and a born storyteller’s feel for credible dialogue and the power of suspense’

Lancashire Evening Post

‘The reader does not need to be a classicist by any means to enjoy this epic and stirring tale. It makes a great novel and would be an even better film’

Historical Novels Review

Glyn Iliffe studied English and Classics at Reading University where he developed a passion for the ancient stories of Greek history and mythology. Well-travelled, Glyn has visited nearly forty countries, trekked in the Himalayas, spent six weeks hitchhiking across North America and had his collarbone broken by a bull in Pamplona.

 

Also by Glyn Iliffe

King of Ithaca

The Armour of Achilles

 

F
OR
R
OBIN
I
LIFFE

 

G
LOSSARY

 

 

 

 

 

A

Achilles

– Myrmidon prince

Actoris

– Penelope’s body slave

Aeneas

– Dardanian prince, the son of Anchises

Agamemnon

– king of Mycenae

Ajax (greater)

– king of Salamis

Ajax (lesser)

– prince of Locris

Andromache

– daughter of King Eëtion of the Cilicians, allies of Troy

Antenor

– Trojan elder

Antinous

– Ithacan lad, bullying son of Eupeithes

Antiphus

– Ithacan guardsman

Apheidas

– Trojan commander

Aphrodite

– goddess of love

Apollo

– archer god, associated with music, song and healing

Arceisius

– squire to Eperitus

Ares

– god of war

Artemis

– virgin moon-goddess associated with childbirth, noted for her vengefulness

Athena

– goddess of wisdom and warfare

Aulis

– sheltered bay in the Euboean Straits

C

Calchas

– Trojan priest of Apollo

Chelonion

– flower native to Ithaca

Clytaemnestra

– queen of Mycenae and wife of Agamemnon

Ctessipus

– Ithacan lad, friend of Antinous and son of Polytherses

D

Deiphobus

– younger brother of Hector and Paris

Demeter

– goddess of agriculture

Diomedes

– king of Argos and ally of Agamemnon

Dulichium

– Ionian island, forming northernmost part of Odysseus’s kingdom

E

Eleusis

– port town on the Saronic Sea

Eperitus

– captain of Odysseus’s guard

Eteoneus

– herald of Menelaus

Euboea

– large island off the east coast of mainland Greece

Eupeithes

– Ithacan noble and former traitor

Eurotas

– Spartan river

Euryalus

– companion of Diomedes

Eurybates

– Odysseus’s squire

Eurylochus

– Ithacan soldier, cousin of Odysseus

Exadios

– Trojan soldier

G

Galatea

– a priestess of Artemis

H

Hades

– god of the Underworld

Halitherses

– former captain of Ithacan royal guard

Hecabe

– Trojan queen, wife of King Priam

Hector

– Trojan prince, oldest son of King Priam

Helen

– queen of Sparta, wife of King Menelaus

Hephaistos

– god of fire; blacksmith to the Olympians

Hera

– goddess married to Zeus

Hermes

– messenger of the gods; his duties also include shepherding the souls of the dead to the Underworld

Hesione

– sister of King Priam, abducted by Telamon

Hestia

– goddess of the hearth and protectress of the household

I

Ida (Mount)

– principal mountain in Ilium

Idaeus

– herald to King Priam

Idomeneus

– king of Crete

Ilium

– the region of which Troy was the capital

Ionian Sea

– sea to the west of the Greek mainland

Iphigenia

– eldest daughter of Agamemnon

Ithaca

– island in the Ionian Sea

K

Kerosia

– Ithacan council meeting

L

Lacedaemon

– Sparta

Laertes

– Odysseus’s father

Leothoë

– daughter of King Altes of the Leleges, allies of Troy

Lemnos

– island in the Aegean Sea

Lycomedes

– king of Scyros

M

Medon

– Malian commander

Melanthius

– Ithacan lad, brother of Melantho

Melantho

– Ithacan girl, sister of Melanthius

Menelaus

– king of Sparta and younger brother of Agamemnon

Menestheus

– king of Athens

Mentor

– close friend of Odysseus

Mnemon

– servant of Achilles, employed to remind him not to fight any of Apollo’s sons

Mycenae

– most powerful city in Greece, situated in north-eastern Peloponnese

Myrine

– Helen’s old nursemaid

Myrmidons

– the followers of Achilles

N

Neaera

– Helen’s body slave

Neoptolemus

– son of Achilles and Deidameia

Nestor

– king of Pylos

O

Odysseus

– king of Ithaca

Omeros

– Ithacan boy

Orestes

– son of Agamemnon

P

Palamedes

– Nauplian prince

Paris

– Trojan prince, second eldest son of King Priam

Parnassus (Mount)

– mountain in central Greece and home of the Pythian oracle

Patroclus

– cousin of Achilles and captain of the Myrmidons

Peisandros

– Myrmidon spearman

Peloponnese

– southernmost landmass of Greek mainland

Penelope

– queen of Ithaca and wife of Odysseus

Pergamos

– the citadel of Troy

Perithous

– Mycenaean gate guard

Persephone

– goddess of the Underworld, wife of Hades

Philoctetes

– Malian archer who lit the pyre of Heracles, for which he was awarded the hero’s bow and arrows

Phronius

– Ithacan elder

Pleisthenes

– youngest son of Menelaus and Helen

Podarces

– Thessalian leader, brother of Protesilaus

Polites

– Thessalian warrior

Polymele

– Clytaemnestra’s body slave

Poseidon

– god of the sea

Priam

– king of Troy

Protesilaus

– Thessalian leader, brother of Podarces

Pyrrha

– daughter of Lycomedes

Pythoness

– high priestess of the Pythian oracle

S

Samos

– neighbouring island to Ithaca, also under the rule of Odysseus

Saronic Sea

– body of water between Attica and the Peloponnese

Scamander

– river on the Trojan plain

Scyros

– island east of Euboea

Simöeis

– river on the Trojan plain

Sparta

– city in the south-eastern Peloponnese

Sthenelaus

– companion of Diomedes

T

Talthybius

– squire to Agamemnon

Taphians

– pirate race from Taphos

Tecton

– friend of Iphigenia

Telamon

– former king of Salamis, father of the greater Ajax

Tenedos

– island off the coast of Ilium

Tenes

– king of Tenedos

Teucer

– famed archer, half-brother and companion to the greater Ajax

Thersites

– Aetolian hunchback

Thessaly

– region of northern Greece

Thoosa

– friend of Iphigenia

Troy

– chief city of Ilium, on the eastern seaboard of the Aegean

X

xenia

– the custom of friendship towards strangers

Z

Zacynthos

– southernmost of the Ionian islands under Laertes’s rule

Zeus

– the king of the gods

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